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Community Structure (Chapter 21)

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Because there are so many species, it's useful to group species by ... woodpeckers, squirrels, raccoons, wasps, bees, ants, snakes... Why are guilds useful? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Community Structure (Chapter 21)


1
  • Community Structure (Chapter 21)
  • Defining communities
  • Patterns of community organization
  • Patterns of diversity

2
  • Community association of interacting
    populations
  • Different ways that communities are organized

3
  • Because there are so many species, its useful to
    group species by how they use resources
  • Guild group of species that use resources in a
    similar way

4
  • Types of guilds
  • foraging use the same food resources or feed in
    the same locations
  • nesting reproduce in the same places
  • Guilds can include diverse, unrelated species
  • seed-eating animals in the desert
  • ants, rodents, birds
  • cavity-nesting animals in forest
  • woodpeckers, squirrels, raccoons, wasps, bees,
    ants, snakes

5
  • Why are guilds useful?
  • simplifies analysis of communities
  • a few guilds vs. 1000s of species
  • allows comparison across locations
  • organisms that use the same resources will
    respond to environmental changes in similar ways

6
  • Biome community type distinguished by dominant
    plant form
  • Ecotone a zone of transition between two
    habitat types

7
Sharp ecotone
Soft ecotone
8
  • Ecotones are often caused by underlying
    environmental gradients

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10
  • Ecotones often have more species than either of
    the two habitats does alone
  • Some species are specifically adapted to edge
    conditions
  • Ecotones are maintained by plants themselves,
    fire, or competition

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12
  • Two ways of looking at a community
  • Holistic view
  • species in a community act as a superorganism,
    coevolved to act as one unit
  • can only understand the community by
    understanding the species together, not
    separately
  • distributions of species in a community coincide

13
  • Two ways of looking at a community
  • Individualistic view
  • communities are aggregations of populations that
    happen to be in the same place
  • each population has its own independent dynamics
  • distributions of species are individualistic, in
    response to environmental conditions

14
  • Holistic view leads to the idea of a closed
    community one in which each species
    distribution coincides with the boundaries of the
    community
  • Individualistic view leads to the open community
    concept each species has its own limits, so the
    boundaries of a community are abitrary

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16
  • The continuum concept
  • Ecotones tend to be soft, with overlap between
    communities across the ecotone
  • Distributions of plant species tend to be
    independent of one another

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18
  • The continuum concept is the idea that plant and
    animal species continually replace each other
    along environmental gradients
  • temperature
  • precipitation
  • soil types
  • soil moisture

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22
  • Within any community species differ in how
    abundant they are

23
  • For any different type of organism in a community
  • a few species will be very abundant (dominant
    species)
  • most species will be relatively rare

24
  • Diversity
  • Diversity the variety of taxa in a particular
    place
  • Species richness the number of species in a
    community
  • varies widely from place to place
  • can be very high in some locations

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  • Because species can differ in abundance, richness
    may be a poor measure of diversity
  • Evenness how evenly abundances are distributed
    among species

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  • Two diversity indices that account for evenness
  • Simpsons index
  • pi the proportional abundance of species
  • (count of species i)/(total sample
    size)
  • varies from 1 to S (the species richness)
  • larger numbers indicate more diversity

29
  • Two diversity indices that account for evenness
  • Shannon-Wiener Index
  • pi the proportional abundance of species i
  • maximum ln (S)
  • larger numbers indicate more diversity
  • often reported as eH

30
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