ch. 52 community ecology: what you should already know… community predation herbivory (herbivores...

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Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-), mutualism (+/+), commensalism (+, 0) Coevolution Trophic levels, food chains, food webs Biomass Ecological succession- primary vs. secondary Humans most common source of disturbance Biodiversity

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Page 1: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know…

• Community

• Predation

• Herbivory (herbivores eating plants)

• Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-), mutualism (+/+), commensalism (+, 0)

• Coevolution

• Trophic levels, food chains, food webs

• Biomass

• Ecological succession- primary vs. secondary

• Humans most common source of disturbance

• Biodiversity

Page 2: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

CHAPTER 53COMMUNITY ECOLOGY

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Section A: What Is a Community?

1. Contrasting views of communities are rooted in the individualistic and

interactive hypotheses

2. The debate continues with the rivet and redundancy models

Page 3: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• What is a Community?

• A community is defined as an assemblage of species living close enough together for potential interaction.

• Communities differ in their species richness, thenumber of speciesthey contain, andthe relativeabundance ofdifferent species.

Introduction

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 4: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• An individualistic hypothesis depicts a community as a chance assemblage of species found in the same area because they happen to have similar abiotic requirements.

1. Contrasting views of communities are rooted in the individualistic and interactive hypotheses

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Fig. 53.1a

Page 5: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• An interactive hypothesis depicts a community as an assemblage of closely linked species locked in by mandatory biotic interactions.

Fig. 53.1b

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 6: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• These two very different hypotheses suggest different priorities in studying biological communities.

• In most actual cases, the composition of communities does seem to change continuously.

Fig. 53.1c

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 7: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• The rivet model of communities is a reincarnation of the interactive model.

• The redundancy model states that most species in a community are not closely associated with one another.

• No matter which model is correct, it is important to study species relationships in communities.

2. The debate continues with the rivet and redundancy models

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 8: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

CHAPTER 53COMMUNITY ECOLOGY

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Section B1: Interspecific Interactions andCommunity Structure

1. Populations maybe linked by competition, predation, mutualism, and

commensalism

Page 9: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• There are different interspecific interactions, relationships between the species of a community.

Introduction

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 10: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Possible interspecific interactions are introduced in Table 53.1, and are symbolized by the positive or negative affect of the interaction on the individualpopulations.

1. Populations may be linked by competition, predation, mutualism and commensalism

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 11: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Competition.

• Interspecific competition for resources can occur when resources are in short supply.

• There is potential for competition between any two species that need the same limited resource.

• The competitive exclusion principle: two species with similar needs for same limiting resources cannot coexist in the same place.

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 12: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• The ecological niche is the sum total of an organism’s use of abiotic/biotic resources in the environment.

• An organism’s niche is its role in the environment.

• The competitive exclusion principle can be restated to say that two species cannot coexist in a community if their niches are identical.

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 13: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Classic experiments confirm this.

Fig. 53.2

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 14: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Resource partitioning is the differentiation of niches that enables two similar species to coexist in a community.

Fig. 53.2Fig. 53.3

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 15: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Character displacement is the tendency for characteristics to be more divergent in sympatric populations of two species than in allopatric populationsof the same two species.

• Hereditary changesevolve that bringabout resourcepartitioning.

Fig. 53.4

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 16: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Predation.

• A predator eats prey.

• Herbivory, in which animals eat plants.

• In parasitism, predators live on/in a host and depend on the host for nutrition.

• Predator adaptations: many important feeding adaptations of predators are both obvious and familiar.

• Claws, teeth, fangs, poison, heat-sensing organs, speed, and agility.

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 17: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Plant defenses against herbivores include chemical compounds that are toxic.

• Animal defenses against predators.

• Behavioral defenses include fleeing, hiding, self-defense, noises, and mobbing.

• Camouflage includes cryptic coloration, deceptive markings.

Fig. 53.5Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 18: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Mechanical defenses include spines.

• Chemical defenses include odors and toxins

• Aposematic coloration is indicated by warning colors, and is sometimes associated with other defenses (toxins).

Fig. 53.6

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Page 19: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Mimicry is when organisms resemble other species.

• Batesian mimicry is where a harmless species mimics a harmful one.

Fig. 53.7

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 20: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Müllerian mimicry is where two or more unpalatable species resemble each other.

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Fig. 53.8

Page 21: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Parasites and pathogens as predators.

• A parasite derives nourishment from a host, which is harmed in the process.

• Endoparasites live inside the host and ectoparasites live on the surface of the host.

• Parasitoidism is a special type of parasitism where the parasite eventually kills the host.

• Pathogens are disease-causing organisms that can be considered predators.

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 22: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Mutualism is where two species benefit from their interaction.

• Commensalism iswhere one speciesbenefits from theinteraction, but otheris not affected.

• An example wouldbe barnacles thatattach to a whale.

Fig. 53.9

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 23: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Coevolution and interspecific interactions.

• Coevolution refers to reciprocal evolutionary adaptations of two interacting species.

• When one species evolves, it exerts selective pressure on the other to evolve to continue the interaction.

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 24: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

CHAPTER 53COMMUNITY ECOLOGY

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Section B2: Interspecific Interactions andCommunity Structure (continued)

2. Trophic structure is a key factor in community dynamics

3. Dominant species and keystone species exert strong controls on community

structure

4. The structure of a community may be controlled bottom-up by nutrients or

top-down by predators

Page 25: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• The trophic structure of a community is determined by the feeding relationships between organisms.

• The transfer of food energy from its source in photosynthetic organisms through herbivores and carnivores is called the food chain.

2. Trophic structure is a key factor in community dynamics

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 26: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Charles Elton firstpointed out that thelength of a food chain is usually four or five links, called trophic levels.

• He also recognizedthat food chains arenot isolated units butare hooked togetherinto food webs.

Fig. 53.10

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 27: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Food webs.

• Who eats whom in a community?

• Trophic relationships can be diagrammed in a community.

• What transformsfood chains intofood webs?

• A given species may weave into the web at more than one trophic level.

Fig. 53.11Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 28: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• What limits the length of a food chain?

• The energetic hypothesis suggests that the length of a food chain is limited by the inefficiency of energy transfer along the chain.

• The dynamic stability hypothesis states that long food chains are less stable than short chains.

Fig. 53.13

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 29: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Dominant species are those in a community that have the highest abundance or highest biomass (the sum weight of all individuals in a population).

• If we remove a dominant species from a community, it can change the entire community structure.

3. Dominant species and keystone species exert strong controls on community structure

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 30: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Keystone speciesexert an importantregulating effecton other speciesin a community.

Fig. 53.14

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

These sea stars control a mussel species that takes over if not held in check.

Page 31: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• If they are removed, community structure is greatly affected.

Fig. 53.15

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Otters control sea urchins

Page 32: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Simplified models based on relationships between adjacent trophic levels are useful for discussing how communities might be organized.

4. The structure of a community may be controlled bottom-up by nutrients or top-down by predators

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 33: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Consider three possible relationships between plants (V for vegetation) and herbivores (H).

• V H V H V H

• Arrows indicate that a change in biomass of one trophic level causes a change in the other trophic level.

• The bottom-up model postulates V H linkages, where nutrients and vegetation control community organization.

• The top-down model postulates that it is mainly predation that controls community organization V H.

• Other models go between the bottom-up and top-down extreme models.

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 34: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

CHAPTER 53COMMUNITY ECOLOGY

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Section C1: Disturbance and Community Structure

1. Most communities are in a state of nonequilibrium owing to disturbances

2. Humans are the most widespread agents of disturbance

Page 35: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Disturbances affect community structure and stability.

• Stability is the ability of a community to persist in the face of disturbance.

Introduction

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 36: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Disturbances are events like fire, weather, or human activities that can alter communities.

• Some are routine.

1. Most communities are in a state of nonequilibrium owing to disturbances

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Fig. 53.16

Page 37: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Marine communities are subject to disturbance by tropical storms.

Fig. 53.17

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 38: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

Fig. 53.17Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 39: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• We usually think that disturbances have a negative impact on communities, but in many cases they are necessary for community development and survival.

Fig. 53.18

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Page 40: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Human activities cause more disturbance than natural events and usually reduce species diversity in communities.

2. Humans are the most widespread agents of disturbance

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Page 41: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

CHAPTER 53COMMUNITY ECOLOGY

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Section C2: Disturbance and Community Structure (continued)

3. Ecological succession is the sequence of community changes after a

disturbance

Page 42: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Ecological succession is the transition in species composition over ecological time.

• Primary succession begins in a lifeless area where soil has not yet formed.

3. Ecological succession is the sequence of community changes after a disturbance

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 43: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

Fig. 53.19

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 44: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Mosses and lichens colonize first and cause the development of soil.

• An example would be after a glacier has retreated.

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 45: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Secondary succession occurs where an existing community has been cleared by some event, but the soil is left intact.

• Grasses grow first, then trees and other organisms.

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 46: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Soil concentrations of nutrients show changes over time.

Fig. 53.20Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 47: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

CHAPTER 53COMMUNITY ECOLOGY

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Section D: Biogeographic Factors Affecting the Biodiversity of Communities

1. Community biodiversity measures the number of species and their relative

abundance

2. Species richness generally declines along an equatorial-polar gradient

3. Species richness is related to a community’s geographic size

4. Species richness on an island depends on island size and distance from the

mainland

Page 48: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Two key factors correlated with a community’s biodiversity (species diversity) are its size and biogeography.

Introduction

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Page 49: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• The variety of different kinds of organisms that make up a community has two components.

• Species richness, the total number of species in the community.

• Relative abundance of the different species.

• Imagine two small forest communities with 100 individuals distributed among four different tree species.

1. Community biodiversity measures the number of species and their relative abundance

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 50: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Species richnessmay be equal,but relativeabundance maybe different.

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Fig. 53.21

Page 51: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Counting species in a community to determine their abundance is difficult, especially for insects and smaller organisms

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Fig. 53.22

Page 52: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Tropical habitats support much larger numbers of species of organisms than do temperate and polar regions.

2. Species richness generally declines along an equatorial-polar gradient

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 53: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Fig. 53.23

Page 54: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• What causes these gradients?

• The two key factors are probably evolutionary history and climate.

• Organisms have a history in an area where they are adapted to the climate.

• Energy and water may factor into this phenomenon.

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 55: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Fig. 53.24

Page 56: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• The species-area curve quantifies what may seem obvious: the larger the geographic area, the greaterthe numberof species.

3. Species richness is related to a community’s geographic size

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Fig. 23.25

Page 57: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Because of their size and isolation, islands provide great opportunities for studying some of the biogeographic factors that affect the species diversity of communities.

• Imagine a newly formed island some distance from the mainland.

• Robert MacArthur and E. O. Wilson developed a hypothesis of island biogeography to identify the determinants of species diversity on an island.

4. Species richness on islands depends on island size and distance from the mainland

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 58: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Two factors will determine the number of species that eventually inhabit the island.

• The rate at which new species immigrate to the island.

• The rate at which species become extinct.

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Fig. 53.26

Page 59: Ch. 52 Community Ecology: What you should already know… Community Predation Herbivory (herbivores eating plants) Symbiotic relationships= parasitism (+/-),

• Studies of plants on many island chains confirm their hypothesis.

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Fig. 53.27