1 / 23

Lecture 26

Lecture 26 Chapter 36 Communities Learning Objectives Define disturbance Discuss the role of disturbance in communities Fire in Yellowstone Flood in Grand Canyon Contrast open and serotinous pine cones Recall what “NPS” & “USGS” stand for Disturbance A disruption in the community

Renfred
Download Presentation

Lecture 26

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lecture 26 Chapter 36 Communities

  2. Learning Objectives • Define disturbance • Discuss the role of disturbance in communities • Fire in Yellowstone • Flood in Grand Canyon • Contrast open and serotinous pine cones • Recall what “NPS” & “USGS” stand for

  3. Disturbance • A disruption in the community • Typically involves an abiotic force (we often call disasters) • Fires • Storms • Drought • Flood • Volcano

  4. Disturbance is Natural • Despite “disaster” label, disturbance is natural, and often necessary • Example: prairies need fire every 2-3 years • Keeps trees from taking over • Recycles nutrients to soil • Clears away dead grass, allowing sunlight & air to penetrate

  5. Disturbance & Humans • People like to prevent “disasters” or natural disturbances • Put out forest fires • Dam rivers to control flooding • This can affect ecological communities negatively

  6. Natural Fires in Yellowstone Park • A dozen natural fires in average year • Caused by lightning • Usually small “ground fires” (a few to 100 or so acres) • Patchy • Heat not too intense (many trees can survive)

  7. Benefits of Fire • Nutrients recycled • Undergrowth cleared • Allows sunlight to penetrate • Lush grass, flower growth encouraged • Bottom line: fire can beneficial

  8. Lodgepole Pine • The dominant tree in Yellowstone • Makes 2 kinds of pine cones • Open cones: • Seeds fall out immediately • Serotinous cones: • Require fire to open • Cone coated in resin • Seeds stay inside until fire • Can stay on tree for years • Quickly reseed burnt areas

  9. Fire Suppression • Fire suppression by National Park Service (NPS) began when park opened • Every fire quickly put out (natural or not) • Problem: fuel for fires accumulated year, after year, after year, then…

  10. Fire Season of 1988 • Summer 1988 park basically exploded! • Decades of fuel built up • Dry conditions, little rain • “Crown fires” in tops of trees • Too big, too hot to fight

  11. Aftermath of Fire • Originally, thought to be great tragedy • Nature recovered • Park Service came under nation-wide scrutiny • Cost of fire suppression = 10X annual park budget (guess who pays)

  12. Grand Canyon Flooding • Flood disturbance was natural part of ecosystem • Maintained depth of river • Replenished sand on beaches • Cleared vegetation

  13. Dam Disrupts Flooding • Dam in Glen Canyon region of Grand Canyon for flood control • Over time, environmentalists & anglers worried about habitat alteration

  14. Flood Experiment • United States Geological Survey (USGS) • Decides to try “flood experiment” • March to April 1996, allows river to “flood” experimentally • River returned to more natural state

  15. Grand Canyon Floods • USGS Websites • Rationale for experiment website 1 • Grand Canyon Flows • Grand Canyon Sand

  16. Trophic Level & Diet • Primary producers = autotrophs, chemotrophs • Heterotrophs include: • Primary Consumers = herbivores • All carnivores, which include • Secondary consumers • Tertiary consumers • Quaternary consumers

  17. Question • There is an alga, eaten by a shrimp, eaten by a surfperch, eaten by a heron • Using trophic level terminology, how would you describe the surfperch?

  18. Question • What kind of heterotroph does not eat meat?

  19. Question • What is the lowest level heterotroph which eats meat?

  20. Problem with Food Chains • Food chains aren’t realistic • Few communities are so simple • Some species defy classification • Hawk can eat mice or snakes • Raccoons eat vegetation and meat

  21. Food Webs • Food webs are more realistic depiction • Consist of several intertwined food chains

  22. Limited Length of Food Chains/Webs • Remember 2nd Law of Thermodynamics • Some energy lost in every conversion • Metabolic efficiency typically 10% • 90% loss at each level • Only a few pyramid levels can be supported (3 to 5)

  23. Meat is Energetically Expensive • Just as with any food chain, there is loss at every level • Meat requires greater land & water resources

More Related