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Community Ecology

Community Ecology. Differences within a Community. Community - an assemblage of species living close enough for the potential of interaction Species richness - number of species within a community. Relative abundance - the number of common species as compared to rare species.

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Community Ecology

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  1. Community Ecology

  2. Differences within a Community • Community - an assemblage of species living close enough for the potential of interaction • Species richness - number of species within a community. • Relative abundance - the number of common species as compared to rare species. • Species diversity - species richness+relative abundance

  3. Interspecific Interactions between Populations of Different Species • The adaptation of one species to the presence of another may lead to coevolution (a change in one species acts as a selective force on another). • Example • predator/prey • mutualism • commensalism

  4. Predation/Parasitism • Predation - a predator eats a prey • Parasitism - parasites live in or on a host, usually killing them outright. • Parasitoidism - small insects such as wasps lay eggs on hosts; the larvae feed within the body of the host, killing it. • Herbivory - animals eat plants

  5. Plant Defenses Against Herbivores • Thorns/hooks/spines in or on leaves and stems • chemicals that produce distasteful foliage such as strychnine, morphine, nicotine • production of analogous (same in appearance not function) hormones that causes abnormal insect development when eaten

  6. Animal Defenses Against Predators • Hiding, fleeing, alarm calls, distraction displays, escaping, combat tactics. • Cryptic coloration - passive defense that makes potential prey difficult to see (camouflage) • Batesian mimicry - palatable prey resembles the appearance of a harmful or unpalatable species

  7. Predation • Parasitism - one organisms derives nourishment from another • Endoparasites - live within the host tissue or cavities (tapeworms) • Ectoparasites - attach or briefly feed on external surfaces ( mosquitoes)

  8. Interspecific Competitions • Competitive Exclusion Principle - two similar species in the same area with similar resources can not coexist.

  9. Ecological Niche • What is your niche? • Ecological niche - how an organisms fits in to its environment by using biotic and abiotic resources • Two species can not coexist if they have identical niches.

  10. Evidence for Competition • The weaker individual will become extinct. • One of the species will evolve to the point of using a different set of resources. • Resource partitioning

  11. Commensalism • Symbiotic relationship where one organism benefits without significantly affecting another; unlike parasitism. • Cattle egrets • Difficult to find a true commensalistic relationship when most relationships will benefit both species to some degree.

  12. Mutualism • Symbiotic relationship where both organisms benefit. • Nitrogen fixing bacteria and legumes.

  13. Community Structure - Food Webs Secondary Consumers Primary Consumers Primary Producers

  14. Disturbance and Nonequilibrium • Disturbance - anything that disrupts a community • change in resource availability allowing for disappearance or emergence of new species • natural disasters • human intervention • clear cutting • logging • pollution • grassland destruction

  15. Succession • Succession - transition of species composition over time • Primary succession - succession of barren areas due to lack of soil formation, rubble, or barren rock (colonization of new lands) • pioneering species - species that will first colonize areas in primary succession (mosses, algae)

  16. Succession (con’t) • Secondary succession - occurs when an existing community has been cleared by some disturbance that leaves the soil intact which will be recolonized by a fugitive species (weeds).

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