1 / 24

Survivor: Who Will Be the Best Competitor?

Survivor: Who Will Be the Best Competitor?. How environmental change affects competition. Competition. Organisms require resources from their environment to grow, survive and reproduce Plants in the rainforest require sunlight, water and nutrients

mort
Download Presentation

Survivor: Who Will Be the Best Competitor?

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. Survivor:Who Will Be the Best Competitor? How environmental change affects competition

  2. Competition • Organisms require resources from their environment to grow, survive and reproduce • Plants in the rainforest require sunlight, water and nutrients • Different species of plants compete for these resources

  3. Competition Examples http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d26AhcKeEbE&feature=related Within Species Competition Video Clover sprouts compete above and below ground. Between Species Competition Video Damselfish defend territories to compete with other fish. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9YR7VfsR5iA&feature=related

  4. Competition Examples

  5. Competition Examples What examples of competition can you think of?

  6. Why is it important to understand competition? • Predict if species can coexist • Predict what will happen if • species are lost (extinction) • species are introduced • Invasive species • Biological controls

  7. Environmental Change = Competition Change If global warming decreased rainfall, • how would that affect plant competition? Sea lamprey are an invasive species that attack fish and suck their blood. If sea lamprey, invade Lake Michigan • how would that affect fish competition?

  8. Species Loss in Stickleback Fish • Historically 2 species that differ in • Color, size, shape, behavior • Feeding & mating habitats • One species mates in the open; the other species mates in the vegetation

  9. Invasive Species Changed Mating Habitats • Recent crayfish introduction • Ecological changes: • - Vegetation loss • - Increased turbidity • - Water color Current Conditions Historical Conditions

  10. Loss of habitat increased species competition • Bigger males compete better • Bigger males = more aggression = gain a territory • Need a territory to build a nest and attract females

  11. Loss of habitat increased species competition

  12. Loss of habitat increased species competition Benthic Species Limnetic Species

  13. Loss of habitat increased species competition

  14. Loss of habitat increased species competition

  15. Competition: The Game Species A vs. Species B Environment 1 • Species A = Red-filtered vision • Species B = Blue-filtered vision species • Multiple types of available food items • 60 seconds to collect as many food items as you can • You need 5 units of food to survive until tomorrow • You must • Pick up one food item at a time and return it to your stomach (cup) • Walk carefully • Not physically interfere with other organisms

  16. Competition: The Game • Use your worksheet to record food items eaten by each member of your species

  17. Competition: The Game Species A vs. Species B Environment 2 A disease has drastically reduced the number of one of the prey items. You must forage for food in this new environment.

  18. Competition: The Game • Use your worksheet to record food items eaten by each member of your species in Environment 2. • Graph total # of food items of each color eaten by all members of your species. • How do results compare between environments? (Groups prepare to report out)

  19. Competition: The Game • How do results for each species compare?

  20. Competition: The Game • What other changes to the game environment can you imagine? • Small groups develop ideas • Entire group votes on one question to test • Make predictions • Test question and interpret results

  21. Competition is Costly • Competing takes energy and time • Poor competitors get less of the resources (food, territory) • This leads to lower survival and reproduction How can organisms reduce this cost?

  22. Reduce competition by specializing Eats detritus (dead material on pond bottom) Eats shrimp that swim in pond

  23. Reduce competition by specializing = Niche differentiation Eats invertebrates in the sediment of the lake bottom Eats plankton that swim in open water of the lake

  24. Competition in Bioenergy Plots How might competition be important in bioenergy plots?

More Related