html5-img
1 / 48

Species Interactions

Species Interactions. Bellringer. Mass leaves to find biomass Defend the following statement: Species interactions are the driving force behind natural selection. Pop Quiz??. Cycles in Nature. Ecology vocabulary preview:. Biotic factors Abiotic Niche (Fundamental and Realized)

Download Presentation

Species Interactions

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. Species Interactions

  2. Bellringer • Mass leaves to find biomass • Defend the following statement: • Species interactions are the driving force behind natural selection.

  3. Pop Quiz?? • Cycles in Nature

  4. Ecology vocabulary preview: • Biotic factors • Abiotic • Niche (Fundamental and Realized) • Competition

  5. EQ: How do species interactions drive changes in organisms? • Predator/Prey • Parasitism • Commensalism • Mutualism • Commensalism

  6. Predator-Prey

  7. Parasatism • Parasitism

  8. Mutualism

  9. Commensalism

  10. Competitive Exclusion Principle • Tansley (1917) showed (1) that the presence of absence of a species could be determined by competition with other species; (2) that conditions of the environment (in this case, soil type) affected the outcome of competition; (3) that competition might be felt very broadly at first (i.e., from other vegetation throughout the community); and (4) that the present ecological segregation of species might have resulted from competition in the past.

  11. Bellringer: • Explain the predator-prey model • What is a symbiotic relationship? • Name the three types of symbiotic relations ships and give examples of each

  12. Competition can be a driving force in evolution; this example is know as character displacement. of resource partitioning.

  13. Competitive Exclusion Principle • 2. • Gause: used cultures of protozoans to develop the competitive exclusion princple (1934). • two species cannot coexist on the same limiting resource. Similar results have been obtained for fruit flies, mice, flour beetles, and annual plants: One species dies and the other persists. May requires 30-70 generations for insects.

  14. Competitive Exclusion • two speciescompeting for the same resources cannot stably coexist • Connell (1961)

  15. Limiting Resource/Factor

  16. Resource Partitioning • Charles Darwin noticed that competition is most intense between similar species that require the same resources. • Robert MacArthur studied several species of warblers that foraged in the same tree. A closer look showed that each species hunts for insects in a different part of the tree. • process by which natural selection drives competing species into different patterns of resource use or different niches.

  17. Resource partitioning: process by which natural selection drives competing species into different patterns of resource use or different niches.

  18. On the next slide, have students analyze the graph and then work with a partner to draw some conclusions. • Discuss the student’s ideas in class.

  19. Competition can be a driving force in evolution; this example is know as character displacement. of resource partitioning.

  20. Coevolution • Two or more species living in a close relationship may cause each other to evolve as a response to each others changes. • My example: As a prey item evolves better camouflage, the predator evolves keener eye site. • Can you come up with an example?

  21. Coevolution at its best! Here you can see two Heliconius eggs that have been layed on a passionflower leaf. Here you can see the leaf on one passionflower species which has evolved to "fake eggs" (nectaries) to make the moth think that the leaf is already occupied. (Moths will not lay their eggs on occupied leaves because newly hatched lavae will often eat other eggs on leaves before eating the leaf)

  22. Begin Predator-Prey Model

  23. Adaptations • Mimicry • Toxins • Aposomatic coloration • Plants: Physical defenese, chemical defenses • Secondary compounds – nicotine, strychnine, poison ivey

  24. Batesian Mimicry

  25. This tropical ant of the species Cephalotes atratus is infected with a parasitic roundworm that makes its bulbous rear end, called a gaster, look like a juicy red berry. Researchers believe the parasites transform the gasters to trick foraging birds into eating the ants. Birds poop out parasite eggs, allowing the worms to spread to new ant colonies. Coevolution at its best!

  26. Ecological Succession • Primary Succession • Secondary Succession • Pioneer Species • Climax Community

  27. Ecological Succession

  28. Primary or Secondary

  29. Primary or Secondary

  30. Primary or Secondary

  31. Primary or Secondary

  32. Primary or Secondary

  33. Primary or Secondary

  34. Primary or Secondary

  35. Bellringer (Begins on pg 436) • How does the greenhouse effect occur? • What is biodiversity? • Compare species richness and species evenness. Compare species diversity and genetic diversity. • Calculate the species richness and species evenness for each island. Island X has 50 individuals of species A, 200 of species B and 2000 of species C. Island Y has 300 of species A, 300 of species B and 500 of 200 of species C and 500 of species D. • Which island has the greatest biodiversity?

  36. Environmental Issues • Pollution – smog • Ozone thinning • Global Warming • Acide Rain • Biological magnification • Extinction • Keystone species • Sustainability • Environmental Footprint

More Related