Community Ecology
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Transcript Community Ecology
Community Ecology
Chapter 47
Mader: Biology 8th Ed.
Outline
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Diversity and Composition Models
Island Biogeography
Habitat and Ecological Niche
Competition Between Populations
Predator-Prey Interactions
Symbiotic Relationships
Community Development
Community Diversity
Mader: Biology 8th Ed.
Community Concept
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A community is an assemblage of
populations interacting with one another
within the same environment.
– Composition is a listing of various species
in the community.
– Diversity includes both species richness
and species diversity.
Mader: Biology 8th Ed.
Diversity and Composition Models
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Gleason - Individualistic Model
– Each population in community is there
because its own particular abiotic
requirements are met by a particular
habitat.
Clements - Interactive Model
– Community is the highest level of
organization.
Dependent on biotic interactions.
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Island Biogeography
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MacArthur and Wilson developed a general
model of island biogeography to explain and
predict the effects of distance from the
mainland and size of an island on
community diversity.
– Island size and distance from population
source affects species diversity.
Mader: Biology 8th Ed.
Model of Island Biogeography
Mader: Biology 8th Ed.
Community Structure
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Competition for limited resources between
two species has a negative effect on the
abundance of both species.
– Predation and parasitism are expected to
increase the abundance of the predator
and parasite at the expense of the
abundance of the prey and its host.
Mader: Biology 8th Ed.
Habitat and Ecological Niche
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Habitat is the area an organism lives and
reproduces in.
Ecological niche is the role an organism
plays in its community, including its habitat
and its interactions with other organisms.
– Fundamental niche - All conditions under
which the organism can survive.
– Realized niche - Set of conditions under
which it exists in nature.
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Feeding Niches for Wading Birds
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Competition Between Populations
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Interspecific competition occurs when
members of different species try to utilize a
resource in limited supply.
– Competitive Exclusion Principle - No two
species can occupy the same niche at the
same time.
Resource Partitioning decreases
competition.
Can lead to character displacement.
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Competition Between Barnacle Species
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Character Displacement in Galápagos Finches
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Predator-Prey Interactions
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Predation occurs when one living organism,
the predator, feeds on another, the prey.
– Presence of predators can decrease prey
densities, and vice-versa.
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Lynx-Snowshoe Hare Interactions
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Prey Defenses
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Prey defenses are mechanisms that thwart
the possibility of being eaten by a predator.
– Spines
– Tough Epidermis
– Poisonous Chemicals
– Camouflage
– Bright Coloration
– Flocking Behavior
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Camouflage in the Anglerfish
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Mimicry
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Mimicry occurs when one species
resembles another that possesses an overt
antipredator defense.
– Batesian - Mimic lacks defense of the
organism it resembles.
– Müllerian - Mimic shares same protective
defense.
Mader: Biology 8th Ed.
Symbiotic Relationships
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Symbiosis refers to interactions in which
there is a close relationship between
members of two populations.
– Parasitism
Parasite derives nourishment from a
host, and may use host as habitat and
mode of transmission.
Endoparasites
Ectoparasites
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Commensalism
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Commensalism is a symbiotic relationship in
which one species is benefited and the other
is neither benefited nor harmed.
– Remoras and Sharks
Many examples may turn out to be
mutualism or parasitism.
Amount of harm or benefit two
species do to one another is partially
determined by the investigator.
Mader: Biology 8th Ed.
Mutualism
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Mutualism is a symbiotic relationship in
which both members of the association
benefit.
– Often help organisms obtain food or avoid
predation.
Bacteria in human intestinal tact.
– Need not be equally beneficial to both
species.
Cleaning Symbiosis
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Mutualism Between Bullhorn Acacia and Ants
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Cleaning Symbiosis
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Community Development
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Ecological Succession
– A change involving a series of species
replacements in a community following a
disturbance.
Primary Succession occurs in areas
where there is no soil formation.
Secondary Succession begins in areas
where soil is present.
Pioneer Species
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Secondary Succession in a Forest
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Succession Models
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Facilitation Model
– Succession in a particular area will always
lead to the same type of community.
Climax Community
Each stage facilitates invasion and
replacement by organisms of the
next stage.
Mader: Biology 8th Ed.
Succession Models
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Inhibition Model
– Colonists hold onto their space and inhibit
growth of other plants until the colonists
are damaged or die.
Tolerance Model
– Different types of plants can colonize an
area at the same time.
Chance determine which seeds arrive
first.
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Community Diversity
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Community stability can be recognized in
three ways.
– Persistence through time.
– Resistance to change.
– Recovery once a disturbance has
occurred.
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Intermediate Disturbance Hypothesis
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Moderate amounts of disturbances at
moderate frequency are required for a high
degree of community diversity.
– If widespread disturbances occur
frequently, diversity will be limited.
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Intermediate Disturbance Hypothesis
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Predation, Competition, and Biodiversity
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In certain communities, predation by a
particular species reduces competition and
increases diversity.
– Predators that regulate competition and
maintain community diversity are referred
to as keystone predators.
Introduction of exotic species into a new
area may lead to unbridled competition and
resultant reduction in biodiversity.
Mader: Biology 8th Ed.
Review
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Diversity and Composition Models
Island Biogeography
Habitat and Ecological Niche
Competition Between Populations
Predator-Prey Interactions
Symbiotic Relationships
Community Development
Community Diversity
Mader: Biology 8th Ed.
Mader: Biology 8th Ed.