Chapter 3: Species Populations, Interactions and Communities
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Transcript Chapter 3: Species Populations, Interactions and Communities
Chapter 3: Species
Populations, Interactions
and Communities
Principles of Environmental
Science - Inquiry and Applications,
3rd Edition
by William and Mary Ann Cunningham
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
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Chapter 3. Key Terms McGraw-Hill Course Glossary
adaptation
Batesian mimicry
biotic potential
carrying capacity
coevolution
commensalism
complexity
convergent evolution
divergent evolution
diversity
ecological development
ecological niche
ecotones
edge effects
overshoots
environmental resistance
pioneer species
evolution
predator
exponential growth
primary productivity
habitat
primary succession
J curve
r-adapted species
K-adapted species
resource partitioning
keystone species
S-curve
logistic growth
secondary succession
Mullerian mimicry
selective pressure
mutualism
symbiosis
natural selection
tolerance limits
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Chapter 3 - Topics
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Who Lives Where, and Why?
Species Interactions
Population Dynamics
Community Properties
Communities in Transition
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Part 1: Who Lives Where,
and Why?
Generalists vs. Specialists
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Tolerance Limits
Each environmental factor (temperature, nutrient supply,
etc.) has both minimum and maximum levels beyond which
a species cannot survive or is unable to reproduce.
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Abundance and Distribution of Species
• Liebig - proposed that
the single
environmental factor in
shortest supply relative
to demand is the critical
determinant in species
distribution
• Shelford - added to
Liebig's work by
proposing that the
single environmental
factor closest to
tolerance limits
determines where a
particular organism can
live
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• Today we know that for
many species the
interaction of several
factors, rather than a single
limiting factor, determines
biogeographical distribution.
• Sometimes, the
requirements and
tolerances of species are
useful indicators of specific
environmental
characteristics.
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Adaptation and Natural Selection
Two types of adaptation:
• Acclimation - changes in an individual organism due to
non-permanent physiological modifications
• Evolution - gradual changes in a species due to
changes in genetic material and competition
Theory of evolution - developed by Charles Darwin and
Alfred Wallace.
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Natural selection - genetic combinations best adapted
for present environmental conditions tend to become
abundant
• Spontaneous, random mutations
• Selective pressure - physiological stress, predation,
•
competition, luck
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Speciation
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The Taxonomic Naming System
ADD TABLE 3.1
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The
Ecological Niche
Habitat - the place or
set of environmental
conditions in
which a particular
organism lives
Ecological niche - the
role played by a
species in a biological
community
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Resource
Partitioning
Over time, niches can
evolve as species
develop new strategies
to exploit resources.
Law of Competitive
Exclusion:
No two species will
occupy the same niche
and compete for the
same resources in the
same habitat for very
long.
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Part 2: Species Interactions
Most obvious are Predation and Competition
- antagonistic relationships
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ADD FIG. 3.18 A-C
Three Types of Symbiosis:
• Commensalism - one member benefits, while the
other is neither benefited nor harmed
• Mutualism - both members of the partnership benefit;
• Parasitism - a form of predation where one species
benefits and the other is harmed
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Defensive Mechanisms
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Batesian Mimicry
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Keystone species species that play
essential community
roles (examples:
mycorrhizae, giant
kelp)
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Part 3: Population Dynamics
Exponential growth - the unrestricted increase in
a population (also called the biotic potential of a
population)
Carrying capacity - the maximum number of
individuals of any species that can be supported by
a particular ecosystem on a sustainable basis
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Overshoots and Diebacks
ADD FIG. 3.20
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Population Oscillations
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Growth to a Stable Population
ADD FIG. 3.22
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Environmental Resistance
Environmental resistance - factors that tend to reduce
population growth rates:
• Density-dependent
• - linked to population size
• - disease, lack of food
• Intrinsic
• - attributes of a species
• - slow reproduction
• Density-independent
• - often environmental
• - droughts, floods, habitat
• destruction
• Extrinsic
• - external to a species
• - predators, competitors,
• environmental risks
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Part 4: Community Properties
• Primary productivity - a community's rate of
biomass production, or the conversion of solar
energy into chemical energy stored in living (or
once-living organisms)
• Net primary productivity - primary productivity
minus the energy lost in respiration
• Productivity depends on light levels,
temperature, moisture, and nutrient availability.
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Relative biomass accumulation
of major world ecosystems.
ADD FIG. 3.29
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Abundance and Diversity
Abundance - the number of individuals of a species
in an area
Diversity - the number of different species in an area
• A useful measure of the variety of ecological niches
or genetic variation in a community
• Decreases as we go from the equator towards the
poles
Abundance and diversity depend on total resource
availability in an ecosystem.
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Antarctic
Marine Food
Web
Complexity - the
number of species
at each trophic
level and the
number of trophic
levels in a
community
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Stability and Resilience
Stability - a dynamic equilibrium among the physical
and biological factors in an ecosystem or a
community
Resiliency - the ability to recover from disturbance
Three kinds of stability or resiliency in ecosystems:
• Constancy - lack of fluctuations in composition or
functions
• Inertia - resistance to perturbations
• Renewal - ability to repair damage after disturbance
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Community structure
Distribution of members of a
population in a given space can be:
• Random - individuals live wherever
resources are available
ADD FIG.
3.25 A-C
• Ordered - often the result of
biological competition
• Clustered - individuals of a species
cluster together for protection,
mutual assistance, reproduction, or
to gain access to a particular
environmental resource
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Edges and Boundaries
• Ecotones- the
boundaries
between
adjacent
habitats
• Often rich in
species
diversity
• Example: the
boundary
between a
forest and a
meadow
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Edge vs. Core
Edge effects - the environmental and biotic conditions
at the edge of a habitat
• Temperature, moisture levels, predator species, etc.
• Edge effects associated with habitat fragmentation
are generally detrimental to species diversity.
Core habitat - the interior area of a habitat
• Habitat not impacted by edge effects
• Some species avoid edges and ecotones and prefer
interior environments.
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Part 5: Communities in
Transition
Ecological succession - the process by which
organisms occupy a site and gradually change
environmental conditions by creating soil, shelter,
shade, or increasing humidity
• Primary succession - occurs when a
community begins to develop on a site
previously unoccupied by living organisms
• Secondary succession - occurs when an
existing community is disrupted and a new one
subsequently develops at the site
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Primary
Succession
on Land
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Exotic Species
• Sometimes communities can be completely altered
by the introduction of exotic species.
• Exotic species are often introduced by humans.
• Successful exotics tend to be prolific, opportunistic
species, such as goats, cats, and pigs.
• Many ecologists consider exotic species
invasions the most pressing hazard for biological
communities in the coming century.
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Introduced Species and Community
Change
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