Community Ecology - Tuscaloosa County High School
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Transcript Community Ecology - Tuscaloosa County High School
Community Ecology
Chapter 52
Community:
All the populations in an ecosystem
Difficult to study
Can be large or small
Have a wide range of interactions
Are rarely isolated
Community structure and
functioning
Niche vs. habitat
Niche = role
Habitat = local environment (part of an
organism’s niche)
Fundamental niche – all the basic parts of
the ecosystem that it could use; reduced by
competition with other species
Realized niche – the parts of the ecosystem
that the organism actually uses
Interspecific competition
Two or more species attempting to use the
same limited resource
Competitive exclusion: two species cannot
share the same resource at the same time
– one will be excluded
Resource partitioning – competing species each
use only part of the available resource so they
can coexist
Character displacement – a physical change in
an organism’s appearance as a result of
competition reduction
Predator/Prey
Coevolution – each one changes in
response to the other
Predator strategies: pursuit vs.
ambush
Prey strategies:
Plants – physical or chemical defenses
Animals – physical, mechanical,
chemical, cryptic coloration, mimicry
Symbiosis
Mutualism – both benefited
Nitrogen-fixing bacteria and legumes
Commensalism – one benefits, the
other is neither harmed nor helped
Tree and epiphyte
Parasitism – one harms the other
Tapeworm and host
Keystone species
A crucial species – determines the
characteristics of the rest of the
community
Many times are the top predator in
the ecosystem
Without their presence the shape of
the entire community changes
Dominant species
Also greatly impact their community
– but because of their high number
Forests – trees, coral reef - coral