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STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]

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Community Ecology Chapter 15
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Page 1: STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]

Community Ecology

Chapter 15

Page 2: STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]

Community ecology

• A community is

• Interspecific interactions

– classified according to effect on population concerned

Page 3: STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]

Interspecific interactions• Competition: -/-

• Mutualism: +/+

• Predation/herbivory: +/-

• Parasite/pathogen: +/-

Page 4: STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]

Each organism has a niche

• Ecological niche: a multidimensional description of a species; its way of living

• The more similar 2 niches are, the more intense the competition for resources

Page 5: STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]

When niches overlap• Competitive exclusion

• OR• Resource partitioning

• Both of these result in a reduction or removal of competition

• Competition seems to be indirect, not head-to-head; both species trying for same resource, one is just a bit better at getting it

Page 6: STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]

When niches overlap

Page 7: STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]

Key properties to a community

• Prevalent vegetation• Species diversity• Response to disturbance

Page 8: STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]

Vegetation & species diversity

• The more diverse the vegetation, the more diverse the population of animal species

• The more diverse the community, the more resistant it is to the negative effect of pathogens

Page 9: STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]

Diversity defined by 2 components

• Species richness

• Relative abundance

Page 10: STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]

Species richness & relative abundance together

determine community diversity

Page 11: STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]

Keystone species impact diversity• A keystone species greatly

influences which other species are present

• If a keystone species is removed from community, the composition changes drastically

Page 12: STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]

Community response to disturbance

• What is a disturbance?

• Not always negative; small scale disturbances can contribute to species diversity

• Succession is the change in species composition over time following a disturbance

Page 13: STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]

Primary succession• Starts in lifeless area without even soil

– 1st life forms are autotrophic bacteria– photosynthetic mosses & lichen– grasses & shrubs– small trees– larger, longer-living species that eventually

become prevalent vegetation• Primary succession can take 100s or 1000s

of years

Page 14: STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]

Primary succession

Page 15: STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]

Primary succession

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Secondary succession

• Occurs when disturbance destroyed existing community but left soil intact

• 1st grasses & shrubs followed by larger vegetation. . . – because animals depend on plants, animal

community goes through succession too; ex. diversity of birds increases as trees replace shrubs

• Secondary succession can happen in decades or even a few years

Page 17: STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]

Secondary succession

Page 18: STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]
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More about succession• Succession can lead to a climax community

– the specific species in a climax community is dependent on the temperature & rainfall

• The most diverse communities are at some intermittent step of succession

Page 20: STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]

Summary• Community ecology is the study of

interspecies interactions• Interactions can be classified as beneficial or

harmful• Interactions shape the community structure• The presence or absence of some species

play a larger role in the community structure than others (keystone species)

• How communities respond to disturbance help define the community

Page 21: STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]
Page 22: STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]

Predation• An interaction where one species eats

another, including herbivory– the predator benefits; the prey or plant don’t

• One of the most important forces shaping the composition & abundance of species in a community

• Defenses against predation– physical– behavioral

Page 23: STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]

Physical prey defenses• Mechanical defenses

– spines, quills, armor, claws, etc.

• Chemical toxins– make prey poisonous or

unpalatable– used by many plants;

can be harmful to one species and harmless to another

– some animals also use this defense

Page 24: STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]

Physical prey defenses, cont.

• Warning coloration– danger! poisonous!

& mimics

• Camouflage– patterns of

coloration that allow an organism to blend into its environment

Page 25: STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]

Behavioral prey defenses• Hiding or escaping

– requires vigilance to avoid predators– safety in numbers

• Alarm calling– many species, especially birds &

mammals, warn others of danger• Fighting back

– some species mob the predator– spitting, vomiting, eliminating waste,

dropping tails, eviscerating, etc.

Page 26: STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]

Parasitism• Parasitism: a symbiotic relationship where one

species benefits (the parasite) & one is harmed (the host)

• Two types of parasites– ectoparasites live outside the host’s body

• lice, leeches, ticks, fleas– endoparasites live inside the host’s body

• tapeworms, roundworms, Plasmodium

• Different from other forms of predation – the parasite is much smaller then the host – parasites stay in contact with the host for long periods

of time, weakening the host as it uses the host’s resources

Page 27: STU Ch 15 Communities [Read-Only]

Positive interspecies interactions

• Mutualism: everyone benefits– both species gain & neither is

harmed– common in virtually every

community• honeybees & flowers; cleaner fish &

the “dirty” fish

• Commensalism: one species benefits & the other neither benefits or is harmed– cattle egrets & livestock


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