Community Ecology
Community Ecology
Community Ecology
Vocabulary
1. Population A group of individuals of a certain species in a
given area at a given time: blue crabs in the Halifax river
2. Community Interacting groups of populations in an area:
the scrub community on campus
3. Species A group of individuals who can interbreed to
produce fertile, viable offspring: FL panthers
4. Niche The role of an organism in its environment
(multidimensional): nocturnal predator of small mammals in
the forest
5. Habitat Where an organism typically lives: mangrove
swamps
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Community Structure
Consider the spatial distribution of organisms
Community Differences
• Aquatic systems deep ocean, sandy beach, lakes, rivers, wetlands
• Physical structure varies
– Most habitats are mosaics, vegetation patches
– Sharp edges or broad ecotones (transition zones)
– Physical properties differ at edges = edge effect
– Forest edge may be sunnier, drier, warmer
• different species at the edge
• Many wild game species found here
• Edges can fragment habitat vulnerability & barriers
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What is a niche?
• The organisms role in its environment
• How it responds to the distribution of resources
• Many dimensions to it – therefore an n-dimensional
hyper-volume
• No two species can occupy the same niche for any period
of time
• If a niche is vacant organisms will quickly adapt to fill it
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Biodiverse Communities
• Top species rich environments are tropical rainforests, coral
reefs, deep sea, large tropical lakes
• Usually high diversity but low abundance
• Factors for increased diversity
1. Latitude: most diverse near equator
2. Depth: marine communities peak about 2000m
3. Pollution: more pollution less species
On land increases in solar radiation, precipitation, seasonal
variation, decreased elevation
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200 1,000
Species Diversity
Species Diversity
100 100
0 10
90ºN 60 30 0 30ºS 60 80ºN 60 40 20 0
Latitude Latitude
Effects of Latitude
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© 2004 Brooks/Cole – Thomson Learning
25 25
Snails Tube worms
20 20
Species diversity
15 15
10 10
5 5
Coast Deep Sea Coast Deep Sea
0 0
0 2,000 4,000 6,000 0 2,000 4,000 6,000
Effects of Depth
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Nonnative Species
• Also called exotics, aliens, or introduced sp.
Indicator Species
• Mostly species that respond quickly to changes in the
environment
• Birds indicate tropical forest destruction
• Trout indicate pollutant presence in water
• Amphibians are a classic indicator
– Frog decline and deformities
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Keystone Species
Keystone Species II
• Habitat modification
Waste Removal
• Dung beetles – remove bury
and recycle animal waste
• Establish new plants
• Aerate soil
• Reduce disease causing
microorganisms
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Species Interactions
• Interactions may be harmful, beneficial, or have no
effect at all
Intraspecific Competition
• Competition between members of the same species for a
common resource
• Resource: food, space, mates, etc.
• Territoriality
– Organisms patrol or mark an area
– Defend it against others
– Good territories have
o Abundant food, good nesting sites, low predator pop.
– Disadvantage = Energy, Reduce gene pool
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Interspecific Competition
• 2 or more different species involved
• Competing for food, space, sunlight, water, space, nesting
sites or other limited resource
• If resources abundant, they can be shared but in nature they
are always limited.
• If fundamental niches overlap competition
• One of the species must…
1. Migrate if possible
2. Shift feeding habits or behavior = Evolve
3. Suffer a sharp population decline
4. Become extinct
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Connell’s Barnacles
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Methods of competition
1. Interference
• One species limits access of others to a resource,
regardless of its abundance
• Hummingbird territoriality, Desert plant
allelopathy
2. Exploitation
• Species have equal resource access, differ in speed
of use
• Quicker species = more of it & hampers growth,
reproduction and survival of other species
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Allelopathy
Allelopathy is a biological phenomenon by which an
organism produces one or more biochemical that influence
the germination, growth, survival, and reproduction of
other organisms. These biochemicals are known
as allelochemicals and can have beneficial (positive
allelopathy) or detrimental (negative allelopathy) effects
on the target organisms and the community.
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Avoiding Competition
• Resource partitioning = dividing of scarce resources to
species at different
– Times
– Methods of use
– Different locations
• Species occupy realized niche, a small fraction of their
fundamental niches
– Lions vs leopards, hawks vs. owls
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Predation
• Members of one species feed directly on all
or part of a living organism of a different
species
• Individuals predator benefits, prey harmed
• Population prey benefits: take out the
weak, greater resource access, improved
gene pool
• Predator plays important ecological role
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Predation strategies
1. Herbivores – sessile prey, no need to
hurry
Prey defenses
• Camouflage – change color, blend with
environment,
• Chemical warfare – produce chemicals which
are poisonous, irritating, bad smelling or
tasting
• Warning coloration – bright colors advertise
inedibility (mimics take advantage of this)
• Behavioral strategies – Puffing up, mimicking
predators, playing dead, schooling
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Parasitism
• One species feeds on part of another
organism (the host) without killing it
• Specialized form of predation
• Parasite Characteristics
1. Usually smaller than the host
2. Closely associated with host
3. Draws nourishment from & slowly weakens host
4. Rarely kills the host
• Examples = Tapeworms, ticks, fleas, fungi
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Parasites
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Malaria
According to the World Health Organization
there are 300 to 500 million clinical cases of
malaria each year resulting in 1.5 to 2.7
million deaths
Mutualism
• Symbiotic relationship where both species
benefit
• Pollination, Nutrition, Protection are main
benefits
• Not really cooperation, both benefit by
exploiting the other
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Mutualism II
Examples
1. Lichens – fungi & algae living together
food for one, structure for the other
2. Plants and Rhizobium bacteria one
gets sugars the other gets nitrogen
3. Oxpeckers and Rhinos food for one,
less parasites for the other
4. Protists and termites break down
wood for one, nutrients for the other
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Commensalism
• One species benefits the other is
neither harmed nor helped
– Examples
1. Herbs growing in the shade of
trees
2. Birds building nests in trees
3. Epiphytes = “Air plants” which
attach themselves to the trunk
or branches of trees
-they have a solid base to grow
on and better access to
sunlight & rain