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Species Diversity and Succession

Species Diversity and Succession. The Dynamics of Community Structure. Competition. When two or more individuals attempt to use an essential, common resource. May be intraspecific (within a species) or interspecific (between species). Effects of Competition on Realized Niches.

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Species Diversity and Succession

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  1. Species Diversity and Succession The Dynamics of Community Structure

  2. Competition • When two or more individuals attempt to use an essential, common resource. • May be intraspecific (within a species) or interspecific (between species).

  3. Effects of Competition on Realized Niches The Competitive Exclusion Principle states that completely equivalent competitors cannot coexist; two species cannot have the same niche.

  4. Species 2 outcompetes species 1 and restricts the niche of species 1 Effect of Competition on Realized Niche

  5. Amoeba

  6. Species “1”

  7. Species “2”

  8. Species “1” + “2”

  9. Resource Partitioning • Resource partitioning is reduced competition by evolving differences in resource use. Resource partitioning occurs when natural selection acts to favor individuals of species that reduce competition by becoming more specialized.

  10. Warblers as examples of Resource Partitioning - each species spends at least 50% of foraging time in designated areas

  11. Coevolution • Coevolution is reciprocal evolution. That is, an interdependent evolution of two or more species that occurs as a result of their interactions (suggests the importance of interactions for the structure of biotic communities - if one species is lost, the co-evolved species will be affected). • For predator/prey = “Arms race” (i/.e., The evolution of predator strategies to catch prey, and the responding prey strategies to escape predators.).

  12. Evidence of Coevolution Each of the following either improves the chance of catching prey or avoiding predator. Predators: Rapid pursuit Ambush Prey: Speed Crypsis (camouflage) Aposematic coloration - warning Distasteful nature - Monarch butterflies Dangerous nature - wasps, bees Mimicry Group living

  13. Aposematic Coloration

  14. Cryptic Coloration

  15. Dangerous Nature

  16. Distasteful Nature

  17. Mimicry

  18. Mimicry

  19. Herbivory (i.e., when organisms eat plants - plants are not usually killed) • Herbivore: • Avoidance of chemical defenses: choice of tissue. • Specialized adaptations: horse teeth and skull. • Use of plant chemicals: sequestering chemicals; digesting chemicals • Plant: • Physical Defenses: Thorns/spines/prickles, toughness (grass) • Chemical Defenses: digestibility reducers, toxins • Recruitment of Predators: extra-floral nectaries, food bodies.

  20. Plant Toxins

  21. Mutualism Is an interaction between two species where both benefit (often co-evolved relationship) Examples: Lichens: fungi/algae (or cyanobacteria). Protected environment in exchange for photosynthates. Mycorrhizae: plants/fungi make connections with the roots of plants. Get photosynthates in return for nutrients, especially phosphorous. Rhizobium bacteria/some plants: nitrogen/photosynthates

  22. Lichens

  23. Rhizobium bacteria

  24. Commensalism Interaction wherein one species benefits, while the other is unaffected. Examples: Cattle and cattle egrets Eyelash mites

  25. Cattle Egrets

  26. Eyelash Mites

  27. Benefits from Diversity Utilitarian Food Drugs and Medicines Aesthetic Recreation/tourism Ecological Community Stability Moral

  28. Diverse Food Sources

  29. Drugs and Medicines

  30. Drugs and Medicines

  31. Recreation/Tourism

  32. Determinants of Species Diversity 1. Abundance of ecological niches 2. Dominance of individual species 3. Environmental stress of habitat

  33. Effect of Abundance of Niches

  34. Succession • Succession is the directional changes in the community through time. Changes occur because species alter the soil, shelter, humidity, etc. It results from the differential ability of organisms to colonize disturbed areas and from environmental changes. • Move from pioneer community through successional communities to a climax community.

  35. Primary Succession Primary succession is at a new, sterile site. Conditions that may cause primary succession are glaciers, winds, fires, or volcanoes producing glacial moraines, dunes, and lava fields. The key point is that the soil has been disturbed.

  36. Indiana Dunes

  37. Glacial Moraine

  38. Mount Saint Helens

  39. Mount Saint Helens Lake Obscurity 10 miles N

  40. Secondary Succession Secondary succession is recovery of a disturbed site back to a climax community. The soil remains relatively intact (e.g., cause of secondary succession is cutting oak trees from a forest)

  41. Progression

  42. Examples of Progression

  43. Lichens and Mosses of Early Succession

  44. Plants of Middle Succession

  45. Timeline for Hardwood Climax Forest

  46. Succession Often is the Result of Human Intervention

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