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Chapter 5 Biodiversity, Species Interactions, and Population Control

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1 Chapter 5 Biodiversity, Species Interactions, and Population Control

2 Core Case Study: Southern Sea Otters: Are They Back from the Brink of Extinction?
Habitat Hunted: early 1900s Partial recovery Why care about sea otters? Ethics Tourism dollars Keystone species

3 Southern Sea Otter Fig. 5-1a, p. 104

4 5-1 How Do Species Interact?
Concept 5-1 Five types of species interactions—competition, predation, parasitism, mutualism, and commensalism—affect the resource use and population sizes of the species in an ecosystem.

5 Species Interact in Five Major Ways
Interspecific Competition Predation Parasitism Mutualism Commensalism 5

6 Most Species Compete with One Another for Certain Resources
For limited resources Ecological niche for exploiting resources Some niches overlap 6

7 Some Species Evolve Ways to Share Resources
Resource partitioning Using only parts of resource Using at different times Using in different ways

8 Resource Partitioning Among Warblers
Fig. 5-2, p. 106 8

9 Specialist Species of Honeycreepers
Fig. 5-3, p. 107 9

10 Most Consumer Species Feed on Live Organisms of Other Species (1)
Predators may capture prey by Walking Swimming Flying Pursuit and ambush Camouflage Chemical warfare Luring 10

11 Predator-Prey Relationships
Figure 5.17: This graph tracks the exponential growth, overshoot, and population crash of reindeer introduced onto the small Bering Sea island of St. Paul. When 26 reindeer (24 of them female) were introduced in 1910, lichens, mosses, and other food sources were plentiful. By 1935, the herd size had soared to 2,000, overshooting the island’s carrying capacity. This led to a population crash, when the herd size plummeted to only 8 reindeer by Question: Why do you think the sizes of some populations level off while others such as the reindeer in this example exceed their carrying capacities and crash? Fig. 5-4, p. 107 11

12 Most Consumer Species Feed on Live Organisms of Other Species (2)
Prey may avoid capture by Run, swim, fly Protection: shells, bark, thorns Camouflage Chemical warfare Warning coloration Mimicry Deceptive looks Deceptive behavior

13 Some Ways Prey Species Avoid Their Predators
Fig. 5-5, p. 109 13

14 (a) Span worm (b) Wandering leaf insect (c) Bombardier beetle (d) Foul-tasting monarch butterfly (e) Poison dart frog (f) Viceroy butterfly mimics monarch butterfly Figure 5.1: An endangered southern sea otter in Monterey Bay, California (USA), uses a stone to crack the shell of a clam (left). It lives in a giant kelp bed (right). Scientific studies indicate that the otters act as a keystone species in a kelp forest system by helping to control the populations of sea urchins and other kelp-eating species. (g) Hind wings of Io moth resemble eyes of a much larger animal. (h) When touched, snake caterpillar changes shape to look like head of snake. Stepped Art Fig. 5-5, p. 109 14

15 Science Focus: Threats to Kelp Forests
Kelp forests: biologically diverse marine habitat Major threats to kelp forests Sea urchins Pollution from water run-off Global warming 15

16 Purple Sea Urchin Fig. 5-A, p. 108 16

17 Predator and Prey Interactions Can Drive Each Other’s Evolution
Intense natural selection pressures between predator and prey populations Coevolution Interact over a long period of time Bats and moths: echolocation of bats and sensitive hearing of moths 17

18 Coevolution: A Langohrfledermaus Bat Hunting a Moth
Fig. 5-6, p. 110 18

19 Some Species Feed off Other Species by Living on or in Them
Parasitism Parasite is usually much smaller than the host Parasite rarely kills the host Parasite-host interaction may lead to coevolution

20 Parasitism: Trout with Blood-Sucking Sea Lamprey
Figure 5.5: These prey species have developed specialized ways to avoid their predators: (a, b) camouflage, (c–e) chemical warfare, (d, e) warning coloration, (f) mimicry, (g) deceptive looks, and (h) deceptive behavior. Fig. 5-7, p. 110 20

21 In Some Interactions, Both Species Benefit
Mutualism Nutrition and protection relationship Gut inhabitant mutualism Not cooperation: it’s mutual exploitation 21

22 Mutualism: Hummingbird and Flower
Fig. 5-8, p. 110 22

23 Mutualism: Oxpeckers Clean Rhinoceros; Anemones Protect and Feed Clownfish
Fig. 5-9, p. 111 23

24 In Some Interactions, One Species Benefits and the Other Is Not Harmed
Commensalism Epiphytes Birds nesting in trees 24

25 Commensalism: Bromiliad Roots on Tree Trunk Without Harming Tree
Fig. 5-10, p. 111 25

26 1. Figure 5.10: In an example of commensalism, this bromeliad—an epiphyte, or air plant—in Brazil’s Atlantic tropical rain forest roots on the trunk of a tree, rather than in soil, without penetrating or harming the tree. In this interaction, the epiphyte gains access to sunlight, water, and nutrients from the tree’s debris; the tree apparently remains unharmed and gains no benefit. 26

27 2.

28 3.

29 4.

30 5. bobtail squid and bioluminscent bacteria

31 6. Nile Crocodile (Crocodylus niloticus) with Egyptian Plover or

32

33 1.5-2 What Limits the Growth of Populations?
Concept 5-2 No population can continue to grow indefinitely because of limitations on resources and because of competition among species for those resources.

34 2.Most Populations Live Together in Clumps or Patches (1)
Population: group of interbreeding individuals of the same species Population distribution Clumping Uniform dispersion Random dispersion

35 3. Why clumping? Species tend to cluster where resources are available
Groups have a better chance of finding clumped resources Protects some animals from predators Packs allow some to get prey

36 Generalized Dispersion Patterns
Fig. 5-12, p. 112

37 4. Populations Can Grow, Shrink, or Remain Stable (1)
Population size governed by Births Deaths Immigration Emigration Population change = (births + immigration) – (deaths + emigration) crisis/412396/

38

39 5. Populations Can Grow, Shrink, or Remain Stable (2)
Age structure Pre-reproductive age Reproductive age Post-reproductive age Mostly made up of reproductive stage? Mostly made up of past reproductive stage? Mostly made up of evenly distributed groups? How does child survival rate affects population growth? 39

40 6. Some Factors Can Limit Population Size
Range of tolerance Range of chemical and physical conditions that must be maintained for populations of a particular species to stay alive and grow, develop and function

41 Generally speaking, warm freshwater fish populations need dissolved oxygen concentrations of not less that 4.0 milligrams/liter (mg/l), while cold water fish species require not less than 5.0 mg/l dissolved oxygen.

42

43 Limiting factor principle
Too much or too little of any physical or chemical factor can limit or prevent growth of a population, even if all other factors are at or near the optimal range of tolerance Precipitation Nutrients Sunlight, etc Important limiting factors in aquatic zones: Temperature Sunlight Nutrient availability Oxygen salinity

44 Trout Tolerance of Temperature
Fig. 5-13, p. 113

45 No Population Can Grow Indefinitely: J-Curves and S-Curves (1)
Size of populations controlled by limiting factors: Light Water Space Nutrients Exposure to too many competitors, predators or infectious diseases

46 No Population Can Grow Indefinitely: J-Curves and S-Curves (2)
Environmental resistance All factors that act to limit the growth of a population Environmental resistance determines Carrying Capacity. It makes it sound kind of as if it was the environment vs populations. :P Carrying capacity (K) Maximum population a given habitat can sustain 46

47 8. No Population Can Grow Indefinitely: J-Curves and S-Curves (3)
Exponential growth Starts slowly, then accelerates to carrying capacity when meets environmental resistance Logistic growth Decreased population growth rate as population size reaches carrying capacity Figure 5.12: This diagram illustrates three general dispersion patterns for populations. Clumps (a) are the most common dispersion pattern, mostly because resources such as grass and water are usually found in patches. Where such resources are scarce, uniform dispersion (b) is more common. Where they are plentiful, a random dispersion (c) is more likely. Question: Why do you think elephants live in clumps or groups? 47

48 Logistic Growth of Sheep in Tasmania
Fig. 5-15, p. 115 48

49 Case Study: Exploding White-Tailed Deer Population in the U.S.
1900: deer habitat destruction and uncontrolled hunting 1920s–1930s: laws to protect the deer Current population explosion for deer Spread Lyme disease Deer-vehicle accidents Eating garden plants and shrubs Ways to control the deer population

50 Mature Male White-Tailed Deer
Fig. 5-16, p. 115 50

51 When a Population Exceeds Its Habitat’s Carrying Capacity, Its Population Can Crash
A population exceeds the area’s carrying capacity Reproductive time lag may lead to overshoot Population crash Damage may reduce area’s carrying capacity 51

52 10. Exponential Growth, Overshoot, and Population Crash of a Reindeer
For some, the transition between exponential and logistic is not so smooth Reproduction time lag Fig. 5-17, p. 116

53 Species Have Different Reproductive Patterns (1)
Some species (r pattern) Many, usually small, offspring Little or no parental care Massive deaths of offspring Insects, bacteria, algae

54 Species Have Different Reproductive Patterns (2)
Other species (K pattern) Reproduce later in life Small number of offspring with long life spans Young offspring grow inside mother Long time to maturity Protected by parents, and potentially groups Humans Elephants Most organisms are somewhere in between.

55 12. Under Some Circumstances Population Density Affects Population Size
Density-dependent population controls Predation Parasitism Infectious disease Competition for resources Density –independent populaltion controls

56 13. Several Different Types of Population Change Occur in Nature
Stable: fluctuate slightly above and bellow carrying capacity. Irruptive Population surge, followed by crash. Linked to seasonal changes in weather or nutrition Cyclic fluctuations, boom-and-bust cycles Top-down population regulation (through predation) Bottom-up population regulation (depend on resources) that is, bottom-up controls arise from near the bottom of the food web, below the trophic level in question. Irregular 56

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59 Population Cycles for the Snowshoe Hare and Canada Lynx
Fig. 5-18, p. 118 59

60 Science Focus: Why Do California’s Sea Otters Face an Uncertain Future?
Low biotic potential Prey for orcas Cat parasites Thorny-headed worms Toxic algae blooms PCBs and other toxins Oil spills

61 Population Size of Southern Sea Otters Off the Coast of So
Population Size of Southern Sea Otters Off the Coast of So. California (U.S.) Fig. 5-B, p. 114 61

62 Humans Are Not Exempt from Nature’s Population Controls
Ireland Potato crop in 1845 Bubonic plague Fourteenth century AIDS Global epidemic 62

63 5-3 How Do Communities and Ecosystems Respond to Changing Environmental Conditions?
Concept 5-3 The structure and species composition of communities and ecosystems change in response to changing environmental conditions through a process called ecological succession. Figure 5.18: This graph represents the population cycles for the snowshoe hare and the Canadian lynx. At one time, scientists believed these curves provided evidence that these predator and prey populations regulated one another. More recent research suggests that the periodic swings in the hare population are caused by a combination of top-down population control—through predation by lynx and other predators—and bottom-up population control, in which changes in the availability of the food supply for hares help to determine their population size, which in turn helps to determine the lynx population size. (Data from D. A. MacLulich) 63

64 Communities and Ecosystems Change over Time: Ecological Succession
Natural ecological restoration Primary succession Secondary succession 64

65 Some Ecosystems Start from Scratch: Primary Succession
No soil in a terrestrial system No bottom sediment in an aquatic system Takes hundreds to thousands of years Need to build up soils/sediments to provide necessary nutrients 65

66 Primary Ecological Succession
Fig. 5-19, p. 119 66

67 Figure 5.19: Primary ecological succession: Over almost a thousand years, these plant communities developed, starting on bare rock exposed by a retreating glacier on Isle Royal, Michigan (USA) in northern Lake Superior. The details of this process vary from one site to another. Question: What are two ways in which lichens, mosses, and plants might get started growing on bare rock? Balsam fir, paper birch, and white spruce forest community Jack pine, black spruce, and aspen Heath mat Small herbs and shrubs Lichens and mosses Exposed rocks Time Fig. 5-19, p. 119 67

68 paper birch, and white spruce forest community Jack pine,
Balsam fir, paper birch, and white spruce forest community Jack pine, black spruce, and aspen Heath mat Small herbs and shrubs Lichens and mosses Exposed rocks Time Stepped Art Fig. 5-19, p. 119 68

69 Some Ecosystems Do Not Have to Start from Scratch: Secondary Succession (1)
Some soil remains in a terrestrial system Some bottom sediment remains in an aquatic system Ecosystem has been Disturbed Removed Destroyed 69

70 Mature oak and hickory forest
Young pine forest with developing understory of oak and hickory trees Shrubs and small pine seedlings Perennial weeds and grasses Annual weeds Time Stepped Art Fig. 5-20, p. 120

71 Secondary Ecological Succession in Yellowstone Following the 1998 Fire
Fig. 5-21, p. 120 71

72 Primary and secondary succession
Tend to increase biodiversity Increase species richness and interactions among species Primary and secondary succession can be interrupted by Fires Hurricanes Clear-cutting of forests Plowing of grasslands Invasion by nonnative species 72

73 Succession Doesn’t Follow a Predictable Path
Traditional view Balance of nature and a climax community Current view Ever-changing mosaic of patches of vegetation Mature late-successional ecosystems are not in state of equilibrium State of continual disturbance and change

74 Living Systems Are Sustained through Constant Change
Inertia, persistence Ability of a living system to survive moderate disturbances Resilience Ability of a living system to be restored through secondary succession after a moderate disturbance

75 Three Big Ideas Certain interactions among species affect their use of resources and their population sizes. There are always limits to population growth in nature. Changes in environmental conditions cause communities and ecosystems to gradually alter their species composition and population sizes (ecological succession).


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