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Warm Up #8 The Giant Panda, which lives in China and eats only bamboo, is on the verge of extinction due to a variety of factors. How are humans contributing to the Panda’s extinction? How are other animals contributing to the Panda’s extinction? How is the Panda contributing to its own extinction?
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Animal Populations
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Laying the Land Niche – conditions a species needs in order to survive and reproduce in an ecosystem ▫Conditions = physical (temperature) and chemical (salinity, acidity) IMPORTANT to study: ▫Human impact effects ▫Species interaction ▫Extinction rates
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The Lockett Niche In our class, 34 desks Fundamental Niche – full range of resources and conditions a species can use ▫You can sit at ANY desk Realized Niche – the part of the fundamental niche a species TENDS to occupy ▫The desk you normally sit at ▫Why? Competition for resources
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Why the Panda is killing itself Generalist species – can survive in a large variety of niches (flies, cockroaches, mice, etc) Specialist species – can only survive in a very particular niche/environment (Panda) Less tolerant = less likely you are to survive
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The Grossness of the Cockroach Literally eats anything (including electrical cords and glue) Can breed anywhere (except polar regions) 1 cockroach 10 million babies in one year. One species can survive frozen for 48 hours Can survive nuclear bomb
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Other threats to the Cuteness Non-Native Species – species introduced to a niche by humans Competition for resources (food, light, shelter, etc) Non-Native species usually more Generalist (can tolerate more) WHAT’S A PANDA TO DO??
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Quick Quiz #4 In a hypothetical world where all things are possible, you are now a cute Panda and want to survive: You are an extreme specialist species, how would you change that? If a non-native species came into your niche, how would you adapt?
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Adaptation to a Competitor
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Adaptation Strategy Plan A Scenario: Non-native species thrive in cold and moderate temperatures 1.Directional Selection – reproductive rates better on one side of curve than other Solution: You learn to love the heat
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Adaptation Strategy Plan B Scenario: Non-native species loves either really hot or really cold climates 2.Stabilizing Selection – highest reproduction = center of curve Solution: You, as a cute panda, adapt to living in moderate climates
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Adaptation Plan C Scenario: Non-native species thrives in moderate temperatures 3.Disruptive Selection – high reproduction at BOTH extremes Solution: You either get a jacket or embrace sweating
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Warm Up #5 Scenario: You are officially a honey-badger…and you just don’t care. Use your prior knowledge of how bad-ass the honey-badger is to answer the following questions: Would you classify the honey-badger as a specialist species or a generalist species? Why would you say this? If the honey-badger was a non-native species, would any other species stand a chance? Why? Say you try to stand against the honey-badger’s awesomeness. You discover the honey-badger only eats small and medium sized larva. Show, on a bell curve, how you would adapt, showing the type of selection as well.
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Avoiding Competition
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Review…with some new Directional – shifting toward ONE extreme Stabilizing – shifting toward the MIDDLE Disruptive – shifting toward BOTH extremes This is character displacement – physical/behavioral changes for more stuff
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Competition is Drama To avoid drama… Resource Partitioning – dividing resources amongst competing species Use at different times, different ways, different places Example: Diurnal vs. Nocturnal animals (hawks vs. owls) “I WANT TO WATCH FOOTBALL” “I WANT TO WATCH DESPERATE HOUSEWIVES!!”
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More Cowardly Avoidance (but also kind of BA) Camouflage – resembling the abiotic factors around it Chemical warfare – using poisonous/odorous chemicals Coloration – certain colors = danger Mimicking – Looking like something more dangerous
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Predator-Prey Relationship Negative Feedback Loop 1.Predators kill prey (obviously) 2.More prey die = less food for predators 3.Predators die (less food) 4.Prey start to repopulate, cycle repeats
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A Predator-Prey Fad Diet Parasitism – one species (parasite) gets nourishment by living on another species (host) Smaller than host, weakens host, rarely kills it Ex. Virus Tapeworm Diet – ingest tapeworm, eats contents of stomach (along with actual stomach)
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Symbiotic Relationships [less gross] Symbiotic Relationship – interaction between two species Mutualism – both species benefit (+, +) Normally 1 species is protected, the other gets food Commensalism – one species benefits, the other is unaffected (+, 0) Shark (0) and Pilot Fish (+)
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Quick Quiz # 3 Describe what resource partitioning is, and give a real life example. How is mimicking an effective way to avoid being eaten? Why do you think a parasite rarely kills its host?
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