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Community Ecology Ch. 20. (20-1) Species Interactions 5 major types –Predation –Competition –Parasitism –Mutualism –Commensalism.

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Presentation on theme: "Community Ecology Ch. 20. (20-1) Species Interactions 5 major types –Predation –Competition –Parasitism –Mutualism –Commensalism."— Presentation transcript:

1 Community Ecology Ch. 20

2 (20-1) Species Interactions 5 major types –Predation –Competition –Parasitism –Mutualism –Commensalism

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4 Predation 1 species benefits (predator) while the other species gets eaten (prey) Adaptations: –Mimicry –Secondary compounds –Physical abilities

5 Predation (cont.) Mimicry: harmless species resembles a poisonous or distasteful species –Ex: king snake mimics poisonous coral snake Secondary Chemicals: poisonous or bad-tasting chemicals made from metabolism –Ex: poison ivy/oak

6 Competition Caused by niche overlap of 2 or more species Can lead to: –Competitive exclusion –Character displacement –Resource partitioning

7 Competitive Exclusion 1 species is eliminated due to competition for same limited resource –2 barnacle species

8 Character Displacement Evolution of anatomical differences that reduce competition –Darwin’s finches

9 Resource Partitioning Species reduce their use of shared resource thus decrease competition –Warbler feeding

10 Symbiosis Relationship b/w different species living in close contact w/ each other 3 types: 1. Parasitism 2. Mutualism 3. Commensalism

11 Parasitism 1 species benefits (parasite) while the other species is harmed (host) 2 types: –Ectoparasite: external Ticks, fleas, leeches –Endoparasite: internal Tapeworms

12 Mutualism Both species benefit from one another –Pollinators & plants

13 Commensalism 1 species benefits while other is not affected –Cattle egrets & Cape buffalo

14 (20-2) Properties of Communities 3 community characteristics: –Richness: # of species it contains –Diversity: how common a species is –Stability: resistance to change Richness improves stability

15 Species Richness Patterns Communities closer to the equator have more species Species-area effect: larger areas usually contain more species than smaller areas

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17 Succession Gradual, sequential re-growth of species in an area

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19 2 Types of Succession Primary: development of a community in an area that never had life before –Bare rock, sand dune –Extremely slow process Secondary: change of community makeup after a disturbance –Farming, flood, fire –~100 yrs to return

20 Key Terms Pioneer species: predominate in early succession –Small, fast-growing, & fast- reproducing –Ex: weeds, crabgrass Climax community: community make-up that will last for a long time –Stable end result of succession


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