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AP Bio Ch 54 Community Ecology: the study of the interactions among all the populations in an ecosystem. Interactions within a Community Interspecific Interactions include: • • • • Competition (-/-) Predation (+/-) Herbivory (+/-) Symbiosis – Parasitism (+/-) – Mutualism (+/+) – Commensalism (+/0) • Facilitation (+/+) or (+/0) Competition • A contest between individuals for shared resources. (-/-) interaction. • Between species (interspecific) or within a species (intraspecific). • All of an organism's interactions in its environment are known as its Niche • Competition limits an organism's niche. • Fundamental niche: maximum possible niche. • Realized niche: actual niche. Removal of Balanus barnacles demonstrates the difference between the fundamental and realized niche of Chthamalus barnacle Effects of Competition • Competitive Exclusion: When two species have overlapping niches, one will out compete the other. Remember this lab??? Effects of Competition: Resource Partitioning • Competition drives species with overlapping niches to adapt to non-overlapping resource pools. Effects of Competition: Character Displacement • The process by which traits evolve in response to selection to lessen competition. Together, they could be distinguished unequivocally by beak size. Alone the beak size was intermediate in size relative to when the two co-occurred. Predation • One species (the predator) kills and eats the other species (the prey). • +/- interaction. • Predation drives many adaptations. Effects of Predation (Defensive Adaptations) Video Coloration • Cryptic: Camouflage or other coloration that confuses predators Mimicry • Aposematic: Warning coloration, advertising a threat to predators • Mullarian: Two or more harmful species with common predators mimic each other. • Batesian: A harmless species mimics a harmful species. Venomous Coral snake Video Herbivory • One species (the herbivore) eats part of a producer (plant or algae) • +/-interaction • Producers have evolved many adaptions to control herbivory. Symbiosis • Parasitism – The most common – +/– Animation: Very gross! • Mutualism • Commensalism - +/0 – Everyone Wins! – +/+ Facilitation • Species have positive effects on other species in the community without being in a symbiotic relationship. • +/+ or 0/+ interaction. • Examples: – Lichens – Beavers Disturbances to the Community Structure • Disturbances are things that remove organisms or change recourses availability…they include: – Human Activities – Storms – Fire – Drought – Floods Disturbances are not always bad! The intermediate disturbance hypothesis states that moderate levels of disturbance can foster greater species diversity. Ecological Succession Transitions in Species Composition Primary Succession • Life invading a region that was virtually lifeless and were soil has not formed yet. • Ex: Newly formed volcanic island and a landslide exposing new rock Secondary Succession • Occurs when a disturbance clears the existing community but the soil is left intact. • Ex: Wild fires and abandoned farms Energy Transfer in a Community • Energy is transferred through the Food Chain! – Trophic Levels show the feeding relationships in a community. – Energy flows from the SUN to the producers, who are the 1st level of any food chain. – Food chains tend to have no more than 4 or 5 tropic levels due to the inefficiency of energy transfer. – Decomposers/detritivores connect at every level. Primary Productivity • This is the amount of chemical energy produced from light energy in photosynthesis. • GPP: Gross meaning the TOTAL primary productivity in an ecosystem. • NPP: Net meaning what energy is left after the plants use it for respiration. • Formula: NPP = GPP-respiration Energy Pyramid Where does this energy go?? • Energy is lost through the cost of living: • Cellular Respiration 50% • Waste production/removal 33% • Growth 17% ***only this energy can move on to the next level in the food chain A. B. C. D. 14,000 180 35 100 Other Ecological Pyramids Biomass Pyramid Pyramid of Numbers The species in a community with the highest biomass or are the most abundant are called the Trophic Structure and Species Diversity • A community with an even species abundance is more diverse than one that has a few abundant species and the others are rare. • Keystone species hold such an important role in their niche that they have control over the structure of the community. • Categories of Keystone Species Keystone Species Animation Biochemical Cycles • You NEED to know how changes in these cycles could change an ecosystem. • Important note! – Matter Cycles – Energy does not! Biodiversity and Threats • Remember a more biodiversity means are more stable community. – Diversity can refer to… • genetic diversity • species diversity • ecosystem diversity • Threats include: • • • • Habitat Loss Introduction of new species Over Harvesting Global Changes Human Interventions for the GOOD! • Bioremediation – Using bacteria, fungi, or plants to clean up pollutants. • Bioaugmentation – Introducing a species to add needed nutrients to an area.