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Community structure What structures communities? Biotic & Abiotic factors Are communities predictable or stochastic (random)? • Are communities highly organized or just loose assemblages? – Do communities have a predictable number of trophic levels? – If a disturbance erases a community, will identical species recolonize? Will they have the same interactions with each other? Competing Hypotheses • H1: Communities are stable & integrated with predictable compositions (Clements) – Communities pass through predictable stages of development & species composition – Those stages end in a Climax Community – Determined by climate & species interactions – If disturbed, the same species will arrive & reconstitute the community Climax Competing Hypotheses • H2: Communities are loose, unpredictable, chance assemblages of species – The presence of each species is due to chance – History & abiotic factors determine which species are present – If disturbed, the chance of identical reconstitution is small Climax 1 Climax 2 Climax 3 Climax 4 Climax 5 Climax 6 Species interactions • Bob Paine (UW) • Intertidal ecology • How do communities respond to altered species interactions? – Predatory interaction between Pisaster & Mytilus – What effect does predator removal have on Mytilus populations Biotic interactions do structure communities • Removal of predator leads to: – increased prey densities – decreased species diversity • algae & invertebrates disappear • Mytilus populations explode • Keystone species – Has greater impact on surrounding species than its abundance suggests Historical data • Pollen record suggests that species composition at a given site changes through time (NA). – Some tree species appear and disappear together. – Others appear to come and go independently of each other. – Is community composition static or dynamic? – Is it predictable or dependent on history & chance? More experimental data • Pond communities! • Examined richness & diversity of planktonic species • 12 identical ponds – Same location, filled & sterilized @ same time • Prediction if H1 is correct? • Prediction if H2 is correct? Results • 60 possible species • Ponds contain ~ 34 species • Most species occur in most or all of the ponds, but NO assemblage is identical • Why? – Dispersal ability? – Occupied niches? Disturbance structures communities • An event that removes biomass from a community – Forest fires, disease epidemics, etc. – Produce “vacancies” (unfilled niches) • Components of disturbance (disturbance regime) – – – – Timing since last disturbance Frequency of disturbance Severity Predictability Some disturbances “make” the community • Tree rings mark time • Scars mark fires – In Sierra Nevada mtns, fires are both frequent and predictable – Fire suppression reduced species diversity, understory, soil health & primary productivity – Suppression has given way to tolerance & promotion of small, controlled burns Succession structures communities • Recovery that occurs after disturbance • Primary succession – Occurs after severe disturbance (all organisms & soil removed – Volcanic eruptions, glaciations, floods • Secondary succession – Occurs after mild disturbance (some organisms removed) – Fire, logging • Recovery often follows a predictable sequence, but not always Factors affecting succession 1. Species Traits – – Critical @ early stages of succession Abiotic conditions have strongest influence 2. Types of species interactions – – More important as time-since-disturbance increases Biotic conditions have strongest influence 3. Historical & environmental context – Affects pattern & rate of succession Secondary Succession Sequence Species traits • Early successional species traits: – Small – Good dispersers/colonizers – Short-lived – Adapted to withstand harsh abiotic conditions – High r • Late successional species traits: – Large – Poor dispersers/colonizers – Long-lived – Good long-term competitors for resources (adapted for success in biotic encounters) – Low r Biotic interactions • Existing species influence future colonizers in 3 ways • Facilitation: encourages future colonizers • Tolerance: no effect on future colonizers • Inhibition: Inhibits future colonizers Succession in Glacier Bay • As glaciers retreated, distinct regions of Bay become exposed for recolonization How many successional pathways? • Just 1: Willows, dryas -> alder, cottonwood -> spruce, alder -> Spruce, hemlock Or many? All factors contribute • Species traits – Hemlock requires thick, organically rich soil & shade for seed germination & growth – Perhaps only the oldest sites have those conditions • Species interactions – Alder facilitates spruce, due to N2 fixing bacteria living in alder roots – Alder competes with spruce for light: Spruce are inhibited at first, then overtop & out-compete alder • History & environment – Lower Bay has closer (geographically) sources of late successional species Patterns of Species Diversity • Diversity decreases as distance from Equator increases • Explanation? What determines diversity? – An abiotic factor that varies predictably with latitude? – An abiotic factor that alters speciation, extinction, immigration or emigration? Time since Disturbance • Observation: Tropical regions ice free but higher latitudes were glaciated – H3: Higher latitudes are less species diverse because they’re in an earlier stage of succession – Less time for species interaction & niche partitioning Intermediate Disturbance • Observation: Mid-successional communities have higher species diversity • H4: Regions with moderate disturbances (frequency, severity) contain more species because they will always have a mix of pioneer & late-successional species.