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Introduction-to/Review-of Ecology I. Population Ecology A. Human population B. Simple population models II. Community Ecology A. Community parameters B. Interactions between populations III. Ecosystems Ecology IV. Conservation Biology ECOLOGY: the study of the interactions of organisms with one another and with the physical and chemical environment. Ecology is as easy as: L(s, t ) L(s, t ) L L(s, t ) m( x) (s) L(s, t ) P(t ) D(s) L(s, t ) t s Population: a group of the same species living in a specific habitat SIZE: number of individuals http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4BbkQiQyaYc&feature=PlayList&p=A756CBD99E1CF7A3&index=0&playnext=1 Tanton, J.H. 1995. End of the Migration Epoch. Social Contract 4:1-28. http://www.ibiblio.org/lunarbin/worldpop Ecology is... • The scientific study of interactions among biotic and abiotic factors that determine the distribution and abundance of organisms DENSITY: number of individuals per unit of area or volume Source: Wikipedia DISTRIBUTION: general pattern in which the population members are dispersed through its habitat Source: Science Population Models 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Create differential equation for population growth rate. State assumptions of the model. Solve for equilibrium. Determine if equilibria are stable. Integrate equation to provide predictions for population size. Relax assumptions. ASSUMPTIONS ASSUMPTIONS 1. 2. No immigration or emigration. Constant b and d (model is deterministic). ASSUMPTIONS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. No immigration or emigration. Constant b and d (model is deterministic). No genetic structure. No age or size structure. Continuous growth without time lags. Lutz, W., Sanderson, W., and S. Scherb. 2001. The end of world population growth. Nature 412, 543545. ALEE EFFECT Carrying capacity Verhulst 1838 ASSUMPTIONS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. No immigration or emigration. Constant r (model is deterministic). No genetic structure. No age or size structure. Continuous growth without time lags. ASSUMPTIONS 6. Constant carrying capacity. 7. Linear density dependence. Figure 9.20 Faster than Exponential (Part 1) Figure 9.20 Faster than Exponential AGE STRUCTURE: relative proportions of individuals of each age--especially with respect to reproductive years. Introduction-to/Review-of Ecology & Evo I. II. Population Ecology Community Ecology A. Community parameters B. Interactions between populations III. Ecosystems Ecoloy IV. Conservation Biology V. An extremely brief introduction to evolution NEUTRALISM NEUTRALISM MUTUALISM Batesian bodies Extrafloral nectary Swollen thorns Acacia cornigera COMMENSALISM epiphyte AMENSALISM Juglans sp. lianas COMPETITION HERBIVORY Seed predators Fruit Borers Parasites Social Parasites Parasitoids APOSEMATIC COLORATION Community: an association of interacting populations of different species living in a particular habitat. Endophytic Invertebrate Community associated with P. cenocladum Arthropods Nematodes Annelids Crustaceans •• 77 shrubs housed 84,147 organisms, > 50 spp. •• Community structure: the composite of important parameters that give a habitat its ecological distinction, such as: diversity, number of trophic levels, dominant interactions, ability to persist Trophic levels: levels of organization determined by what the members eat or produce ENEMIES A G C D HERBIVORES B H Troubles and enhancements…. Omnivory IGP Nonlinear trophic structure Functional trophic levels F PLANT CHEMISTRY PLANT BIOMASS I J E RESOURCES Mean number of families and morphospecies Species richness: total number of species in a community. 50 40 Families Morphospecies 30 20 10 0 Temperatg Tropical Latitude Continental shelf bivalves Stehli et al. (Geol. Soc. Am. Bull. 78:455) Insects in Texan vs. Costa Rican deciduous forests Diversity Relative abundance: the number of individuals of each species Diversity: the species richness, abundance and dispersion in a given region or system USDA Photo by: Anson Eaglin Conservation Biology: a field that utilizes population biology and ecological theory (or hypotheses) to guide management of populations, communities, ecosystems, or the biosphere. Evolution 1. 2. 3. 4. Origin of species Microevolution Macroevolution Evolutionary Ecology ‘Nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution’ Dobzhansky, 1973 1. Species were not created in their present forms; they have evolved from ancestral species. 2. One proposed mechanism is NATURAL SELECTION. http://www.nature.com/nature/newspdf/evolutiongems.pdf http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2008/12/evolutionexampl FACT 1: All species have such great potential fertility that their population size would increase exponentially if all individuals that are born would reproduce successfully. FACT 2: Most populations are normally stable in size. FACT 3: Natural resources are limited. INFERENCE 1: Production of more individuals than the environment can support leads to a struggle for existence; only a fraction of offspring survive. FACT 4: Individuals of a population vary extensively in their characteristics. FACT 5: Much of this variation is heritable. INFERENCE 2: Survival in the struggle for existence is not random, but depends in part on the heriditary constitution of the surviving individuals. INFERENCE 3: This unequal ability of individuals to survive and reproduce will lead to a gradual change in a population, with favorable characteristics accumulating over the generations. NATURAL SELECTION: An evolutionary theory which postulates the survival and reproduction of the best adapted forms whose characteristics arise as random variations ADAPTATION: adjustment to environmental conditions through the long term process of natural selection acting on the genotype. POPULATION: A group of interbreeding individuals belonging to a particular species and sharing a common geographic area. MICROEVOLUTION – change in allele frequency over time. MACROEVOLUTION – changes over longer periods of time, including speciation and larger phylogenetic changes. Mechanisms of Evolution Concept 6.2: Natural selection, genetic drift, and gene flow can cause allele frequencies in a population to change over time. Four key processes influence evolution: • Mutation • Natural selection • Genetic drift • Gene flow To study history one must know in advance that one is attempting something fundamentally impossible, yet necessary and highly important. To study history means submitting to chaos and nevertheless retaining faith in order and meaning. It is a very serious task, young man [or woman], and possibly a tragic one. Herman Hesse Biogeography Fossil record Comparative anatomy Comparative embryology Molecular biology Systematics Definitions Systematics: the scientific study of the kinds and diversity of organisms and of any and all relationships among them. Taxonomy: the theoretical study of classification (ordering of organisms into groups) its bases, principles, procedures, and rules. Simpson, G.G. 1961. Principles of Animal Taxonomy. Columbia University Press, New York. Definitions homology: similarity of a feature in two or more organisms due to common ancestry pleisomorphy: primitive feature; = ancestral, generalized apomorphy: derived feature; = advanced, specialized parsimony: of competing hypotheses choice of the simpler Definitions monophyletic: contains all and only the descendents of a unique common ancestor polyphyletic: contains descendents of more than one ancestor paraphyletic: contains some, but not all, of the descendents of a single ancestor sister groups: two monophyletic groups that together form a monophyletic group Adaptive radiation: Evolutionary divergence of members of a single phyletic line into a series of rather different niches or adaptive zones (Mayr 1963). •Lack of competitors facilitates adaptive radiation •Predators may prevent radiation •Occupation of a new adaptive zone is followed by a radical increase in rates of evolution and speciation and major types develop