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Community Ecology Chapter 8 • • • • • • • Community Ecology A biological community consists of interacting species, usually living within a defined area. A community lies between the spatial scales of a population and a biome. Community Ecology is the study of how a given ecosystem functions. Matter is conserved Matter = all material in the universe that has mass and occupies space • The law of conservation of matter: matter can be transformed from one type of substance into others • But it cannot be destroyed or created Because the amount of matter stays constant • It is recycled in nutrient cycles and ecosystems • We cannot simply wish pollution and waste away Energy fundamentals Energy = the capacity to change the position, physical composition, or temperature of matter • Involved in physical, chemical, biological processes Potential energy = energy of position • Nuclear, mechanical energy Kinetic energy = energy of motion • Thermal, light, sound, electrical, subatomic particles Energy is conserved but changes in quality • • First law of thermodynamics = energy can change forms, but cannot be created or destroyed Second law of thermodynamics = energy changes from a more-ordered to a less-ordered state • Entropy = an increasing state of disorder Second Law of Thermodynamics • The Flow of Energy Through Ecosystems Producers, Consumers, and Decomposers The Path of Energy Flow • Food Chains • Trophic levels: Feeding levels in a food chain • Food Webs – Trophic Pyramid The Path of Energy Flow • Ecological Pyramids • Ecological Pyramids • The Path of Energy Flow Example: Thermodynamics in Action The Path of Energy Flow The Path of Energy Flow • Desert Biomass Pyramid • The Path of Energy Flow Temperate Forest Biomass Pyramid • • • • Levels of biological diversity (biodiversity) Humans are reducing Earth’s diversity of life Biodiversity = variety of life at all levels of organization • Species diversity • Genetic diversity • Population and community diversity Species diversity Species diversity = the number or variety of species in a particular region • Richness = the number of species • Evenness (relative abundance) = the similarity in numbers between species Speciation adds to species richness • Extinction reduces species richness Some Species Have Major Influences on Community Composition • Keystone species influence ecological communities more than would be expected from their abundance. Keystone species • • Types of Ecological/Species Interactions Focus: nature and consequences of interactions among species in a community. 5 Species interactions: • competition • predation/parasitism • commensalism • • mutualism (amensalism) Competition: Seeking and Using Scarce Resources • Organisms using the same limited resources are competitors. • intraspecific (within sp.) • interspecific (between/among spp.) Ecological Succession