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CHAPTER 53 COMMUNITY ECOLOGY I. EARLY HYPOTHESES OF COMMUNITY STRUCTURE SPECIES DIVERSITY WITHIN A COMMUNITY: AN ASSEMBLAGE OF SPECIES LIVING CLOSE ENOUGH TOGETHER FOR POTENTIAL INTERACTION, INCLUDES BOTH THE SPECIES RICHNESS (NUMBER OF SPECIES PRESENT) AND THE RELATIVE ABUNDANCE OF EACH SPECIES. II. INTERACTIONS BETWEEN POPULATIONS OF DIFFERENT SPECIES A. INTERSPECIFIC INTERACTIONS CAN BE STRONG SELECTION FACTORS IN EVOLUTION COEVOLUTION: RECIPROCAL INTERACTIONS BETWEEN TWO SPECIES THAT RESULT IN A SERIES OF ADAPTATIONS AND COUNTERADAPTATIONS SECONDARY COMPOUNDS: TOXIC CHEMICALS PRODUCED IN PLANTS TO DISCOURAGE HERBIVORES. CAMOUFLAGE: ENABLES AN ANIMAL TO BLEND WITH ITS SORROUNDINGS. APOSEMATIC COLORATION: CONSPICOUS PATTERN THAT WARNS PREDATORS. MIMICRY: AN ANIMAL BEARS SUPERFICIAL RESEMBLANCE TO AN UNPALATABLE OR HARMFUL MODEL. MULLERIAN MIMICRY: SEVERAL ANIMALS BATESIAN MIMICRY: A DEFENSELESS ANIMAL B. INTERSPECIFIC INTERACTIONS MAY HAVE POSITIVE, NEGATIVE, OR NEUTRAL EFFECTS ON A POPULATION'S DENSITY THESE INTERACTIONS CAN BE REPRESENTED BY PAIRS OF SYMBOLS (+, -, AND 0) INDICATING THE IDEALIZED EFFECT OF THE RELATIONSHIP ON EACH OF THE TWO INTERACTING SPECIES. C. PREDATION AND PARASITISM ARE (+ /-) INTERACTIONS: PREDATION REFERS TO INTERACTIONS IN WHICH ANIMALS FEED ON OTHER ORGANISMS. PARASITISM IS A TYPE OF PREDATION IN WHICH A PARASITE LIVES ON OR IN A HOST , DERIVING NOURISHMENT FROM IT BUT USUALLY NOT KILLING IT OUTRIGHT. D. INTERSPECIFIC COMPETITIONS ARE (- / - ) INTERACTIONS: INTERFERENCE COMPETITION: WHEN POPULATIONS OF DIFFERENT SPECIES IN A COMMUNITY USE SIMILAR LIMITING RESOURCES, THEY MAY FIGHT OVER RESOURCES. THE COMPETITIVE EXCLUSION PRINCIPLE: STATES THAT TWO SPECIES CANNOT COEXIST IN THE SAME COMMUNITY IF THEIR NICHES ARE IDENTICAL. INTERSPECIES COMPETITION LEADS TO EXTINCTION OF THE WEAKER COMPETITOR OR ADAPTATION OF ONE SPECIES TO A NEW NICHE; THUS, IT CANNOT OPERATE FOR LONG. EXPLOITATIVE COMPETITION: EACH MAY SIMPLY REDUCE THE RESOURCES AVAILABLE TO THE OTHER RESOURCE PARTITIONING: SPECIES PURSUE SLIGHTLY DIFFERENT NICHES TO MINIMIZE COMPETITION CHARACTER DISPLACEMENT (NICHE SHIFT): PHYSICAL CHANGES IN A SPECIES TO ACCOMMODATE RESOURCE PARTITIONING. THE ECOLOGICAL NICHE: THE SUM TOTAL OF THE ORGANISM’S USE OF THE BIOTIC AND ABIOTIC RESOURCES IN ITS ENVIRONMENT. FUNDAMENTAL NICHE: THE NICHE THAT AN ORGANISM OCCUPIES IN THE ABSENCE OF COMPETING SPECIES. REALIZED NICHE: THE NICHE THAT AN ORGANISM OCCUPIES IN THE PRESENCE OF COMPETING SPECIES. COMPETITION IN LABORATORY POPULATIONS OF PARAMECIUM E. COMMENSALISM AND MUTUALISM ARE (+ / 0) AND (+ / +) INTERACTIONS, RESPECTIVELY SYMBIOSIS: IN WHICH A HOST AND A SYMBIONT MAINTAIN A CLOSE ASSOCIATION (PARASITISM, COMMENSUALISM, MUTUALISM) COMMENSALISM: REFERS TO SYMBIOTIC INTERACTIONS IN WHICH ONE SPECIES BENEFITS AND THE OTHER IS NOT AFFECTED EX. BIRDS BUILDING NESTS IN TREES MUTUALISM: REFERS TO SYMBIOTIC INTERACTIONS IN WHICH BOTH SPECIES BENEFIT. EX. THE INTERACTIONS OF POLLINATING ANIMALS WITH FLOWERING PLANTS. III. INTERSPECIFIC INTERACTIONS AND COMMUNITY STRUCTURE THE TROPHIC STRUCTURE OF A COMMUNITY REFERS TO ALL OF THE FEEDING RELATIONSHIPS IN THE COMMUNITY. FOOD-WEB ANALYSIS EMPHASIZES THE COMPLEXITY OF TROPHIC CONNECTIONS IN A COMMUNITY. A. PREDATORS CAN ALTER COMMUNITY STRUCTURE BY MODERATING COMPETITION AMONG PREY SPECIES PREDATORS MAY REDUCE OR INCREASE DIVERSITY IN A COMMUNITY. KEYSTONE SPECIES HAVE A DISPROPORTIONATELY STRONG IMPACT ON COMMUNITY STRUCTURE RELATIVE TO THEIR OWN ABUNDANCE. KEYSTONE PREDATORS INCREASE SPECIES DIVERSITY BY LIMITING THE DENSITIES OF THE MOST COMPETITIVE SPECIES IN A COMMUNITY, ALLOWING MORE SPECIES TO COEXIST. B. INTERSPECIFIC COMPETITION INFLUENCES POPULATIONS OF MANY SPECIES AND CAN AFFECT COMMUNITY STRUCTURE EXOTIC SPECIES INTRODUCED INTO A COMMUNITY OFTEN OUTCOMPETE NATIVE SPECIES, BUT COMPETING SPECIES SOMETIMES COEXIST AT REDUCED DENSITIES. COMPETITION MAY BE IMPORTANT IN STRUCTURING MANY COMMUNITIES, SERVING TO REGULATE RELATIVE ABUNDANCE AND PERHAPS SPECIES RICHNESS. IV. DISTURBANCE AND NONEQUILIBRIUM A. HUMANS ARE THE MOST WIDESPREAD AGENTS OF DISTURBANCE AMONG ALL ANIMALS, HUMANS CREATE THE GREATEST DISTURBANCES IN COMMUNITIES, USUALLY REDUCING SPECIES DIVERSTITY. B. SUCCESSION IS A PROCESS OF CHANGE THAT RESULTS FROM DISTURBANCE IN COMMUNITIES SUCCESSION: INVOLVES CHANGES IN SPECIES (NOTED BY PLANTS) COMPOSITION OF A COMMUNITY OVER ECOLOGICAL TIME. PRIMARY SUCCESSION: OCCURS WHERE NO SOIL PREVIOUSLY EXISTED; SECONDARY SUCCESSION: BEGINS IN AN AREA WHERE SOIL REMAINS AFTER A DISTURBANCE CLIMAX COMMUNITY: FINAL SUCCESSIONAL STAGE OF CONSTANT SPECIES COMPOSITION. PIONEER SPECIES: PLANTS AND ANIMALS THAT ARE FIRST TO COLONIZE A NEWLY EXPOSED HABITAT