* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Ecological and Evolutionary Principles
Unified neutral theory of biodiversity wikipedia , lookup
Introduced species wikipedia , lookup
Biodiversity action plan wikipedia , lookup
Occupancy–abundance relationship wikipedia , lookup
Overexploitation wikipedia , lookup
Island restoration wikipedia , lookup
Latitudinal gradients in species diversity wikipedia , lookup
Habitat conservation wikipedia , lookup
Ecological fitting wikipedia , lookup
Molecular ecology wikipedia , lookup
3 Ecological and Evolutionary Principles Notes for Marine Biology: Function, Biodiversity, Ecology by Jeffrey S. Levinton ©Jeffrey S. Levinton 2001 The Ecological Hierarchy • • • • • Biosphere Ecosystem Community Population Individual Ecological Processes • • • • • • Competition Predation Disturbance Parasitism Larval Dispersal Facilitation Interactions Between Individuals • • • • • +- Territoriality +- Predation + - Parasitism ++ Mutualism + 0 Commensalism PREDATION TYPES: Stationary: e.g., anemones Mobile: (a) sit and wait and attack e.g., (b) pursuit e.g., Shark Effects of Predation OVEREXPLOITATION - prey population collapse, occasional predatorprey cycles PREY ESCAPE (a) rapid recovery rate (b) defenses (c) predators limited by other factors (e.g., octopus by den sites) (d) refuges (space, time) Predation Example: Stationary Predator Anthopleura xanthogrammica, anemone living in tide pools of Pacific coast. Feeds on larger invertebrates that fall into its tentacles, such as mussels. Crypsis: A marine flatfish with chromatophores that allows it to match its sedimentary background (fish outlined with arrows) Inducible defenses A bryozoan makes spines when placed in contact with a predatory nudibranch. A hydrozoan, Hydractinia, produces defense stolons armed with nematocysts when in contact with another colony. Inducible Defense: The conical (right) and bent (left) forms of the acorn barnacle Chthamalus anisopoma. The animal develops the bent form if predatory snails are present. Inducible Defense 2: Often has a cost. Barnacle with bent form does not feed as well. Therefore, it is a good strategy to make the defense optional. Escape behavior: The bivalve Lima hians can swim from predators by rapidly clapping its valves and expelling water in jets through the hinge. It also has mantle tentacles that secrete a sticky distasteful material that discourages predators. Optimal Predator Models • Diet breadth - food scarce --> increase breadth Optimal Predator Models 2 Time spent in a patch - greater the distance between patches --> spend more time in a given patch Optimal Predator Models 3 Optimal size of prey --> intermediate is usually preferred, yields the most food per unit time (larger prey good in reward but takes relatively long to eat, smaller prey fast to east but food per prey item is small) Energy reward of a mussel as function of size Preference of crab for different mussel sizes Shore crab Carcinus maenas feeding upon the mussel Mytilus edulis. Parasitism • Parasites evolve to reduce damage to host • Commonly involve complex life cycles with more than one host • Parasites may invade specific tissues, such as reproductive tissue of the host Invasion of the parasitic rhizocephalan barnacle Sacculina into the body of a crab Complex life cycle found in a trematode parasite living in several marine animal hosts Mutualism: Cleaner wrasse removes ectoparasites from a number of species of fish that visit localized “cleaning stations” on a coral reef. Fish (b) is a mimic species that actually attacks fish that would normally be a “client” of the cleaner wrasse. Commensalism Commensal crab and fish live in this burrow of Urechis caupo Construction of a Population Model dN/dT = f (N,M,R,I,E) N = population size M = mortality R = reproduction I = immigration E = emigration M is a function of physical environment, competition, predation, etc. R function of physical environment, resources (e.g., food) Example of Population Model Barnacles: What parameters matter the most? dN/dT = f (N, I, M) I is larval settlement M a function of larval-adult interactions, overgrowth, predation Note R doesn't matter if planktonic larvae mainly go elsewhere Survivors Planktonic larval stage Post-settling stage Mortality pattern expected for a species with a planktonic larva. Note higher mortality rate of larval stage. Modes of Population Change Exponential Growth Logistic growth Random change Metapopulation • Definition: A group of interconnected subpopulations among which there is movement of individuals Metapopulation 2 • Definition: A group of interconnected subpopulations among which there is movement of individuals • Some subpopulations are sources of individuals that move to other subpopulations Metapopulation 3 • Definition: A group of interconnected subpopulations among which there is movement of individuals • Some subpopulations are sources of individuals that move to other subpopulations • Other subpopulations are sinks, which means that they may receive individuals from other subpopulations, but they are not sources (example, only juveniles disperse, but the subpopulation in question does not have individuals that reproduce successfully. Metapopulation - interconnected group of subpopulations Spatial Distribution of Individuals Random Uniform Aggregated COMPETITION LIMITING RESOURCES (1) Renewable - e.g., copepods exploiting diatom population (2) Non-renewable - space on a rock exploited by long-lived sessile species Limiting Resources Space is a limiting resource to these colonies of colonial ascidians Outcomes of Competition COMPETITIVE DISPLACEMENT - one species outcompetes another for a resource COEXISTENCE - two species exploit different resources, some process allows two species to exploit same resource without displacement Interference vs. Exploitation Competition Interference - one species overgrows another, interspecific territoriality, agonistic interaction Exploitation - one species eats a prey resource more efficiently than another (also called scramble competition) Styles of Competitive Interaction: Hierarchy of competitive dominance vs. network Indirect Effects of Competition Note: Effectively, B and C beat up on each other, A and B beat up on each other, interaction between A and C is very weak; B suffers the most, A and C are not as badly affected. CONSEQUENCES OF COMPETITION Extinction: usually local, habitat shift Coexistence: "niche shift" - character displacement evolution of shift in morphology or behavior Variable Environment: Unstable, but can permit coexistence EVIDENCE FOR INTERSPECIFIC COMPETITION 1. EXPERIMENTAL MANIPULATIONS remove hypothetical competitor (e.g., barnacles) 2. LABORATORY DEMONSTRATIONS e.g., growth experiments with one and multispecies combinations disadvantage is lack of field conditions 3. DISPLACEMENTS IN NATURE - e.g., increase of resource exploitation in estuaries. Problem - other factors could be at work 4. CONTIGUITY OF RESOURCE USE e.g., "adjacent niches" - could arise by evolutionary change EVIDENCE FOR INTERSPECIFIC COMPETITION 2 1. EXPERIMENTAL MANIPULATIONS remove hypothetical competitor (e.g., barnacles) 2. LABORATORY DEMONSTRATIONS e.g., growth experiments with one and multispecies combinations disadvantage is lack of field conditions 3. DISPLACEMENTS IN NATURE - e.g., increase of resource exploitation in estuaries. Problem - other factors could be at work 4. CONTIGUITY OF RESOURCE USE e.g., "adjacent niches" - could arise by evolutionary change EVIDENCE FOR INTERSPECIFIC COMPETITION 3 1. EXPERIMENTAL MANIPULATIONS remove hypothetical competitor (e.g., barnacles) 2. LABORATORY DEMONSTRATIONS e.g., growth experiments with one and multispecies combinations disadvantage is lack of field conditions 3. DISPLACEMENTS IN NATURE - e.g., increase of resource exploitation in estuaries. Problem - other factors could be at work 4. CONTIGUITY OF RESOURCE USE e.g., "adjacent niches" - could arise by evolutionary change EVIDENCE FOR INTERSPECIFIC COMPETITION 4 1. EXPERIMENTAL MANIPULATIONS remove hypothetical competitor (e.g., barnacles) 2. LABORATORY DEMONSTRATIONS e.g., growth experiments with one and multispecies combinations disadvantage is lack of field conditions 3. DISPLACEMENTS IN NATURE - e.g., increase of resource exploitation in estuaries. Problem - other factors could be at work 4. CONTIGUITY OF RESOURCE USE e.g., "adjacent niches" - could arise by evolutionary change RELATION OF PREDATION TO COMPETITION Predation suppresses competitive success of superior species over inferior species, especially if predator prefers competitively superior prey DISTURBANCE Usually refers to physical change in environment that causes mortality or affects reproduction (storm, ice scour). SPATIAL SCALE OF DISTURBANCE Habitat wide (storms, ice, oil spill) Localized in patches (horeshoe crabs, logs) EFFECT CAN BE SIMILAR TO PREDATION Suppresses effect of competition (Intermediate disturbance-predation effect) Intermediate DisturbancePredation Hypothesis Low levels of disturbance or predation: Competitive dominant species takes over Intermediate levels: Promotes coexistence, more species present High levels: most individuals removed, reduces total number of species SUCCESSION Predictable order of appearance and dominance of species, usually following a disturbance. SOME MODES OF SUCCESSION (1) Early species modify habitat, which facilitates colonization by later species (2) Late species exclude colonization of early species (3) Early species hold space until death, then are replaced by late species, which do the same Some Interactions in Succession Genetic Variation, Species • Marine species have genetic variation • Variation found in populations, also frequency of genes varies over space, within a species • Species are identified by presence of reproductive isolation Parent-Offspring correlation indicates genetic basis for variation in trait Cline: A regular change in gene frequencies over a geographic space (here, latitude). Example: latitudinal change in frequency of the A’ allele in the blenny Anoplarchus purpurescens, in Puget Sound, Washington Sibling Species in the Sea Closely related species that are reproductively isolated but very similar in form, to the point that they cannot be identified without sophisticated (usually molecular) markers. Larvae of 5 species of the polychaete sibling species complex Capitella capitata Evolutionary Tree: established by grouping species with shared characters. Leads to a hierarchy that can be plotted as a tree. The End