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Why are there so many species? Interactions between species 1. Competition(-/-) 2. Symbiosis(+/+) 3. predation – Parasitism(+/ -) 1 – 3 a f fe c t s evo l ut i on, p e rs i s te nc e o f s p e c i e s, and overall diversity of life Competitive Exclusion Principle The American gray Squirrel vs the British red squirrel http://www.britishredsquirrel.org/ Red squirrel – hazelnuts Gray squirrel - acorns Niches: How Species Coexist - Flour beetle(Tribolium) experiments – Fig. 7.10 p.130 - Ecological niche and habitat – knowledge is helpful in assessing impact of development or of changes in land use - Measuring niches – Hutchinsonian niche – described as the set of all environmental conditions under which a species can persist and carry out its life functions - See fig. 7.11 – flatworm’s fundamental temperature niche vs realized temperature niche Symbiosis Beneficial to both organisms Ex) bacteria in our large intestine, bacteria in rumen of reindeer Obligate symbionts Predation and Parasitism Predation – one organism feeds on another Parasitism – one organism lives off of another a moderately grazed pasture has more species of plants than an ungrazed one Environmental Factors That Influence Diversity See Table 7.2 p. 133 – Factors that tend to increase vs factors that tend to decrease diversity Biogeography – the large-scale geographic pattern in the distribution of species Why Preserve Biodiversity? See list of values on p. 135 How are we protecting our resources? http://evolution.berkeley.edu/evosite/relevance/III C1Why.shtml http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/46602078/ns/toda y-today_people/t/doomsday-vault-holds-seedscould-save-world/#.T3KonGDqrbr