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Download LECTURE 13: POPULATION ECOLOGY & ECOSYSTEM
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POPULATION ECOLOGY & ECOSYSTEM Food out Oxygen out 1. Carbon dioxide in 2. Light in 3. Water in 1 Population Ecology 2 Ecology is the study of interactions among organisms and their environment • Not concerned with individuals • Populations - same area, same time • Population ecology - looks at the dynamics of populations that are similar between species 3 • Population density - number of individuals of a given species in a specific area at a given time • Range - geographic area or limit of a population • Dispersion - frequency or patterns of individuals within a range: • uniform • random • clumped 4 Population change • Growth rate = births - deaths +immigration - emigration • Doubling rate (time it takes for a population to double) = 0.7/growth rate (see page 911) • Biotic potential = maximum rate of population growth given ideal circumstances 5 Limits on growth • Environmental resistance - combination of the limiting factors and effects • Limiting Factors - any resource or requirement that acts to limit population when in short supply • Carrying capacity (K) - the greatest population that can be maintained indefinitely by a given system or place 6 Density dependent factors • As population increases the rate of growth is slowed by density dependent factors either by increasing the death rate or decreasing the birth rate • predation, disease, intraspecifc (within a species) competition and interspecific competition 7 Density independent factors • Weather events • Natural disasters (=bencana alam) 8 Survival tactics - reproduction • r strategies - (r = growth rate) - small body size, large brood, short life span, may be opportunistic and found in disturbed or variable environments • K strategies - (K=carrying capacity) large body small brood, long life, care for young, constant or stable environments 9 Human population growth • 1800 human population reaches 1 billion • 1930 - in 130 years 2 billion • 1960 - in 30 years 3 billion • 1975 - in 15 years 4 billion • 1987 - in 12 years 5 billion • 1999 - in 12 years 6 billion 10 What are the density dependent limits to growth acting on human population? 11 Demographic transition • Preindustrial stage - high birth and death rates - slow population growth • transitional stage - lower death rate but birth rate remains high - rapid population growth • industrial stage - birth rate declines rate of growth slows • post industrial stage - low birth and death rates 12 Communities of organisms • Producers - autotrophs • Consumers - heterotrophs • primary and secondary • Decomposers - heterotrophs 13 Producers in an Ecosystem Categories of Organism in an ecosystem • Autotrophs – self-nourished species (e.g. plants) • Heterotrophs – other-nourished species (humans and animals) 1. Producers: Green Plants responsible for photosynthesis and the release of energy into an ecosystem. 14 Consumers and Decomposers 2. Consumers a) Primary Consumers - Herbivores b) Secondary Consumers – Carnivores c) Tertiary Consumers - Carnivores d) Multiple-level Consumers - Omnivores 3. a) Detritivores –e.g. crab (kepiting), vulture (burung hering), termites (rayap) b) Decomposers – e.g. fungi and bacteria 15 No organism lives in isolation. Every living thing is part of a community. • Predation – pursuit (=mengejar) and ambush (menyerang) • Defenses (=bertahan) – camouflage (=menyamar), chemical defense, mimicry - (batesian mimicry or mullerian mimicry) 16 Interactions among species in an Ecosystem Plants compete amongst themselves for: 1. water, 2. nutrients 3. sunlight and 4. space Animals compete over 1. food, 2. water, 3. mating and 4. territory 2 main types of relationships – Predation – one species (the predator) feeds on the other (prey) e.g. cat and mouse – Symbiosis – species live in an intimate association with each other 17 Types of symbiotic relations • Parasitism - one species feeds on another (the host) and may kill it. • Mutualism – both parties benefit equally from the relationship (flowers and butterflies) • Commensalism – the relationship benefits one species but neither helps nor harms the other 18 Mutualism • A symbiotic relationship • both partners benefit – rhizobium bacteria and plants – pilot fish and sharks (=ikan hiu)? 19 Commensalism • One benefits , the other is neither harmed (=dirugikan) nor helped – epiphytes – sea ducks and sting rays (=ikan pari) 20 Parasitism • Parasite and host • pathogen - parasite that causes disease 21 Niche • The ecological role of an organism is its niche • fundamental niche - potential niche • realized niche - actual • interspecific competition leads to competitive exclusion - absolute overlap cannot exist in nature 22 Diversity in communities • Isolated or places with harsh (=keras/kasar) environments have less diversity • edge effect - diversity is usually greatest at the margins • old communities (tropical rainforests) tend to be more diverse than new communities (Canadian shield, artic) 23 Succession • Primary succession - change in species composition over time in a habitat not previously inhabited by organisms • Pioneer community - first community to appear • Secondary succession - change in species composition over time in a habitat already modified by previous organisms • Climax community 24 Ecosystems and Environment 25 Biogeochemical cycles • All materials flow through the environment over time - materials cycle through the environment • Comprise processes through which elements that sustain life (water, carbon, phosphorus and nitrogen) are continuously made available to living organisms. • Nitrogen cycle • Hydrological cycle • Carbon cycle • Phosphorus cycle 26 Most plants depend on bacteria to supply nitrogen 27 The Hydrological Cycle 28 The Carbon Cycle 29 Phosphorus Cycle • Phosphorus is the key to energy in living organisms, for it is phosphorus that moves energy from ATP to another molecule, driving an enzymatic reaction, or cellular transport. Phosphorus is also the glue that holds DNA together, binding deoxyribose sugars together, forming the backbone of the DNA molecule. Phosphorus does the same job in RNA. 30 Rocks In some cases, phosphorous will travel to a lake, and settle on the bottom. There, it may turn into sedimentary rocks, limestone, to be released millions of years later. So sedimentary rocks acts like a back, conserving much of the phosphorus for future eons. 31 Interruptions in an Ecosystem Causes: a) Natural causes – volcanic eruptions b) Human causes – e.g. construction, agriculture, mining, etc. List some of the consequences that can result from an abrupt interruption in the smooth functioning of an ecosystem? 32 What lessons can we learn from the way a natural ecosystem operates? • Natural ecosystems gain resources, use it and dispose of wastes through recycling. • Ecosystems sustain themselves by running on Solar Energy which is exceedingly abundant, nonpolluting, constant and long lasting. • Far less of Carnivores can be supported by each ecosystem. Many would soon face extinction (=kepunahan) • Every species in a community play an important role in the sustenance (=makanan) of the ecosystem 33 Energy • Energy flows through the environment • Sunlight to chlorophyll to photosynthesis to sugars to plant biomass to…. • Food chains - energy passes from one organism to another - it is a one way tripenergy passed through the environment in a linear fashion- unlike materials 34 Food chains • Trophic levels • Available energy and biomass decrease at each trophic level • Gross primary productivity - rate at which energy is captured and stored in plant tissues • Net primary productivity - energy after plant’s requirements 35 The Food Chain • A food chain or food web is represented by a sequence of organisms through which energy and nutrients flow from one organism to another. • A major step in the transfer of energy through the food chain is termed as a Trophic level – Primary consumers – First trophic level – Secondary consumers - Second trophic level – Tertiary Consumers - Third trophic level • The amount of usable energy in the food chain decreases as we move down the trophic level 36 An example of a marine food chain Phytoplankton is the first level of marine food chain Zooplanktons are eaten by krill and other Small fish which are all eaten in turn by Big fish, including penguins, seals and whales. The marine food chain continues when these big fishes are eaten by Mammals like polar bears 37 A marine food chain A marine food chain • • • • • Polar bear - 5 Seal (anjing laut) - 4 Cod - 3 Krill - 2 Algae - 1 38 A terrestrial-based food chain A Terrestrial food chain • • • • Hawk … Snake eaten by hawk Frog eaten by snake Grasshopper eaten by frog 39 • The path of energy from one feeding level to another. (chain reaction) • Which direction is the energy flow? 40 What is missing from the food web? 41 Tertiary Consumer Secondary Consumer Primary Consumer Decomposer 42 Food Pyramid 43 Energy Flow • Photosynthesis explains how energy from the sun is captured by green plants and used to make food. • Most of this energy is used to carry on the plant's life activities. • The rest of the energy is passed on as food to the next level of the food chain. 44 Impact of pesticides (i.e., DDT) on the species of an ecosystem 45 Major ecosystems • Biomes - large distinct ecosystem – – – – – – Tundra (=padang lumut) boreal forest (=hutan cemara) temperate rainforest temperate deciduous forest temperate grasslands Chaparral (=vegetasi xerophyta /tanaman tahan kering) – Deserts (=daerah dengan curah hujan kurang) – Savanna (=padang rumput dengan pohon yang bertebaran) – tropical rainforests 46 Factors Affecting Ecosystems • • • • • Soil Available Water Temperature Sunlight Abiotic factors will determine biotic factors – Climates (sunlight, temperature and rainfall) will determine which types of vegetation can exist which will determine what type of animals can exist. 47 Soil • pH of soil determines which plants grow best. • Soil Layers – Litter - the upper layer of soil, composed mainly of partially decomposed leaves or grasses – Topsoil - the soil layer beneath the litter, composed of small particles of rock mixed with humus – Humus - decaying plant and animal matter – Subsoil - the soil layer beneath the topsoil, usually containing more rock particles and less organic matter than the topsoil – Bedrock - the layer beneath the soil, composed of rock 48 Available Water • The amount of available water is determined by the amount and type of precipitation. • Amounts of rainfall determined by distance form equator, mountains ranges ocean and wind currents. • The amount of available water will determine the type of vegetation that can exist 49 Temperature • Plants and animals must be well adapted to the temperatures that exist within their ecosystems. – Chinophobes – snow haters (ex. Geese) – Chinoeuphores – snow adaptors (ex. Snowshoe hare) – Chinophiles – snow lovers (ex. Polar bears) • Temperature also influences rates of evaporation which can influence the amount of available water. 50 Plant Adapted for Specific Habitats • Xerophytes – plants that live in the desert biome • Epiphytes – plants that are not rooted in soil but grow directly on other plants 51 Aquatic ecosystems • Lakes and ponds (=danau dan kolam) – littoral zones - nearest to shore (=tepi) – limnetic zones - open water – profundal zone (=tempat yang paling dalam) - no light • Marine (=laut) – Intertidal (= bagian pantai yang terkena pasang surut) - very productive – pelagic - open ocean – euphotic - light is present (100 m) – neritic - 100 m to 200 m – oceanic - no light 52 Stratification in water • In summer warm layers on top, colder at the bottom, separated by thermocline • in fall, water turns over and some mixing between layers occurs • in winter cold at top, warmer at bottom • in spring another turnover! • Spring turnover stimulates algae growth... 53 Environmental effects • living factors in the environment affect the species that are present like temperature, amount of rainfall, predation, availability of food, and population size. As a result, organisms may evolve. Group Discussion: Discuss each environmental effect and possible outcomes 54 How do organisms evolve? • by adapting to their environments, two or more organisms evolve together. • To "make the best of" where they live, organisms make use of other organisms by eating them, living on or in them, and/or building a "partnership" with them. 55 Predation • describes an interaction where a predator organism feeds on another living organism or organisms known as prey (=mangsa). 56 Habitats 57 • A habitat is the place where living things live. • It is more than just a home it includes the whole surrounding area. • The habitat provides the animal or plant with food or shelter. 58 People and their habitats People can live all over the world. 59 We can do this because we are able to build homes for different conditions. 60 Also we can change our clothes to best suit the temperature around us. Animal skin and fur act as insulators and keep heat in. White clothes reflect the heat 61 Animals and plants • Most plants and animals are specially adapted to survive in a particular habitat. • They have developed special features to suit the demands of their environment. • This is called adaption. 62 Some examples of adaption 63 All birds have similar characteristics. But many water birds have features that are different from those birds live on land. Webbed feet for swimming Long legs are good for wading These wings act as flippers 64 Some animals are camouflaged to blend in with their surroundings. This lion blends in well with the grassy background. This keeps them safe as it is more difficult for other animals to see them or catch them for food. These zebra could easily be mistaken for bushes from a distance. This lizards skin is so similar to the rock colour. 65 Aquatic animals have streamlined bodies to move more easliy in the water. 66 Camels store water in their humps. Snakes glide across the hot sands and can shed their skin These animals have adapted to live in the hot climate of the desert. Ostriches have long eyelashes to keep out the sand. 67 These animals have adapted to be more suited to cold temperatures. Layers of fat keep the seals body warm, and small ears stop heat loss. Polar bears are kept warm by their body fat. Deer have a warm layer of fur. 68 Even plants have adapted to their habitats. The cactus has fleshy stems that store water. Dandelions seeds are easily dispersed. The water provides support for this lily as it has less developed roots to hold it 69 in place. Animals and plants help each other Plants and animals depend on each other for a wide variety of things. Protection Nests to reproduce Food Shelter Gas exchange70 The Earth has many different environments, varying in temperature, moisture, light, and many other factors. Each of these habitats has distinct life forms living in it, forming complex communities of interdependent organisms. A complex community of plants and animals in a region and a climate is called a biome. 71 Some of the biomes on Earth include: •Desert - very dry, either hot or cold •Tundra - cool, treeless, and dry •Chaparral or scrub - coastal area with hot, dry summers and mild, cool, rainy winters •Taiga or Coniferous Forest - cool and dry, with coniferous trees •Temperate Deciduous Forest - cool and rainy, with deciduous trees •Grassland - Windy, partly dry sea of grass with few trees, including tropical savanna, prairie, steppe, pampas, etc. •Mountina biomes: there are a lot of different biomes that exist on a mountains, from grasslands at low altitudes, taiga (coniferous forests) below the treeline, and alpine (the same as tundra) •Temperate Rain Forest - cool and wet •Tropical Rain Forest - warm and very wet •Land Caves - cool and dark •Wetlands - there are many types of wetlands, including swamps, marshes, moors, bogs, fens, sloughs, etc. •Freshwater Marsh - a wetland located near creeks, streams, rivers and lakes •Temperate ponds •Marine (ocean or sea) - including benthic biomes (bottom), coral reef (warm shallow saltwater environments based on coral formation), pelagic biomes (open seas near the surface), littoral or intertidal zones, estuarine biomes (where rivers meet oceans), etc. •Sea Caves. 72 Deserts • Little rainfall • High evaporation • Low humidity • Biodiverse • Arid or semiarid • Desertification 73 Dry Shrublands, Woodlands, and Grasslands • Drought and fires • More rain than deserts • Drought-tolerant plants • Hot summers, cold winters • Chaparral • Savannas – Grazing animals 74 Tropical Rain Forests and Broadleaf Forests • Canopy Trees • Evergreen Broadleafs – Tropical rain forests – Rapid decomposition and mineral cycling – Humus poor • Deciduous Broadleafs – Leaves drop – Tropical and Temperate Forests – Decomposition not as rapid 75 Tropical Rain Forests and Broadleaf Forests 76 Coniferous Forests • Canopy Trees – Coniferous – Boreal – Southern pine – Evergreen Conifers 77 Tundra • Treeless plain between polar ice cap and boreal forests • Cool short summers • Below freezing winters • Sunlight nearly continuous in summers • Permafrost 78 Lake Ecosystems Standing freshwater 79 Seasonal Changes in Lakes • Changes in density and temperature • Spring overturn • Fall overturn 80 Seasonal Variation in Primary Production in Oceans Phytoplankton blooms 81 Upwelling Along Coasts in the Northern Hemisphere 82 Environmental Issues • • • • • • Habitat destruction pollution foreign or exotic species deforestation global warming ozone depletion 83 84