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Mon. Tues. Wed. Thurs. Fri. Week of Oct. 27 Week of Nov. 3 Exam 2 no OH no OH Forest ecology lab – dress for weather Week of Nov. 10 Independent project analysis Week of Nov. 17 T lab switch? River ecology lab – dress for weather Lab Exam 1 For exam: - Chaps. 6,7,8,13 - Chap. 14 – only equations and concepts we talked about in class - Chapter 15 – only through p. 302. Lab open for counting Lemna every day 10 - 4 2 Structure of course Environmental variability Organisms Ecosystems Populations Species interactions Communities Applied Ecological Issues 3 Species interactions Introduction Consumer/resources interactions (predation, herbivory, parasitism) Competition Mutualism 4 Change in pop. size of one species has an effect on growth rate of other species 5 Species interactions Introduction Consumer/resources interactions (predation, herbivory, parasitism) Competition Mutualism 6 Consumer/resource interactions - Consumer Resource + Arrows represent effect on growth rate 7 Consumer Resource Predator Prey Parasite Host Herbivore Plant/algae Detritivore Dead organic matter 8 Consumer form and function tied to their diet Examples?? 9 Consumer/resource interactions 1. Predation 2. Herbivory 3. Parasitism 4. Dynamics of C/R interactions 10 Given that predators have adaptations that allow them to capture prey, why don’t predators drive their prey extinct? 11 12 100% 6,000 Cicada mortality due to predation Live cicadas per 1,000 m2 Periodical cicadas 3,000 0% 0 May 15 May 30 June 15 June 30 Decline due to thunderstorm 13 The predator’s predator - Predator Prey + 14 Consumer/resource interactions 1. Predation 2. Herbivory 3. Parasitism 4. Dynamics of C/R interactions 15 Given that herbivores have adaptations that allow them to exploit resource, Why don’t herbivores drive plants extinct? Or Why is the world green? 16 17 Spatial refuge Figure 17.1 18 Index of cone production Production of population not individuals Cost 19 Consumer/resource interactions 1. Predation 2. Herbivory 3. Parasitism 4. Dynamics of C/R interactions 20 How is a parasite different from a predator? 21 Parasites are incredibly diverse Examples? 22 Parasites on wood mice On skin – 1 sp. tick. On fur – 12 sp. of mites, 1 sp. tick, 11 sp. fleas, 1 sp. lice. In stomach – 1 sp. roundworm. In small intestine – 3 sp. roundworms, 3 sp. flatworms, 2 sp. flagellates, 1 sp. ciliate, 1 sp. amoeba. In liver – 1 sp. tapeworm. etc. 47 species not counting bacteria and viruses 23 24 Challenges for a parasite 25 Figure 17.14 26 pillbug = intermediate host tapeworm in a crow tapeworm changes pillbug behavior 27 Challenges for a parasite 2. overcoming host defenses 28 Consumer/resource interactions 1. Predation 2. Herbivory 3. Parasitism 4. Dynamics of C/R interactions 29 Dynamics of consumer/resource interactions Consumers can reduce resource populations Examples of cycles Models of consumer/resource interactions 30 Figure 17.18 Effect on growth rate 31 Figure 18.3 32 33