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Lake Victoria, East Africa Nile Perch Cichlids Deforestation Competition Predation Symbiosis: * parasitism * mutualism *commensalism Interspecific competition – occurs when parts of the fundamental niches of different species overlap Intraspecific competition – competition between the same species TO SURVIVE….. Species must…. a. migrate to another area b. shift its feeding habits or behavior through natural selection and evolution c. become extinct in that area Interference competition – one species may limit another’s access to some resource Defend territory – release chemicals, chase away, stinging Exploitation competition – competing species have roughly equal access to a specific resource but differ in how fast or efficiently they exploit it The faster you eat… the more you get!. 1. 2. Some plants displace others by having leaf and root systems that allow them to absorb more sunlight and soil nutrients than their competition. Other plants produce chemicals that inhibit the growth or germination of seeds of competing species. Two species that require the same resource cannot coexist indefinitely in an ecosystem in which there is not enough of that resource to meet the needs of both species. Resource Partitioning Character Displacement Species coexistence = neither species fully excludes the other from resources, so both live side by side Resource partitioning = species use different resources Or they use shared resources in different ways Ex: one species is active at night, another in the day Ex: one species eats small seeds, another eats large seeds Character displacement = competing species diverge in their physical characteristics Due to the evolution of traits best suited to the resources they use Results from resource partitioning Birds that eat larger seeds evolve larger bills Birds that eat smaller seeds evolve smaller bills Competition is reduced when two species become more different Fundamental niche = the full niche of a species (no competition for resources) Realized niche = the portion of the fundamental niche that is actually filled Due to competition or other species’ interactions Ways to get lunch – pursuit, ambush How to get away Protective mechanisms – run fast, keen eye sight Camouflage, Chemical warfare Warning coloration Mimicry Behavioral strategies Protection from living in large groups (a) Span worm (c) Bombardier beetle (e) Poison dart frog (g) Hind wings of Io moth resemble eyes of a much larger animal. (b) Wandering leaf insect (d) Foul-tasting monarch butterfly (f) Viceroy butterfly mimics monarch butterfly (h) When touched, snake caterpillar changes shape to look like head of snake. Stepped Art Fig. 5-2, p. 103 Herbivory = animals feed on the tissues of plants May not kill the plant Widely seen in insects But affects its growth and survival Defenses against herbivory include: Chemicals: toxic or distasteful Thorns, spines, or irritating hairs Other animals: protect the plant Natural selection leads to evolution of adaptations that make predators better hunters Individuals who are better at catching prey: Live longer, healthier lives Take better care of offspring Prey face strong selection pressures: they are at risk of immediate death Prey develop elaborate defenses against being eaten Parasitism Mutualism Commensalism Two or more species benefit from their interactions Symbiosis = mutualism in which the organisms live in close physical contact Each partner provides a service the other needs (food, protection, housing, etc.) Microbes within digestive tracts Mycorrhizae: plant roots and fungi Coral and algae (zooxanthellae) Pollination = bees, bats, birds and others transfer pollen from one flower to another, fertilizing its eggs In exchange for the plant nectar, the animals pollinate plants, which allows them to reproduce Parasitism = a relationship in which one organism (parasite) depends on another (host) For nourishment or some other benefit The parasite harms, but doesn’t kill, the host • Some are free-living - Infrequent contact with their hosts - Ticks, sea lampreys • Some live within the host - Disease, tapeworms Amensalism = a relationship in which one organism is harmed while the other is unaffected Difficult to confirm, because usually one organism benefits from harming another Allelopathy = certain plants release harmful chemicals Or, is this a way to outcompete another for space? Commensalism = a relationship in which one organism benefits, while the other remains unaffected Succession = the predictable series of changes in a community Primary Succession – ecological succession in an environment that has not previously been inhabited. No Soil is Present Initially! Examples: The first organisms to colonize a new site are Lichens and mosses Rock Secondary Succession: Succession in an area that experiences some type of disturbance. Soil is Already Present Climax Community is a community of plants and animals that has reached a steady state because of the development of vegetation in an area over time. A fire levels portions of a forest A farmer plows his field Communities experience many types of disturbance Removal of keystone species, spread of invasive species, natural disturbances Human impacts cause major community changes Resistance = community of organisms resists change and remains stable despite the disturbance Resilience = a community changes in response to a disturbance, but later returns to its original state A disturbed community may never return to its original state Humans have dramatically changed ecological systems Severely degraded systems cease to function Ecological restoration = efforts to restore communities Restoration is informed by restoration ecology = the science of restoring an area to an earlier condition To restore the system’s functionality (i.e. filtering of water by a wetland) It is difficult, time-consuming, and expensive It is best to protect natural systems from degradation in the first place Prairie restoration = replanting native species, controlling invasive species The world’s largest project = Florida Everglades Flood control and irrigation removed water Populations of wading birds dropped 90-95% It will take 30 years and billions of dollars to restore natural water flow What is meant by “natural”? Is it before industrialization ? Before the Europeans came to the New World??? Let’s say the Native Americans altered a forest community 8,000 years ago by burning the underbrush to improve hunting and continued doing so until Europeans arrived 400 years ago and cut down the forest for farming. Should restorationist try to recreate the forest of the Native Americans or the forest that existed before the Native Americans arrived? What values are involved in the decision?