Top Banner
Bird Trip: Email Me ay April 29 or May 6? Need binoculars? Transportati
14

Bird Trip: Email Me Sunday April 29 or May 6? Need binoculars? Transportation?

Dec 19, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Bird Trip: Email Me Sunday April 29 or May 6? Need binoculars? Transportation?

Bird Trip: Email Me

Sunday April 29 or May 6? Need binoculars? Transportation?

Page 2: Bird Trip: Email Me Sunday April 29 or May 6? Need binoculars? Transportation?

Outline

• Community Ecology– Indirect effects, Keystone species, Invasive species

– Biodiversity: importance and evaluation

– The new paradigm in ecology: communities in flux

– Conservation of species interactions

• Ecosystem Ecology– Ecosystem services

– Biodiversity and ecosystem services

– Ecosystems of special concern (Marine and Tropical)

Page 3: Bird Trip: Email Me Sunday April 29 or May 6? Need binoculars? Transportation?

Purple Loosestrife

• Benefits of Biological Control– Mediate spread– Restore interactions– Conserve endangered

species

• Risks of Biological Control– Unintended ecological

consequences

Page 4: Bird Trip: Email Me Sunday April 29 or May 6? Need binoculars? Transportation?

How Risky is Biological Control?

• 800 spp. of snails have evolved in Hawaii islands.

• Rosy Wolf-Snail introduced to control Giant African Snail.

• 50-75% of native land snails extinct.

Simberloff, D., and P. Stiling. 1996. How risky is biological control? Ecology 77:1965-1974.

Page 5: Bird Trip: Email Me Sunday April 29 or May 6? Need binoculars? Transportation?

Gypsy Moths:Entomophaga maimaiga

Page 6: Bird Trip: Email Me Sunday April 29 or May 6? Need binoculars? Transportation?

Island Communities

• Some of the “best” examples of invasive species come from island communities– Brown tree snake on Guam

– Rosy wolf-snail in Hawaii

• Possible reasons– Low Diversity (1° factor:

discuss later)

– Relaxed selection (2° consequence of low diversity)

Page 7: Bird Trip: Email Me Sunday April 29 or May 6? Need binoculars? Transportation?

Biodiversity

(1)

(2)

(3)

Page 8: Bird Trip: Email Me Sunday April 29 or May 6? Need binoculars? Transportation?

Biodiversity

6 1.35 2.67 1

5 1.35 7.58 0

4 1.38 4 2

Richnes

s

Shannon-W

ienerSimpson’

s Endem

icity

*In nature, different “diversity indices” typically give similar results

Page 9: Bird Trip: Email Me Sunday April 29 or May 6? Need binoculars? Transportation?

Biodiversity

Richness: Total number of spp.Evenness: The distribution of individuals among spp.

Page 10: Bird Trip: Email Me Sunday April 29 or May 6? Need binoculars? Transportation?

How do we determine species richness?

BIOBLITZ:http://www.smithsonianmag.si.edu/smithsonian/issues00/apr00/interest_apr00.html

Total species found in 695 acres over 24 hours - 1,369

Page 11: Bird Trip: Email Me Sunday April 29 or May 6? Need binoculars? Transportation?

Measuring Biodiversity: Extrapolation

• ~ 1200 beetle spp. in canopy of Luehea seemanii.

• ~ 13.5 % (163 spp.) of beetles are specialists.

• ~ 50,000 tropical tree spp.• Beetles ~ 40% of insect diversity.• ~ 2/3 insects found in canopy,

1/3 on ground• ~30 million insect spp.

Page 12: Bird Trip: Email Me Sunday April 29 or May 6? Need binoculars? Transportation?

Measuring Biodiversity: EstimatorsFor more info, see: Colwell, R. K., and J. A. Coddington. 1994. Estimating terrestrial biodiversity through extrapolation. Phil.Trans.R.Soc.Lond.B. 345: 101-118.

Samples

Spe

cie

s

NOTE: Species richness increase with sampling effort

Goal: sample here, extrapolate there

Page 13: Bird Trip: Email Me Sunday April 29 or May 6? Need binoculars? Transportation?

ALAS

http://viceroy.eeb.uconn.edu/ALAS/ALAS.html

“How many arthropod species are there in a tropical rainforest? . . . Systematists use a "find them all" approach . . . Community ecologists, in contrast, use a "sample and estimate" approach. Project ALAS combines both traditions in an assessment of arthropod diversity. "Sample and estimate" methods are used to sample a set of broad "survey taxa," while "find them all" methods are used to sample much more thoroughly a set of smaller "focal taxa." The known focal taxa are then used to calibrate and evaluate and compare the sampling and estimation methods.”

Page 14: Bird Trip: Email Me Sunday April 29 or May 6? Need binoculars? Transportation?

Is Biodiversity Important?

• Conservation Biology Perspective– Inherently valuable

• Utilitarian Perspective– Natural resources: Genetic libraries; natural design

• Ecological Role– Invasibility

– Stability

– Ecosystem Function