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Chapter 17 Community Structure • A community has attributes that differ from those of its components – Number of species – Relative abundance of species – Nature of species interactions – Physical structure
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Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.

Dec 26, 2015

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Noel Mitchell
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Page 1: Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.

Chapter 17 Community Structure

• A community has attributes that differ from those of its components– Number of species– Relative abundance of species– Nature of species interactions– Physical structure

Page 2: Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.

17.1 The Number of Species and Their Relative Abundance Define Diversity

• Species richness (S) is the count of the number of species occurring within the community

• Relative abundance represents the percentage each species contributes to the total number of individuals of all species

Page 3: Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.

Species Rank - Abundance Curves

Page 4: Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.

Barlow J et al. PNAS 2007;104:18555-18560

primary forest

secondary forest

plantation forest

Species Accumulation Curves

Page 5: Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.

17.1 The Number of Species and Their Relative Abundance Define Diversity

• Diversity indexes provide a way to quantify the relationship between species number and relative abundance

• Simpson's index (D) = (ni/N)2

= summation for all species

– ni = number of individuals of species i

– N = total number of individuals of all species– D ranges between 0 and 1 and as both

species' richness and evenness increase, the value approaches 0

Page 6: Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.

17.1 The Number of Species and Their Relative Abundance Define Diversity

• Simpson's index (D) = (ni/N)2

• Simpson's reciprocal index or Simpson's diversity index = 1/D– The lowest possible value is 1, representing a

community containing only one species– The maximum value is the number of species

in the community (species richness: S)– Maximum value with perfect even-ness of

relative abundance

Page 7: Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.

17.1 The Number of Species and Their Relative Abundance Define Diversity

• Shannon (or Shannon-Weiner) index = H = -(pi)(loge pi)

– Relative abundance of each species =

pi = ni / N

– pi = proportion of species i

• In the absence of diversity, where only one species is present, H = 0

• Hmax = ln S, occurs when all species are present in equal numbers

Page 8: Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.

Species abundance (or biomass)

Species Ecological Effect

RARE

KEYSTONE DOMINANT

UMBRELLA

INDICATOR

Not all species within a community are equivalent

Page 9: Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.
Page 10: Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.
Page 11: Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.
Page 12: Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.
Page 13: Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.
Page 14: Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.
Page 15: Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.
Page 16: Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.
Page 17: Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.
Page 18: Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.
Page 19: Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.

OTTER RECOLONIZATION

Kelp recovery in some cases

But not in others (hysteresis)

Page 20: Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.
Page 21: Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.

17.9 Two Contrasting Views of the Community

• Clements: Organismal concept of community organization and structure: communities are sets of species that are co-adapted to biotic interactions with one another

• Gleason: Individual concept of community organization and structure: each species largely responds to environmental gradients independently

Page 22: Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.

Clements

Gleason

Page 23: Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.

Ecotones ARE easily recognizable breaks in community structure, but often arise from abiotic factors, rather than biotic interactions among species

Page 24: Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.
Page 25: Chapter 17 Community Structure A community has attributes that differ from those of its components –Number of species –Relative abundance of species –Nature.

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.