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Community Ecology
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Community Ecology. Species Interactions Predators vs. Parasites How is mimicry used? Plant defenses Competition Mutalism vs. Commensalism.

Dec 14, 2015

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Colleen Stewart
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Page 1: Community Ecology. Species Interactions Predators vs. Parasites How is mimicry used? Plant defenses Competition Mutalism vs. Commensalism.

Community Ecology

Page 2: Community Ecology. Species Interactions Predators vs. Parasites How is mimicry used? Plant defenses Competition Mutalism vs. Commensalism.

Species Interactions

• Predators vs. Parasites

• How is mimicry used?

• Plant defenses

• Competition

• Mutalism vs. Commensalism

Page 3: Community Ecology. Species Interactions Predators vs. Parasites How is mimicry used? Plant defenses Competition Mutalism vs. Commensalism.

Predation

• Predators capture, kills and consumes prey– Regulates pop. Size

• Think: what examples of adaptations that improve a predators abilities can you think of?– Poison, webs, teeth,

comouflage

Page 4: Community Ecology. Species Interactions Predators vs. Parasites How is mimicry used? Plant defenses Competition Mutalism vs. Commensalism.

Prey defenses

Page 5: Community Ecology. Species Interactions Predators vs. Parasites How is mimicry used? Plant defenses Competition Mutalism vs. Commensalism.

Mimicry

• A harmless species resembles a poisonous or distasteful species

• King Snakes vs. Coral Snakes (found in S. US)• Bees and wasps

"If red touches black, it's OK, Jack. If red touches yellow, you're a dead fellow.“

"Red on yellow, kill a fellow. Red on black, okay jack."

Page 6: Community Ecology. Species Interactions Predators vs. Parasites How is mimicry used? Plant defenses Competition Mutalism vs. Commensalism.

• Left Monarchs eat poison Milkweed

• Right Viceroys are harmless

Page 7: Community Ecology. Species Interactions Predators vs. Parasites How is mimicry used? Plant defenses Competition Mutalism vs. Commensalism.

Plant-Herbivore interactions

• Plant defense?– Thorns, spikes, tough

leaves, – Chemical defenses:

Secondary Compounds that are poisonous, irritating or bad tasting

• Strychnine• Nicotine• Poison Ivy/ Oak

Devil’s Club

Devil’s walking stick

Page 8: Community Ecology. Species Interactions Predators vs. Parasites How is mimicry used? Plant defenses Competition Mutalism vs. Commensalism.

Parasites and Hosts

• One organisms is harmed, and the other benefits

• Usually does not immeadiately kill host

• Ectoparasites: external– Ticks, fleas, lice

• Endoparasites: internal– Bacteria, malaria,

tapeworms• Tapeworms don’t even

need a digestive system, since they get food from hosts

Page 9: Community Ecology. Species Interactions Predators vs. Parasites How is mimicry used? Plant defenses Competition Mutalism vs. Commensalism.

Competition

• Niches overlap• Resources are limited• Happens between plants

– What do plants compete for?

• Light, water, nutrients

– How do plants compete? • Herbicides, creosote, out

growing

Page 10: Community Ecology. Species Interactions Predators vs. Parasites How is mimicry used? Plant defenses Competition Mutalism vs. Commensalism.

Competitive Exclusion

• One species uses resources more efficiently and has a reproductive advantage that eventually drives out another species from a habitat.

Page 11: Community Ecology. Species Interactions Predators vs. Parasites How is mimicry used? Plant defenses Competition Mutalism vs. Commensalism.

• tidal zonation of Chthamalus and Balanus (barnacles) is the result of competition and what environment each can tolerate. Competition for space, however, was responsible for the sharp boundary between the two species.

Page 12: Community Ecology. Species Interactions Predators vs. Parasites How is mimicry used? Plant defenses Competition Mutalism vs. Commensalism.
Page 13: Community Ecology. Species Interactions Predators vs. Parasites How is mimicry used? Plant defenses Competition Mutalism vs. Commensalism.

A scientist grew 2 species of Galium (Bedstraw)The presence/absence of a species determined by competition with other species; (2) that conditions of the environment (in this case, soil type) affected the outcome of competition; (3) that competition might be felt very broadly at first (i.e., from other vegetation throughout the community); and (4) that the present ecological segregation of species might have resulted from competition in the past

Page 14: Community Ecology. Species Interactions Predators vs. Parasites How is mimicry used? Plant defenses Competition Mutalism vs. Commensalism.

Avoiding competition

• Niche Differences or anatomical differences evolve that lessen competition

• Character displacement• A bunch of finches live in the same area

but have dif. beaks and eat slightly dif foods.

• Resource Partitioning– I’ll use this part of the resource, you use that

part.

Page 15: Community Ecology. Species Interactions Predators vs. Parasites How is mimicry used? Plant defenses Competition Mutalism vs. Commensalism.

• Mutualism: A cooperative relationship in which both species benefit– Ants live in the bull horn acacia plant

• Ants get food from plant and protect it

– Pollination: Bees and flowers– Us and the gardens in our guts

• Commensalism: one species benefits and the other is not affected– Little birds follow around buffalo and

eat insects they scare up– Remora fish

Page 16: Community Ecology. Species Interactions Predators vs. Parasites How is mimicry used? Plant defenses Competition Mutalism vs. Commensalism.

Side note

• The African (cape) Buffalo

• Takes several lions to bring one down

• Very Aggressive, Known as the “black death”

• Once wounded, have doubled back and ambushed hunters