Top Banner
1 Basic Ecological Principles Tanya Latty
64

Ecological Principles No Fun Version

Apr 07, 2018

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: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 1/64

1

Basic Ecological Principles

Tanya Latty

Page 2: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 2/64

Objectives

• What is ecology?

• Levels of organization

• Distribution and abundance of organisms

• Trophic levels and ecological pyramids

Page 3: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 3/64

References

• Knox B, Ladiges P, Evans B and Saint, R. (2010)Biology: an Australian perspective. 4thedition. McGraw-Hill, Sydney .

Chapter 42 Population ecology

Chapter 43 Living in communities

Chapter 44 Ecosystems

Page 4: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 4/64

4

Page 5: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 5/64

5

Page 6: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 6/64

Ecology

Scientific study of the interactions that determinethe distribution and abundance of organisms

Charles Krebs 1972

Page 7: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 7/64

7

Distribution – geographical range ofa species; where a species is foundwithin an area

Terms used in Ecology

Page 8: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 8/64

Terms used in Ecology

8

Distribution – geographical range ofa species; where a species is foundwithin an area

Abundance – number of individualspresent in a specified area at aspecified time

Page 9: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 9/64

Levels of Organisation

Individual :

One organism

9

Population – a group of organisms of

the same species that inhabit adefined area

Page 10: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 10/64

Levels of Organisation

Individual - One organism

Population – a group of organisms of

the same species that inhabit a definedarea

Meta-population - group of populations of same specieslinked by limited migration

Page 11: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 11/64

11

Levels of Organisation

Community – assemblage of populations of different speciesliving together in space and time

Page 12: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 12/64

12

Levels of Organisation

Community – assemblage of populations of different speciesliving together in space and time

Ecosystem – ecological communityand physical environment withwhich community membersinteract, together forms arecognisable self-contained entity

Page 13: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 13/64

13

Levels of Organisation

Community – assemblage of populations of different speciesliving together in space and time

Ecosystem – ecological communityand physical environment withwhich community membersinteract, together forms arecognisable self-contained entity

Biome – on a global scale,ecological communities with thesame structure and delineated byclimate

Page 14: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 14/64

Biomes of the world

14

Page 15: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 15/64

Biosphere

• Ecology exists within the biosphere

• Parts of the earth that are accessible

• to living organisms• - hydrosphere = water• - atmosphere = air• - lithosphere = soils and rocks

• Extends from 11,000 metres below sea level to15,000 metres above sea level

Page 16: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 16/64

Ecology

Scientific study of the interactions thatdetermine the distribution and abundance of

organisms

Page 17: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 17/64

Abiotic and Biotic interactions

Biotic factors: relations between species thatare either intra-specific or inter-specific

17

Abiotic factors: geological, geographical,hydrological and climatological parameters, physicaand chemical

Page 18: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 18/64

Abiotic and Biotic interactions

Biotic factors: relations between species thatare either intra-specific or inter-specific

18

Abiotic factors: geological, geographical,hydrological and climatological parameters, physicaand chemical

Page 19: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 19/64

Classifying biotic interactions

Odum 1983

Species A Species B

Commensalism 0 +

Mutualism + +

Predation, parasitism + -

Competition - -

Amensalism 0 -

Page 20: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 20/64

Commenalism

20

1 Species benefits, the other is unaffected

Page 21: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 21/64

Predation/herbivory : One specieseats all or part of another species

Page 22: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 22/64

Dingo fence

• Dingoes excluded by 9660 km of fence•Intensive shooting + poisoning ofdingoes

Caughly et al 1980

Page 23: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 23/64

•Kangaroo densities 166 times higher in NSW than inSA

•Emu populations 20 times higher in dingo free areas

Page 24: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 24/64

Competition

24

Competition : two species use the same limitedresource, or seek the resource, to thedetriment of both

Page 25: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 25/64

Exploitation competition

• Occurs via the consumption of resources. When anindividual of one species consumes a resource, thatresource is no longer available to be consumed by amember of a second species.

• Resource in common is limited

Page 26: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 26/64

Interference competition

Occurs via direct interactions betweenindividuals, where one species physicallyprevents the other from accessing

resources.

Page 27: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 27/64

Allelopathy

Page 28: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 28/64

Interference competition: harvesterants

Page 29: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 29/64

Mutualism

Organisms of different species interact to thebenefit of both participants

Page 30: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 30/64

Termites and protozoa• Protozoa live inside

the termite andbreak downcellulose and lignin,providing acetic acid

• Protozoa get stableenvironment andconstant food supply

Page 31: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 31/64

‘Lichens ’ consist of a fungi ( mycobiont)and an algae (sometimes acyanobacterium; phycobiont orphotobiont)

Page 32: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 32/64

32

Page 33: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 33/64

Parasitism

‘Two species live in a physically close, obligatoryassociation in which the parasite dependsmetabolically on the host’

Page 34: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 34/64

Abiotic and Biotic interactions

Biotic factors: relations between species thatare either intra-specific or inter-specific

34

Abiotic factors: geological, geographical,hydrological and climatological parameters, physicaland chemical

Page 35: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 35/64

Abiotic factors

•Temperature

•Rainfall or wateravailability

•Air

•Space

•Salinity•Nutrients

•Light

Page 36: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 36/64

Natural Disasters

36

Page 37: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 37/64

Temperature and Eucalypts

E. pauciflora , snow gum

Page 38: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 38/64

Niche

Range of environmental conditions under which themembers of a species could live and reproduce

Page 39: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 39/64

Fundamental niche

FundamentalNiche

Fundamental Niche:includes the totalrange ofenvironmentalconditions that aresuitable for existence.

Temperature

L i g h t

Page 40: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 40/64

Realised niche

FundamentalNiche

Realised Niche

Realised Niche:describes that part ofthe fundamentalniche actuallyoccupied by thespecies.

Temperature

L i g h t

Page 41: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 41/64

Paramecium competition

P. aurelia

P. caudatum

P.bursar

G.F Gause

Page 42: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 42/64

Paramecium competition

All three species grow well in isolation

Page 43: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 43/64

P.caudatum

P.aurelia

Page 44: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 44/64

Trophic ecology

It’s all about energy!

44

Page 45: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 45/64

45

Page 46: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 46/64

46

Producers

Page 47: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 47/64

47

Producers

Page 48: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 48/64

48

Producers

Primary

Consumers

Page 49: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 49/64

49

Producers

Primary

Consumers

Page 50: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 50/64

50

Producers

Primary

Consumers

SecondaryConsumers

Page 51: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 51/64

51

Producers

Primary

Consumers

SecondaryConsumers

Tertiary

Consumers

Page 52: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 52/64

52

Producers

Primary

Consumers

SecondaryConsumers

TertiaryConsumers

Degraders

Degraders feed on dead organisms and

Page 53: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 53/64

53

Scavengers : eat deadorganisms

Detritivores : eat organic litter ordetritus

Decomposers: cause chemicaldecay of organic matter

Degraders - feed on dead organisms andorganic wastes from several trophic levels

Degraders feed on dead organisms and

Page 54: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 54/64

54

Scavengers : eat deadorganisms

Detritivores : eat organic litter ordetritus

Decomposers: cause chemicaldecay of organic matter

Degraders - feed on dead organisms andorganic wastes from several trophic levels

Degraders feed on dead organisms and

Page 55: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 55/64

55

Scavengers : eat deadorganisms

Detritivores : eat organic litter ordetritus

Decomposers: cause chemicaldecay of organic matter

Degraders - feed on dead organisms andorganic wastes from several trophic levels

Page 56: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 56/64

56

Producers

Primary

Consumers

SecondaryConsumers

TertiaryConsumers

Degraders

Page 57: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 57/64

Food chains and food webs

Food chain = sequential transfer of food alongseveral trophic levels; simplistic

Page 58: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 58/64

Food chains and food webs

Food web = series of interconnected food chains;realistic

Page 59: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 59/64

Salt Marsh Food Web

Food web of salt marsh,Carpentaria, California

Inclusion of parasites (red)dramatically changes foodweb

Lafferty, K.D. et al. (2006) Food webs and parasites in a salt marsh ecosystem. In Disease Ecology: Community Str

and Pathogen Dynamics (Collinge, S. and Ray, C., eds), pp. 119 – 134, OxfordUniversity Press

Page 60: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 60/64

Why don’t food chains have morethan 6 links?

60

l h l l

Page 61: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 61/64

• Not all energy ingested is available to thenext trophic level

heat

Detritivoresonly

Raven et al. 2008 Fig 57.9

Production efficiency

Energy lost in trophic levels

Page 62: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 62/64

Campbell et al. 2008

1%

10%

10%

10%

0.1%

Page 63: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 63/64

Raven et al. 2008 Fig 57.13

Pyramids of numbers - number ofindividuals (per unit) in each trophic level,based on organism size and mechanics ofeating and being eaten

Pyramids of biomass - total amount of livingmaterial present

Pyramids of energy - based on productivityor rate of energy flow to next level, note lossof heat

Summary

Page 64: Ecological Principles No Fun Version

8/4/2019 Ecological Principles No Fun Version

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ecological-principles-no-fun-version 64/64

Summary

What is Ecology?

Levels of organisation

Biotic and abiotic interactions

Trophic ecology