Top Banner
Physiologic al Ecology
66

Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living Physiology is the study of how organisms work. How nutrients are acquired.

Dec 16, 2015

Download

Documents

Rudy Braund
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: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Physiological Ecology

Page 2: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Species Distribution

Page 3: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

The Fundamental Tasks of Living Physiology is the study of how

organisms work. How nutrients are acquired & transported. How wastes are eliminated.

Ecology is concerned with how species deal with their environments and how the environment limits distribution. Both directly affected by physiology.

Page 4: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Do Species Distributions form Patterns? Each place has a unique assortment of

plants and animals. Animals and plants are adapted to their

environments.

Page 5: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Do Species Distributions form Patterns? Which two

pictures were taken closest to each other?

A & B A& C A & D B & C

Page 6: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Do Species Distributions form Patterns? Many factors influence the distribution

of organisms: Land or water Amount of nutrients available Amount of sunlight available pH Other species present

Page 7: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Do Species Distributions form Patterns? The two most important factors in a

terrestrial environment: Moisture Temperature

Page 8: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.
Page 9: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

From the way the Valdivian forest looks compared to the other locations, which labeled point on the graph would you expect to represent its annual temperature and precipitation?

Page 10: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.
Page 11: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Whittaker Diagrams The Whittaker

Diagram suggests that the average temperature and precipitation of a particular location controls what type of vegetation may grow there.

Page 12: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Temperature vs Water Temperature and precipitation combine

to control the amount of water available to plants and hence, its overall health.  Physiological tolerances describe what

a plant can tolerate. Max/min temperatures How much water is required

Page 13: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Temperature vs Water Water enters a plant

through the roots. Travels up through the

plant Is lost at the leaf

surfaces – Transpiration

Water is also lost through evaporation from the soil surface.

The total amount of water available to plants in any ecosystem is a balance between incoming precipitation and outgoing evapotranspiration.

Page 14: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Potential Evapotranspiration The amount of water loss from an

ecosystem at a given temperature is known as the Potential Evapotranspiration (PET).

To avoid desiccation, a plant will need to access an amount of water that is equal to or greater than PET.

Page 15: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Climate Diagrams The PET can be read from

the temperature line on the climate diagram, because, as you saw, potential evapotranspiration (in mm) is approximately twice temperature (in °C).

Where the precipitation graph line lies above the temperature line, precipitation is greater than PET. If precipitation lies below temperature, precipitation is less than PET.

Page 16: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Tolerances Define Species Ranges Every species has a limited tolerance to

different environmental variables that determine its geographic range, including not only temperature and precipitation, but also the many other variables we mentioned earlier. The sum of these conditions is sometimes referred to as a species’ niche.

Page 17: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Tolerances Define Species Ranges The speed of a

desert night lizard increases up to 35 °C, then drops.

Physiology plays a large role in determining the range of areas where you will see any given species.

Page 18: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Tolerances Define Species Ranges Temperature and precipitation are very

important, but sometimes they don’t tell the whole story.

For example spruce require an environment where precipitation is above PET throughout the year. In Georgia, precipitation is above PET, but

spruce don’t occur. Competition? Soil drainage? Nutrients?

Page 19: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Law of the Minimum Liebig, working in the 1800’s, suggested

that growth and reproduction are limited by the rarest resource.

Page 20: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Shifts in Species Ranges The geographic range of a species can

change over time. As the ice receded after the last ice age,

organisms moved back into the area. Measured using pollen in core samples.

Page 21: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Spruce tree distribution over the past 21,000 years. Ranges were reconstructed from depth-specific pollen grain counts in lake sediments. Blue indicates glaciated areas. Green indicates spruce range, with darker green suggesting higher spruce density. Data courtesy Williams et al. 2004 and the National Climatic Data Center.

Page 22: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Physiological Ecology Each species has an optimal

environment and tolerance to a variety of conditions.

If conditions change a species can Migrate with climatic conditions Go extinct Adapt to the new conditions

Page 23: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Physiological Ecology Adaptation to new conditions can occur:

As individuals acclimate or As populations evolve

Page 24: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Adaptation & Acclimation

Page 25: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Adaptation and Acclimation Dams result in

warmer water downstream.

Temperature is an important factor for many species. Will it affect the

trout living in the stream?

Page 26: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Trout Physiology Enzymes are proteins that catalyze

reactions. Change shape during the process. Affected by temperature.

High temps denature enzyme – doesn’t work. Low temps decrease flexibility – doesn’t work.

Page 27: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Trout Physiology Trout living

above the dam (cool) and below the dam (warm) have enzymes that have different optimal temps. Genetic

adaptation or individual acclimation?

Page 28: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Acclimation Experiment to

determine if individual fish acclimate.

The optimal temperature for the enzyme adjusts upward over a few weeks.

No reproduction involved – not genetic.

Page 29: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Adaptation through Evolution Acclimation occurs in the short-term.

No reproduction What happens over several

generations? Each generation of fish receives a new

mix of alleles. Some may be better for high temperatures. They may adapt to high temperatures

through natural selection.

Page 30: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Managing Dams Large dams pull

water from deeper under water resulting in cooler summer temperatures and warmer winter temperatures.

Page 31: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Managing Dams Mixing deep and

shallow water alleviates the problem, but doesn’t eliminate it.

Still working to restore native fishes.

Small dams can often just be removed.

Page 32: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Homeostasis

Page 33: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Homeostasis Homeostasis occurs when an organism

maintains relatively constant internal conditions. Temperature pH Salinity

Some organisms can tolerate a wide range of conditions, some narrow.

Page 34: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Surface Area to Volume Ratio Organisms interact with their

environment through the surfaces of their bodies. Much of the exchange of heat and water

occur across the skin. The amount of skin, or surface area, is a

key to homeostasis.

Page 35: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Surface Area to Volume Ratio Surface area –

exposed surface. Sphere: πd2

Cube: 6w2

Volume – internal capacity. Sphere: π/6 d3

Cube: w3

Page 36: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Surface Area to Volume Ratio A thermoregulating

kangaroo rat gains and loses heat via several processes which we account for using the heat balance equation. These heat inputs and outputs must balance (summing to near zero) for the animal to maintain homeostasis.

Page 37: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Surface Area to Volume Ratio Heat can be gained an lost through:

Radiation from sun Metabolic heat Re-radiation Conduction Convection Loss of heat with water (latent heat)

Page 38: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Surface Area to Volume Ratio Ectothermic

animals rely on the environment to regulate their temperature. Large surface

area in contact with warm ground & exposed to sun.

Page 39: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Adaptations for Controlling Internal Temperature Change behavior

Seek shade/sun Use color

Dark to absorb heat, light to reflect heat Insulation

Page 40: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Water Balance Ingestion

Animals can take in water by ingesting it – from water they drink or in foods they eat.

Page 41: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Water Balance Secretion

Water lost through excretion of metabolic wastes and elimination of fecal waste.

Page 42: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Water Balance Absorption –

most aquatic animals can absorb water through their skin. Bodies saltier

than the freshwater they live in so water enters their bodies.

Page 43: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Water Balance Metabolism of

food During cellular

respiration, sugar (glucose) is broken down into carbon dioxide, water, and free energy.

Page 44: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Water Balance Evaporation –

loss of water from the surface of the organism. Provides cooling

Page 45: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Adaptations for Water Conservation Desert dwelling

tenebrionid beetles use behavior to harvest moisture from fog. Abdomen up,

water condenses and rolls down grooves to mouth.

Page 46: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Trade-offs in Water Balance Kangaroo rat tradeoff between water

balance and heat balance. Plants have a tradeoff between

photosynthesis and water balance.

Page 47: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Why be a Mammal? Mammals are

endothermic & homeothermic. They produce their

body heat internally and maintain a steady temperature.

Requires lots of energy!

Optimal temperature for metabolism is always available.

Page 48: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Metabolism

Page 49: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Metabolism All organisms require energy to fuel

their metabolism and nutrients to build their bodies.

Page 50: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Photosynthesis Energy arrives as

sunlight. Plants use

photosynthesis to make glucose from carbon dioxide & water using energy from the sun.

Bonds in glucose store energy. 6 CO2 + 12 H2O + sunlight → C6H12O6 + 6O2 + 6H2O

Page 51: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Respiration When organisms need energy, they can

break the bonds in glucose during cellular respiration.

C6H12O6 + 6O2 → 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + free energy

Page 52: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Photosynthesis Light Reactions

Sunlight hitting chlorophyll molecules energizes electrons to power creation of first NADPH, then ATP.

Page 53: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Photosynthesis Light

Independent Reactions Rubisco uses the

energy stored in NADPH and ATP from light reactions to carry out carbon fixation.

Page 54: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Photorespiration Rubisco can bind

to oxygen instead of carbon dioxide. Destroys the

sugar. Depends on

concentrations of carbon dioxide vs oxygen.

Page 55: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

C4 Photosynthesis Some plants that

grow in hot climates separate light dependent and light independent reactions into different cells.

Page 56: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Water Potential Plants take up water through their roots

and lose water through pores in the leaves.

Pores in the leaves of plants (stomata) open to take in carbon dioxide for photosynthesis. Release oxygen and water. Transpiration

Page 57: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Water Potential Water moves from

an area of higher water potential to lower water potential.

Increased humidity in the air will make water move more slowly through the plant.

Page 58: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Cavitation At low humidity,

the tension in the water column. As the molecules pull away, air bubbles can form.

Interferes with a plant’s ability to take up water.

Page 59: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Soil Type Affects Water Potential Attraction of water to soil decreases its

mobility. Finer particles (clay) of soil have more

surface area for water molecules to adhere to – lower water potential. Requires more suction to pull water out of

soil.

Page 60: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Solutes Affect Water Potential Adding solutes to the water decreases

water potential.

Page 61: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Controlling Water Flow Water can only flow

from high to low water potential if there is an open route.

Add a valve to the top of the straw. Partially closing the

valve allows the plant to avoid cavitation at lower humidity.

Closing the valve stops the flow.

Page 62: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Controlling Water Flow Leaves have a

waxy coating to prevent water loss.

Stomata can open/close like valves to conserve water.

Page 63: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Xylem The xylem is a

series of tubes that carry water through the plant.

Tradeoff between having narrow tubes to prevent cavitation and wider tubes to carry more water.

Page 64: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

CAM and Water Conservation CAM is a third type of photosynthesis

where light dependent reactions and light independent reactions are separated in time. Stomata open at night to let carbon

dioxide into the leaf. High humidity at night reduces risk of cavitation.

Stomata closed during the day. Light dependent reactions can now occur using the carbon dioxide taken up at night.

Page 65: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Ingestion by Heterotrophs Heterotrophs can’t make their own

food. Take in food from the environment.

Herbivores Carnivores Decomposers

Specialists vs Generalists Tradeoff between availability & efficiency

Page 66: Physiological Ecology. Species Distribution The Fundamental Tasks of Living  Physiology is the study of how organisms work.  How nutrients are acquired.

Plant Nutrient Acquisition & Mycorrhizae Plants acquire

nutrients from the soil. Increased surface

area will help gather more water and nutrients. Plants solve this problem by associating their roots

with fungi in a mutualism called mycorrhizae. The plant provides the fungus with sugars and in return the fungus grows out into the soil and transports nutrients to the plant.