320 likes | 1.02k Views
Community Structure (Chapter 21) Defining communities Patterns of community organization Patterns of diversity. Community – association of interacting populations Different ways that communities are organized….
E N D
Community Structure (Chapter 21) • Defining communities • Patterns of community organization • Patterns of diversity
Community – association of interacting populations • Different ways that communities are organized…
Because there are so many species, it’s useful to group species by how they use resources • Guild – group of species that use resources in a similar way
Types of guilds: • foraging – use the same food resources or feed in the same locations • nesting – reproduce in the same places • Guilds can include diverse, unrelated species • seed-eating animals in the desert • ants, rodents, birds • cavity-nesting animals in forest • woodpeckers, squirrels, raccoons, wasps, bees, ants, snakes…
Why are guilds useful? • simplifies analysis of communities • a few guilds vs. 1000’s of species • allows comparison across locations • organisms that use the same resources will respond to environmental changes in similar ways
Biome – community type distinguished by dominant plant form • Ecotone – a zone of transition between two habitat types
Sharp ecotone Soft ecotone
Ecotones are often caused by underlying environmental gradients
Ecotones often have more species than either of the two habitats does alone • Some species are specifically adapted to edge conditions • Ecotones are maintained by plants themselves, fire, or competition
Two ways of looking at a community • Holistic view • species in a community act as a superorganism, coevolved to act as one unit • can only understand the community by understanding the species together, not separately • distributions of species in a community coincide
Two ways of looking at a community • Individualistic view • communities are aggregations of populations that happen to be in the same place • each population has its own independent dynamics • distributions of species are individualistic, in response to environmental conditions
Holistic view leads to the idea of a closed community – one in which each species’ distribution coincides with the boundaries of the community • Individualistic view leads to the open community concept – each species has its own limits, so the boundaries of a community are abitrary
The continuum concept • Ecotones tend to be “soft,” with overlap between communities across the ecotone • Distributions of plant species tend to be independent of one another
The continuum concept is the idea that plant and animal species continually replace each other along environmental gradients • temperature • precipitation • soil types • soil moisture
Within any community species differ in how abundant they are
For any different type of organism in a community • a few species will be very abundant (dominant species) • most species will be relatively rare
Diversity • Diversity – the variety of taxa in a particular place • Species richness – the number of species in a community • varies widely from place to place • can be very high in some locations
Because species can differ in abundance, richness may be a poor measure of diversity • Evenness – how evenly abundances are distributed among species
Two diversity indices that account for evenness • Simpson’s index: • pi = the proportional abundance of species = (count of species i)/(total sample size) • varies from 1 to S (the species richness) • larger numbers indicate more diversity
Two diversity indices that account for evenness • Shannon-Wiener Index: • pi = the proportional abundance of species i • maximum = ln (S) • larger numbers indicate more diversity • often reported as eH