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Community Ecology II: Species Interactions. Ecological communities: Assemblages of two or more species living and interacting in the same area. Species interactions : the ways different organisms affect each other and how they have adapted to each other’s presence.
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Ecological communities: Assemblages of two or more species living and interacting in the same area. Species interactions: the ways different organisms affect each other and how they have adapted to each other’s presence.
FOUR main kinds of species interactions; all play a role in the formation of community structure... Competition (-,-) Predation, parasitism (+,-) Mutualism (+,+) Commensalism (+,0)
Interspecific Competition: Use or defense of a resource by one species that reduces availability of that resource to a different species. exploitative competition interference competition
Competitive Exclusion: A result of competition between species for a limiting resource, in which one species completely eliminates the other.
Ecological Niche: • a species’ ecological ‘role’ • all the environmental factors that influence • the growth, survival, and reproduction of a species • an n-dimensional hypervolume within which • a species’ population growth is positive
Fundamental Niche vs Realized Niche Fundamental Niche: the niche that a species potentially could occupy, in the absence of competitors. Realized Niche: the niche to which a species is restricted in the presence of competitors.
EXPERIMENT RESULTS Ecologist Joseph Connell studied two barnacle species—Balanus balanoides and Chthamalus stellatus —that have a stratified distribution on rocks along the coast of Scotland. When Connell removed Balanus from the lower strata, the Chthamalus population spread into that area. This suggests that Balanus is the superior competitor, preventing Chthamalus from occupying the low tide zone.
When Balanus are removed from the intertidal zone, Chthamalus expands to occupy the space formerly occupied by Balanus. What would you predict if one removed Chthamalus? A) Since Balanus is the superior competitor, it probably would move up into the space Chthamalus occupied. B) Since Chthamalus is the superior competitor, it probably would move down into the space Balanus occupied. C) Since Balanus is the superior competitor, it probably cannot live in the high intertidal zone. D) Balanus would disappear as well, since it preys on Chthamalus. E) Because of the mutualistic association, the range of Balanus would shrink.
Competitive Release: Expansion of a species’ ecological niche when a competitor is removed (usually in a removalexperiment).
Q: How do similar species coexist? A1: Resource Partitioning
Resource Partitioning • Species using similar resources can coexist when the habitat is spatially and temporally complex, thus allowing for niche specialization
FOUR main kinds of species interactions; all play a role in the formation of community structure... Competition (-,-) Predation, parasitism (+,-) Mutualism (+,+) Commensalism (+,0)
True Predators - prey is killed immediately upon successful attack Great White Shark, Siberian Tiger, …Fox Squirrel?
Partial Predators- prey usually not killed but many prey organisms affected during predators lifetime - grazers, browsers Giraffe, Bison, Monarch Caterpillar
Predators can influence species withincommunities by selecting for anti-predator adaptations in prey…
Morphological Defenses Cryptic coloration Flexible crypsis
Morphological & Physiological Defenses Aposematic or Warning Coloration Monarch Butterfly and Caterpillar
Blue jay eats monarch, but vomitsdue to cardiac glycoside from milkweed
Predators can also influence the abundance and distribution of their prey. e.g. Wolves and Moose on Isle Royale