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Ecosystems. Introduction. Species (be…specific!) Bear: not good American Black bear: great Ursus americanus: amazing Population Community Ecosystem Habitat Niche. All ecosystems have two sets of components. Biotic Living things How they interact Relationships. Abiotic Light
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Introduction • Species (be…specific!) • Bear: not good • American Black bear: great • Ursus americanus: amazing • Population • Community • Ecosystem • Habitat • Niche
All ecosystems have two sets of components. • Biotic • Living things • How they interact • Relationships • Abiotic • Light • Temperature • Soil • Turbidity • Wind speed • Dissolved oxygen • Slope • Salinity • Flow rate • Elevation • pH • Wave action
How do you measure biotic components? • Identify the species • Use a dichotomous key • Estimate the abundance of organisms • Percent cover • Percent frequency • Estimating biomass • The mass of living material • It’s easiest for plants, but it’s destructive
How do you measure biotic components? • We focused mostly on plants. • Animals are harder to measure, why? • There are some simple ways for smaller organisms. • For larger organisms, the Lincoln Index is the easiest way.
Lincoln Index • Scientists capture a sample of individuals, mark them, and release them. • Scientists then return, capture another sample, and estimate the total population
Calculating Lincoln Index • 25 birds caught, tagged, released. 30 birds caught second time, 18 were marked.
Calculating Lincoln Index • 8 elephants caught, tagged, released. 9 elephants caught second time, 6 were tagged.
Calculating Lincoln Index • 200 ants caught, marked, released. 185 ants caught second time, 57 were marked.
Calculating Lincoln Index • 20 blugill caught, tagged, released. 30 bluegill caught second time, 3 were marked.
Lincoln Index Assumptions • Population must be closed, no immigration or emigration • Time between samples must be small compared to the lifespan • Marked organisms must mix with the population after marking
Lincoln Index Setbacks • Capture can injure animal • Mark/tag may harm animal • Mark/tag may be removed • Mark/tag may increase/decrease predators • Different individuals are more/less “capturable” • Individuals may become trap-happy or trap-shy
But it’s not just about HOW MANY living things are in an area. • Diversity is very important as well and is a measure of the health of an ecosystem. • The lower the diversity, the lower the health. • Why do you think this is?
Ecosystem 1 • 15 rats • 13 squirrels • 8 moles • 6 mice • 5 chipmunks
Ecosystem 2 • 0 rats • 10 squirrels • 3 moles • 4 mice • 25 chipmunks
Ecosystem 3 • 16 rats • 0 squirrels • 7 moles • 0 mice • 32 chipmunks
Ecosystem 4 • 3 rats • 24 squirrels • 2 moles • 4 mice • 5 chipmunks
Ecosystem 5 • 10 rats • 10 squirrels • 7 moles • 9 mice • 0 chipmunks
Ecosystem 6 • 85 rats • 0 squirrels • 0 moles • 0 mice • 0 chipmunks
Ecosystem 7 • 3 rats • 13 squirrels • 0 moles • 0 mice • 5 chipmunks
Ecosystem 8 • 0 rats • 13 squirrels • 0 moles • 0 mice • 22 chipmunks
Ecosystem 9 • 15 rats • 15 squirrels • 15 moles • 0 mice • 9 chipmunks
Gross Primary Productivity • The amount of energy produced or amount of mass produced by producers
Net Primary Productivity • The amount of energy or mass that is stored by producers • The amount of energy available to consumers
Gross Secondary Productivity • The total amount of energy consumed by consumers
Net Secondary Productivity • The total amount of mass gained by (primary) consumers
Pyramid of Numbers • Shows the number of organisms at each level. • Good for comparing changes • Bad because numbers can be too great to represent and difficult for organisms at multiple trophic levels
Pyramid of Biomass • Shows the amount of biomass at each level • Difficult to measure biomass, biomass varies over seasons
Pyramid of Productivity • Shows the amount of energy flow through an ecosystem (rule of 10 - each level is about 10% of the previous level) • Good because ecosystems can be compared • Bad because the data is hard to get and species can be at multiple trophic levels.
Measuring abiotic components • Marine Ecosystems: • Salinity • pH • Temperature • Dissolved Oxygen • Wave Action
Measuring abiotic components • Freshwater ecosystems • Turbidity • Flow Velocity • pH • Temperature • Dissolved Oxygen
Measuring abiotic components • Terrestrial ecosystems • Temperature • Light intensity • Wind speed • Slope • Soil moisture • Mineral content
Measuring abiotic components • Best method: • Count the organisms • Next best method: • Capture-Mark-Release-Recapture • (Lincoln Index)
Population Curves • S Curve • Reaches carrying capacity and stabilizes • J Curve • Unchecked population growth
Survivorship • r- strategists • Short generation time • Mature quickly • Small size • Many offspring • Little parental care • Adapted to unstable/ unpredictable environments
Survivorship • K- stragetists • Long life/generation time • Mature slowly • Large size • Few offspring • Parental care • Predictable/stable environments where population stays near carrying capacity
Population Regulation • Density dependent inhibition • Population is regulated by negative feedback • Crowding • Competition
Population Regulation • Density independent inhibition • Weather • Disturbances
Succession • A natural increase in the complexity of the structure and species composition over time • A lifeless area becomes an ecosystem
Bare surface • A lifeless abiotic environment becomes available for pioneer species • Usually r-selected species
Seral Stage 1 • Simple soil starts • Pioneer species adapted to extreme conditions colonize
Seral Stage 2 • Species diversity increases • Organic material and nutrients in soil increases
Seral Stage 3 • Larger plants colonize • K-selected species become established • r-selected species unable to compete get fazed out
Seral Stage 4 • Fewer new species • Narrower niches develop, K-selected species become specialists
Climax Community • Stable and self-perpetuating ecosystem • Maximum development under temperature, light, precipitation conditions.