Community Ecology
Community Ecology
Community Ecology
What is a community?
A community is an assemblage of
plant and animal populations that live in
a particular area or habitat.
Populations of the various species in a
community interact and form a system
with its own emergent properties.
Emergent Properties of a
Community
Scale
Spatial and Temporal Structure
Species Richness
Species Diversity
Trophic structure
Succession and Disturbance
Example Problem
A community contains the following species:
Number of Individuals
Species A
104
Species B
71
Species C
19
Species D
5
Species E
3
What is the Simpson index value for this
community?
Answer:
Total Individuals= (104+19+71+5+3)=202
PA=104/202=.51 PB=19/202=.09
PC=71/202=.35
PD=5/202=.03
PE=3/202=.02
D=1-{(.51)2+(.09)2+(.35)2+(.03)2+
(.02)2}
D=1-.40=.60
Clicker Question
In the example above, what was the
species richness?
A. .60
B. 202 individuals
C. 5 species
D. .40
E. None of the above
Succession, Disturbance
and Change
In terms of species and physical
structure, communities change
with time.
Ecological succession, the predictable change in
species over time, as each new set of species
modifies the environment to enable the
establishment of other species, is virtually
ubiquitous.
Some Agents of
Disturbance
Fire
Floods
Drought
Large Herbivores
Storms
Volcanoes
Human Activity
Disturbance, Invasion,
Succession
Invasion:
Disturbance creates an ecological vacuum that can be
filled from within, from outside, or both. For example,
forest fires clear away old brush and open up the canopy,
releasing nutrients into the soil at the same time. Seeds
that survive the fire germinate and rapidly grow to take
advantage of this opportunity. At the same time, windborne and animal-dispersed seeds germinate and seek to
do the same thing.
The best invaders have good dispersal powers and many
offspring, but they are often not the best competitors in
the long run.
Succession
Mackerel
Cod
Zooplankton
Halibut
Killer Whales
Harbor Seals
Mackerel
Zooplankton
Phytoplankton
One path
through a
food web is
a food
chain.
Examples of Keystone
Species
Trophic Cascades
Species at one trophic level influence species at
other levels; the addition or subtraction of species
affects the entire food web.
This causes positive effects for some species,
and negative effects for others. This is called a
trophic cascade. For instance, removing a
secondary consumer might positively affect the
primary consumers they feed upon, and
negatively affect the producers that are food for
primary consumers.
Types of Interspecific
Interactions
Effect on
Effect on
Neutralism
Competition
Commensalism
Amensalism
Mutualism
Predation,
Species 1
0
+
+
-
Parasitism, Herbivory
Species 2
0
0
0
+
+
Neutralism
Neutralism the most common type
of interspecific interaction. Neither
population affects the other. Any
interactions that do occur are
indirect or incidental.
Example: the tarantulas living in a
desert and the cacti living in a
desert
Competition
Competition occurs when organisms in the
same community seek the same limiting
resource. This resource may be prey, water,
light, nutrients, nest sites, etc.
Competition among members of the same
species is intraspecific.
Competition among individuals of different
species is interspecific.
Individuals experience both types of
competition, but the relative importance of the
two types of competition varies from population
to population and species to species
Styles of Competition
Exploitation competition occurs
when individuals use the same limiting
resource or resources, thus depleting
the amount available to others.
Interference competition occurs
when individuals interfere with the
foraging, survival, or reproduction of
others, or directly prevent their
physical establishment in a portion of a
habitat.
Example of Interference
Competition
The confused flour beetle, Triboleum
Outcomes of Competition
Other experiments...
Subsequent laboratory studies on other
organisms, have generally resulted in
competitive exclusion, provided that
the environment was simple enough.
Example: Thomas Park showed that,
via interference competition, the
confused flour beetle and the red flower
beetle would not coexist. One species
always excluded the other.
Resource Partitioning
Species that share the same
habitat and have similar needs
frequently use resources in
somewhat different ways - so that
they do not come into direct
competition for at least part of the
limiting resource. This is called
resource partitioning.
Character Displacement
Example of Character
Amensalism
Amensalism is when one species
suffers and the other interacting
species experiences no effect.
Example: Redwood trees falling
into the ocean become floating
battering-rams during storms,
killing large numbers of mussels
and other inter-tidal organisms.
Commensalism
Mutualism
Mutualism in an interspecific interaction
between two species that benefits both
members.
Populations of each species grow,
survive and/or reproduce at a higher rate
in the presence of the other species.
Mutualisms are widespread in nature,
and occur among many different types
of organisms.
Examples of Mutualism
Mutualistic Symbiosis
Mutualistic Symbiosis is a type of mutualism in
which individuals interact physically, or even live
within the body of the other mutualist.
Frequently, the relationship is essential for the
survival of at least one member.
Example: Lichens are a fungal-algal symbiosis (that
frequently includes a third member, a cyanobacterium.)
The mass of fungal hyphae provides a protected habitat
for the algae, and takes up water and nutrients for the
algae. In return, the algae (and cynaobacteria) provide
carbohydrates as a source of energy for the fungus.
Other Examples of
Mutualisms
Flowering plants and pollinators. (both
facultative and obligate)
Parasitoid wasps and polydna viruses.
(obligate)
Ants and aphids. (facultative)
Termites and endosymbiotic protozoa.
(obligate)
Humans and domestic animals. (mostly
facultative, some obligate)
Predation, Parasitism,
Herbivory
Predators, parasites, parasitoids, and
herbivores obtain food at the expense of
their hosts or prey.
Example of Parasite-Host
Coevolution
The common milkweed, Asclepias syriaca has leaves
that contain cardiac glycosides: they are very
poisonous to most herbivores. This renders them
virtually immune to herbivory by most species.
Monarch butterfly larvae have evolved the ability to
tolerate these toxins, and sequester them within
their bodies. They are important specialist
hervivores of milkweeds.
These sequestered compounds serve the additional
purpose of making monarch larvae virtually inedible
to vertebrate predators.
Predator-Prey Population
Predation may be a density-dependent mortality
Dynamics
factor to the host population-and prey may
represent a limiting resource to predators.
The degree of prey mortality is a function of the
density of the predator population.
The density of the prey population, in turn, affects
the birth and death rates of the predator population.
i.e, when prey become particularly common,
predators increase in numbers until prey die back
due to increased predation, this, in turn, inhibits the
growth of prey.
Typically, there is a time lag effect.