Chapter 50 An Introduction
to Ecology and the Biosphere
Lecture Outline
Overview: The Scope of
Ecology
·
Ecology is the scientific study
of the interactions between organisms and their environment.
Concept 50.1 Ecology is the study of interactions between organisms
and the environment
·
Ecologists
ask questions about factors affecting the distribution and abundance of
organisms.
·
Ecologists
might study how interactions between organisms and the environment affect the
number of species living in an area, the cycling of nutrients, or the growth of
populations.
Ecology and evolutionary biology are closely
related sciences.
·
Ecology
has a long history as a descriptive science.
·
Modern
ecology is also a rigorous experimental science.
·
Ecology
and evolutionary biology are closely related sciences.
·
Events
that occur over ecological time (minutes to years) translate into effects over
evolutionary time (decades to millennia).
°
For
example, hawks feeding on field mice kill certain individuals (over ecological
time), reducing population size (an ecological effect), altering the gene pool
(an evolutionary effect), and selecting for mice with fur color that
camouflages them in their environment (over evolutionary time).
Ecological research ranges from the
adaptations of individual organisms to the dynamics of the biosphere.
·
The
environment of any organism includes the following components:
°
Abiotic components: nonliving chemical and
physical factors such as temperature, light, water, and nutrients.
°
Biotic components: all living organisms in
the individual’s environment.
·
Ecology
can be divided into a number of areas of study.
·
Organismal ecology is concerned with the
behavioral, physiological, and morphological ways individuals interact with the
environment.
·
A
population is a group of individuals
of the same species living in a particular geographic area. Population ecology examines factors
that affect population size and composition.
·
A community consists of all the
organisms of all the species that inhabit a particular area. Community ecology examines the
interactions between species and considers how factors such as predation,
competition, disease, and disturbance affect community structure and
organization.
·
An
ecosystem consists of all the
abiotic factors in addition to the entire community of species that exist in a
certain area. Ecosystem ecology
studies energy flow and cycling of chemicals among the various abiotic and
biotic components.
·
A
landscape or seascape consists of several different ecosystems linked by
exchanges of energy, materials, and organisms. Landscape ecology deals with arrays of ecosystems and their
arrangement in a geographic region.
°
Each
landscape or seascape consists of a mosaic of different types of patches, an
environmental characteristic ecologists refer to as patchiness. Landscape ecological research focuses on the factors
controlling exchanges of energy, materials, and organisms among ecosystem
patches.
·
The
biosphere is the global ecosystem,
the sum of all of the planet’s ecosystems. The biosphere includes the entire
portion of Earth inhabited by life, ranging from the atmosphere to a height of
several kilometers to the oceans and water bearing rocks to a depth of several
kilometers.
Ecology provides a scientific context for
evaluating environmental issues.
·
It
is important to clarify the difference between ecology, the scientific study of the distribution and abundance of
organisms, and environmentalism,
advocacy for the protection or preservation of the natural environment.
·
To
address environmental problems, we need to understand the interactions of
organisms and the environment.
°
The
science of ecology provides that understanding.
·
In
1962, Rachel Carson’s book Silent Spring
warned that the use of pesticides such as DDT was causing population declines
in many nontarget organisms.
·
Today,
acid precipitation, land misuse, toxic wastes, habitat destruction, and the
growing list of endangered or extinct species are just a few of the problems
that threaten the Earth.
·
Many
influential ecologists feel a responsibility to educate legislators and the
general public about decisions that affect the environment.
°
It
is important to communicate the scientific complexity of environmental issues.
·
Our
ecological information is always incomplete. The precautionary principle (essentially “an ounce of prevention is
worth a pound of cure”) can guide decision making on environmental issues.
Concept 50.2 Interactions between organisms and the environment
limit the distribution of species
·
Ecologists
have long recognized distinct global and regional patterns in the distribution
of organisms.
·
Biogeography is the study of past and
present distributions of individual species in the context of evolutionary
theory.
·
Ecologists
ask a series of questions to determine what limits the geographical distribution
of any species.
Species dispersal contributes to the
distribution of organisms.
·
The
movement of individuals away from centers of high population density or from
their area of origin is called dispersal.
·
The
dispersal of organisms is crucial to understanding geographic isolation in
evolution and the broad patterns of geographic distribution of species.
·
One
way to determine if dispersal is a key factor limiting distribution is to
observe the results when humans have accidentally or intentionally transplanted
a species to areas where it was previously absent.
°
For
the transplant to be considered successful, the organisms must not only survive
in the new area, but also reproduce there.
·
If
the transplant is successful, then the potential
range of the species is larger than its actual
range.
·
Species
introduced to new geographic locations may disrupt the communities and
ecosystems to which they are introduced.
°
Consequently,
ecologists rarely conduct transplant experiments today.
°
Instead,
they study the outcome when a species has been transplanted accidentally or for
another purpose.
Behavior and habitat selection contribute to
the distribution of organisms.
·
Sometimes
organisms do not occupy all of their potential range but select particular
habitats.
·
Does
behavior play a role in limiting distribution in such cases?
·
Habitat
selection is one of the least-understood ecological processes, but it appears
to play an important role in limiting the distribution of many species.
Biotic factors affect the distribution of
organisms.
·
Do
biotic factors limit the distribution of species?
°
Negative
interactions with other organisms in the form of predation, parasitism,
disease, or competition may limit the ability of organisms to survive and
reproduce.
§
Predator-removal
experiments can provide information about how predators limit distribution of
prey species.
°
Absence
of other species may also limit distribution of a species.
§
For
example, the absence of a specific pollinator or prey species may limit
distribution of an organism.
Abiotic factors affect the distribution of
organisms.
·
The
global distribution of organisms broadly reflects the influence of abiotic
factors such as temperature, water, and sunlight.
·
The
environment is characterized by spatial
and temporal heterogeneity.
·
Environmental
temperature is an important factor in the distribution of organisms because of
its effect on biological processes.
°
Very
few organisms can maintain an active metabolism at very high or very low
temperatures.
°
Some
organisms have extraordinary adaptations to allow them to live outside the
temperature range habitable for most other living things.
·
The
variation in water availability among habitats is an important factor in
species distribution.
°
Most
aquatic organisms are restricted to either freshwater or marine environments.
°
Terrestrial
organisms face a nearly constant threat of desiccation and have adaptations to
allow them to obtain and conserve water.
·
Sunlight
provides the energy that drives nearly all ecosystems.
°
Intensity
of light is not the most important factor limiting plant growth in most
terrestrial environments, although shading by a forest canopy makes competition
for light in the understory intense.
°
In
aquatic environments, light intensity limits distribution of photosynthetic organisms.
§
Every
meter of water depth selectively absorbs 45% of red light and 2% of blue light
passing through it.
§
As
a result, most photosynthesis in aquatic environments occurs near the surface.
°
Photoperiod,
the relative length of daytime and nighttime, is a reliable indicator of
seasonal events and is an important cue for the development or behavior of many
organisms.
·
Wind
amplifies the effects of temperature by increasing heat loss due to evaporation
and convection. It also increases water loss by increasing the rate of
evaporative cooling in animals and transpiration in plants.
·
The
physical structure, pH, and mineral composition of soils and rocks limit
distribution of plants and, thus, of the animals that feed upon them,
contributing to the patchiness of terrestrial ecosystems.
·
In
streams and rivers, substrate composition can affect water chemistry, affecting
distribution of organisms.
·
In
marine environments, the structure of substrates in the intertidal areas or
seafloor limits the organisms that can attach to or burrow in those habitats.
Four abiotic factors are the major components
of climate.
·
Climate is the prevailing weather
conditions in an area.
°
Four
abiotic factors—temperature, water, sunlight, and wind—are the major components
of climate.
°
Climatic
factors, especially temperature and water, have a major influence on the
distribution of organisms.
·
Climate
patterns can be described on two scales. Macroclimate
patterns are on global, regional, or
local levels, and microclimate patterns
are very fine patterns such as the conditions experienced by a community of
organisms under a fallen log.
·
Climate
determines the makeup of biomes, the
major types of ecosystems.
°
Annual
means for temperature and rainfall are reasonably well correlated with the
biomes found in different regions.
·
Global
climate patterns are determined by sunlight and Earth’s movement in space.
°
The
sun’s warming effect on the atmosphere, land, and water establishes the
temperature variations, cycles of air movement, and evaporation of water that
are responsible for latitudinal variations in climate.
·
Bodies
of water and topographic features such as mountain ranges create regional
climatic variations, while smaller features of the landscape affect local
climates.
·
Ocean
currents influence climate along the coast by heating or cooling overlying air
masses, which may pass over land.
°
Coastal
regions are generally moister than inland areas at the same latitude.
°
In
general, oceans and large lakes moderate the climate of nearby terrestrial
environments.
§
In
certain regions, cool, dry ocean breezes are warmed when they move over land,
absorbing moisture and creating a hot, rainless climate slightly inland.
§
This
Mediterranean climate pattern occurs
inland from the
°
Ocean
currents also influence climate in coastal areas.
·
Mountains
have a significant effect on the amount of sunlight reaching an area, as well
as on local temperature and rainfall.
°
In
the Northern Hemisphere, south-facing slopes receive more sunlight than
north-facing slopes, and are therefore warmer and drier.
°
These
environmental differences affect species distribution.
·
At
any given latitude, air temperature declines 6°C with every 1,000-m increase in
elevation.
°
This
temperature change is equivalent to that caused by an 880-km increase in
latitude.
·
As
moist, warm air approaches a mountain, it rises and cools, releasing moisture
on the windward side of the peak.
°
On
the leeward side of the mountain, cool, dry air descends, absorbing moisture
and producing a rain shadow.
°
Deserts
commonly occur on the leeward side of mountain ranges.
·
The
changing angle of the sun over the course of a year affects local environments.
°
Belts
of wet and dry air on either side of the equator shift with the changing angle
of the sun, producing marked wet and dry seasons around 20° latitude.
°
Seasonal
changes in wind patterns produce variations in ocean currents, occasionally
causing the upwelling of nutrient-rich, cold water from deep ocean layers.
·
Lakes
are also sensitive to seasonal temperature changes.
°
During
the summer and winter, many temperate lakes are thermally stratified or layered
vertically according to temperature.
°
These
lakes undergo a semiannual mixing, or turnover,
of their waters in spring and fall. Turnover brings oxygenated water to the bottom
and nutrient-rich water to the surface.
·
Many
features in the environment influence microclimates.
°
§
Cleared
areas experience greater temperature extremes than the forest interior.
°
A
log or large stone shelters organisms, buffering them from temperature and
moisture fluctuations.
°
Every
environment on Earth is characterized by a mosaic of small-scale differences in
abiotic factors that influence the local distribution of organisms.
·
Long-term
climate changes profoundly affect the biosphere.
·
One
way to predict possible effects of current climate changes is to consider the
changes that have occurred in temperate regions since the end of the last Ice
Age.
·
Until
about 16,000 years ago, continental glaciers covered much of North America and
·
As
the climate warmed and the glaciers melted, tree distribution expanded
northward.
°
A
detailed record of these migrations is captured in fossil pollen in lake and
pond sediments.
·
If
researchers can determine the climatic limits of current geographic
distributions for individual species, they can predict how that species
distribution will change with global warming.
°
A
major question for tree species is whether seed dispersal is rapid enough to
sustain the migration of the species as climate changes.
°
Consider
the American beech, Fagus grandifolia.
§
Climate
models predict that the northern and southern limit of the beech’s range will
move 700–900 km north over the next century.
à
The
beech will have to migrate 7–9 km per year to maintain its distribution.
§
However,
since the Ice Age, the beech has migrated into its present rage at a rate of
only 0.2 km per year.
§
Without
human assistance, the beech will become extinct.
Concept 50.3 Abiotic and biotic factors influence the structure and
dynamics of aquatic biomes
·
Varying
combinations of biotic and abiotic factors determine the nature of the Earth’s biomes, major types of ecological
associations that occupy broad geographic regions of land or water.
Aquatic biomes occupy the largest part of the
biosphere.
·
Ecologists
distinguish between freshwater and marine biomes on the basis of physical and
chemical differences.
°
Marine
biomes generally have salt concentrations that average 3%, while freshwater
biomes have salt concentrations of less than 1%.
·
Marine
biomes cover approximately 75% of the earth’s surface and have an enormous
effect on the biosphere.
°
The
evaporation of water from the oceans provides most of the planet’s rainfall.
°
Ocean
temperatures have a major effect on world climate and wind patterns.
°
Photosynthesis
by marine algae and photosynthetic bacteria produce a substantial proportion of
the world’s oxygen. Respiration by these organisms consumes huge amounts of
atmospheric carbon dioxide.
·
Freshwater
biomes are closely linked to the soils and biotic components of the terrestrial
biomes through which they pass.
°
The
pattern and speed of water flow and the surrounding climate are also important.
·
Most
aquatic biomes are physically and chemically stratified.
·
Light
is absorbed by the water and by photosynthetic organisms, so light intensity
decreases rapidly with depth.
°
There
is sufficient light for photosynthesis in the upper photic zone.
°
Very
little light penetrates to the lower aphotic
zone.
·
The
substrate at the bottom of an aquatic biome is the benthic zone.
°
This
zone is made up of sand and sediments and is occupied by communities of
organisms called benthos.
°
A
major food source for benthos is dead organic material or detritus, which rains down from the productive surface waters of
the photic zone.
·
Sunlight
warms surface waters, while deeper waters remain cold.
°
As
a result, water temperature in lakes is stratified, especially in summer and
winter.
°
In
the ocean and most lakes, a narrow stratum of rapid temperature change called a
thermocline separates the more
uniformly warm upper layer from more uniformly cold deeper waters.
·
In
aquatic biomes, community distribution is determined by depth of the water,
distance from shore, and open water versus bottom.
·
In
marine communities, phytoplankton, zooplankton, and many fish species live in
the relatively shallow photic zone.
·
The
aphotic zone contains little life, except for microorganisms and relatively
sparse populations of luminescent fishes and invertebrates.
·
The
major aquatic biomes include lakes, wetlands, streams, rivers, estuaries,
intertidal biomes, oceanic pelagic biomes, coral reefs, and marine benthic
biomes.
·
Freshwater
lakes vary greatly in oxygen and nutrient content.
°
Oligotrophic lakes are deep, nutrient
poor, oxygen rich, and contain little life.
°
Eutrophic lakes are shallow,
nutrient rich, and oxygen poor.
·
In
lakes, the littoral zone is the
shallow, well-lit water close to shore.
°
The
limnetic zone is the open surface
water.
·
Wetlands are areas covered with
sufficient water to support aquatic plants.
°
They
can be saturated or periodically flooded.
°
Wetlands
include marshes, bogs, and swamps.
°
They
are among the most productive biomes on Earth and are home to a diverse
community of invertebrates and birds.
°
Because
of the high organic production and decomposition in wetlands, their water and
soil are low in dissolved oxygen.
°
Wetlands
have a high capacity to filter dissolved nutrients and chemical pollutants.
°
Humans
have destroyed many wetlands, but some are now protected.
·
Streams and rivers are bodies of water moving continuously in one direction.
°
Headwaters
are cold, clear, turbulent, and swift.
§
They
carry little sediment and relatively few mineral nutrients.
°
As
water travels downstream, it picks up O2 and nutrients on the way.
°
Nutrient
content is largely determined by the terrain and vegetation of the area.
§
Many
streams and rivers have been polluted by humans, degrading water quality and
killing aquatic organisms.
§
Damming
and flood control impairs the natural functioning of streams and rivers and
threatens migratory species such as salmon.
·
Estuaries are areas of transition
between river and sea.
°
The
salinity of these areas can vary greatly.
°
Estuaries
have complex flow patterns, with networks of tidal channels, islands, levees,
and mudflats.
°
They
support an abundance of fish and invertebrate species and are crucial feeding
areas for many species of waterfowl.
·
An
intertidal zone is a marine biome
that is periodically submerged and exposed by the tides.
°
The
upper intertidal zone experiences longer exposure to air and greater variation
in salinity and temperature than do the lower intertidal areas.
°
Many
organisms live only at a particular stratum in the intertidal.
·
The
oceanic pelagic biome is the open
blue water, mixed by wind-driven oceanic currents.
°
The
surface waters of temperate oceans turn over during fall through spring.
°
The
open ocean has high oxygen levels and low nutrient levels.
°
This
biome covers 70% of the Earth’s surface and has an average depth of 4,000
meters.
·
Coral reefs are limited to the photic
zone of stable tropic marine environments with high water clarity. They are
found at temperatures between 18°C and 30°C.
°
They
are formed by the calcium carbonate skeletons of coral animals.
°
Mutualistic
dinoflagellate algae live within the tissues of the corals.
°
Coral
reefs are home to a very diverse assortment of vertebrates and invertebrates.
°
Collecting
of coral skeletons and overfishing for food and the aquarium trade have reduced
populations of corals and reef fishes.
°
Global
warming and pollution contribute to large-scale coral mortality.
·
The
marine benthic zone consists of the
seafloor below the surface waters of the coastal or neritic zone and the offshore pelagic
zone.
°
Most
of the ocean’s benthic zone receives no sunlight.
°
Organisms
in the very deep abyssal zone are
adapted to continuous cold (about 3°C) and extremely high pressure.
°
Unique
assemblages of organisms are associated with deep-sea hydrothermal vents of volcanic origin on mid-ocean ridges.
§
The
primary producers in these communities are chemoautotrophic prokaryotes that
obtain energy by oxidizing H2S formed by a reaction of volcanically
heated water with dissolved sulfate (SO42−).
Concept 50.4 Climate largely determines the distribution and
structure of terrestrial biomes
·
Because
there are latitudinal patterns of climate over the Earth’s surface, there are
also latitudinal patterns of biome distribution.
·
A
climograph denotes the annual mean
temperature and precipitation of a region.
°
Temperature
and rainfall are well correlated with different terrestrial biomes, and each
biome has a characteristic climograph.
·
Most
terrestrial biomes are named for major physical or climatic features or for
their predominant vegetation.
·
Vertical
stratification is an important feature of terrestrial biomes.
°
The
canopy of the tropical rain forest
is the top layer, covering the low-tree stratum, shrub understory, ground
layer, litter layer, and root layer.
°
Grasslands
have a canopy formed by grass, a litter layer, and a root layer.
°
Stratification
of vegetation provides many different habitats for animals.
·
Terrestrial
biomes usually grade into each other without sharp boundaries. The area of
intergradation, called the ecotone,
may be narrow or wide.
·
The
species composition of any biome differs from location to location.
·
Biomes
are dynamic, and natural disturbance rather than stability tends to be the
rule.
°
Hurricanes
create openings for new species in tropical and temperate forests.
°
In
northern coniferous forests, snowfall may break branches and small trees,
producing gaps that allow deciduous species to grow.
°
As
a result, biomes exhibit patchiness, with several different communities
represented in any particular area.
·
In
many biomes, the dominant plants depend on periodic disturbance.
°
For
example, natural wildfires are an integral component of grasslands, savannas,
chaparral, and many coniferous forests.
·
Human
activity has radically altered the natural patterns of periodic physical
disturbance.
°
Fires
are now controlled for the sake of agricultural land use.
·
Humans
have altered much of the Earth’s surface, replacing original biomes with urban
or agricultural ones.
·
The
major terrestrial biomes include tropical forest, desert, savanna, chaparral,
temperate grassland, coniferous forest, temperate broadleaf forest, and tundra.
·
Tropical forests are found close to the
equator.
°
Tropical rain forests receive constant high
amounts of rainfall (200 to 400 cm annually).
°
In
tropical dry forests, precipitation is highly seasonal.
°
In
both, air temperatures range between 25°C and 29°C year round.
°
Tropical
forests are stratified, and competition for light is intense.
°
Animal
diversity is higher in tropical forests than in any other terrestrial biome.
·
Deserts occur in a band near 30°
north and south latitudes and in the interior of continents.
°
Deserts
have low and highly variable rainfall, generally less than 30 cm per year.
°
Temperature
varies greatly seasonally and daily.
°
Desert
vegetation is usually sparse and includes succulents such as cacti and deeply
rooted shrubs.
°
Many
desert animals are nocturnal, so they can avoid the heat.
°
Desert
organisms display adaptations to allow them to resist or survive desiccation.
·
Savanna is found in equatorial
and subequatorial regions.
°
Rainfall
is seasonal, averaging 30–50 cm per year.
°
The
savanna is warm year-round, averaging 24–29°C with some seasonal variation.
°
Savanna
vegetation is grassland with scattered trees.
°
Large
herbivorous mammals are common inhabitants.
§
The
dominant herbivores are insects, especially termites.
°
Fire
is important in maintaining savanna biomes.
·
Chaparrals have highly seasonal
precipitation with mild, wet winters and dry, hot summers.
°
Annual
precipitation ranges from 30 to 50 cm.
°
Chaparral
is dominated by shrubs and small trees, with a high diversity of grasses and herbs.
°
Plant
and animal diversity is high.
°
Adaptations
to fire and drought are common.
·
Temperate grasslands exhibit seasonal drought,
occasional fires, and seasonal variation in temperature.
°
Large
grazers and burrowing mammals are native to temperate grasslands.
°
Deep
fertile soils make temperate grasslands ideal for agriculture, especially for
growing grain.
°
Most
grassland in North America and
·
Coniferous forest, or taiga, is the largest terrestrial biome on Earth.
°
Coniferous
forests have long, cold winters and short, wet summers.
°
The
conifers that inhabit these forests are adapted for snow and periodic drought.
°
Coniferous
forests are home to many birds and mammals.
°
These
forests are being logged at a very high rate and old-growth stands of conifers
may soon disappear.
·
Temperate broadleaf
forests
have very cold winters, hot summers, and considerable precipitation.
°
A
mature temperate broadleaf forest has distinct vertical layers, including a
closed canopy, one or two strata of understory trees, a shrub layer, and an
herbaceous layer.
°
The
dominant deciduous trees in Northern Hemisphere broadleaf forests drop their
leaves and become dormant in winter.
°
In
the Northern Hemisphere, many mammals in this biome hibernate in the winter,
while many bird species migrate to warmer climates.
°
Humans
have logged many temperate broadleaf forests around the world.
·
Tundra covers large areas of the
°
Alpine tundra is found on high
mountaintops at all latitudes, including the tropics.
§
The
plant communities in alpine and Arctic tundra are very similar.
°
The
Artic tundra winter is long and cold, while the summer is short and mild. The
growing season is very short.
°
Tundra
vegetation is mostly herbaceous, consisting of a mixture of lichens, mosses,
grasses, forbs, and dwarf shrubs and trees.
°
A
permanently frozen layer of permafrost
prevents water infiltration and restricts root growth.
°
Large
grazing musk oxen are resident in Arctic tundra, while caribou and reindeer are
migratory.
°
Migratory
birds use Arctic tundra extensively during the summer as nesting grounds.
°
Arctic
tundra is sparsely settled by humans but has recently become the focus of
significant mineral and oil extraction.