Chapter 53 Community
Ecology
Lecture Outline
Overview: What Is a
Community?
·
A
community is defined as an
assemblage of species living close enough together for potential interaction.
·
Communities
differ in their species richness, the number of species they contain, and the
relative abundance of different species.
Concept 53.1 A community’s interactions include competition,
predation, herbivory, symbiosis, and disease
·
There
are a number of possible interspecific
interactions that link the species of a community.
·
Interspecific
interactions can be symbolized by the positive (+) or negative (−)
effects of the interaction on the individual populations.
°
0
indicates that a population is not affected by the interaction.
°
The
effect of an interaction between two species may change as circumstances
change.
·
Interspecific competition can occur when species
compete for a specific limiting resource.
°
When
two species compete for a resource, the result is detrimental to one or both
species (−/−)
·
Strong
competition can lead to the local elimination of one of the two competing
species, a process called competitive
exclusion.
°
The
competitive exclusion principle
states that two species with similar needs for the same limiting resources
cannot coexist in the same place.
·
The
ecological niche is the sum total of
a species’ use of abiotic and biotic resources in the environment.
°
In
the analogy stated by ecologist Eugene Odum, an organism’s habitat is its
“address,” and the niche is the organism’s “profession.”
°
For
example, the niche of a tropical tree lizard includes the temperature range it
tolerates, the size of branches it perches on, the time of day when it is
active, and the kind of insects it eats.
°
The
competitive exclusion principle can be restated to say that two species cannot
coexist in a community if their niches are identical.
°
However,
ecologically similar species can
coexist in a community if their niches differ in one or more significant ways.
·
A
species’ fundamental niche is the
niche potentially occupied by that species.
°
The
fundamental niche may differ from the realized
niche, the niche a species actually occupies in a particular environment.
·
When
competition between two species with identical niches does not lead to the
local extinction of either species, it is generally because evolution by
natural selection results in modification of the resources used by one of the
species.
°
Resource partitioning is the differentiation of
niches that enables two similar species to coexist in a community.
°
Character displacement is the tendency for
characteristics to be more divergent in sympatric populations of two species
than in allopatric populations of the same two species.
·
Predation is a +/−
interaction between species in which one species, the predator, kills and eats
the other, the prey.
·
The
term predation elicits images such as
a lion attacking and eating an antelope.
°
This
interaction also includes interactions such as seed predation, in which seed-eating weevils eat plant seeds.
·
Natural
selection favors adaptations of predators and prey.
°
Predators
have many feeding adaptations, including acute senses and weaponry such as
claws, fangs, stingers, or poison to help catch and subdue prey.
°
Predators
that pursue prey are generally fast and agile; those who lie in ambush are
often camouflaged.
·
Prey
animals have evolved adaptations that help them avoid being eaten.
°
Behavioral
defenses include fleeing, hiding, and self-defense.
°
Alarm
calls may summon many individuals of the prey species to mob the predator.
°
Adaptive
coloration has evolved repeatedly in animals.
§
Camouflage
or cryptic coloration makes prey
difficult to spot against the background.
°
Some
animals have mechanical or chemical defenses.
§
Chemical
defenses include odors and toxins.
§
Animals
with effecting chemical defenses often exhibit bright warning aposematic coloration.
à
Predators
are cautious in approaching potential prey with bright coloration.
·
One
prey species may gain protection by mimicking the appearance of another prey
species.
°
In
Batesian mimicry a harmless,
palatable species mimics a harmful, unpalatable model.
°
In
Müllerian mimicry, two or more
unpalatable species resemble each other.
§
Each
species gains an additional advantage because predators are more likely to
encounter an unpalatable prey and learn to avoid prey with that appearance.
·
Predators
may also use mimicry.
°
Some
snapping turtles have tongues resembling wiggling worms to lure small fish.
·
Herbivory is a +/−
interaction in which an herbivore eats parts of a plant or alga.
°
Herbivores
include large mammals and small invertebrates.
°
Herbivores
have specialized adaptations.
§
Many
herbivorous insects have chemical sensors on their feet to recognize
appropriate food plants.
§
Mammalian
herbivores have specialized dentition and digestive systems to process
vegetation.
·
Plants
may produce chemical toxins, which may act in combination with spines and
thorns to prevent herbivory.
·
Parasitism is a +/− symbiotic
interaction in which a parasite
derives its nourishment from a host,
which is harmed in the process.
°
Endoparasites live within the body of
the host; ectoparasites live and
feed on the external surface of the host.
°
Parasitoidism is a special type of
parasitism in which an insect (usually a wasp) lays eggs on or in living hosts.
§
The
larvae feed on the body of the host, eventually killing it.
°
Many
parasites have complex life cycles involving a number of hosts.
°
Some
parasites change the behavior of their hosts in ways that increase the
probability of the parasite being transferred from one host to another.
°
Parasites
can have significant direct and indirect effects on the survival, reproduction,
and density of their host populations.
·
Pathogens are disease-causing
agents that have deleterious effects on their hosts (+/−)
°
Pathogens
are typically bacteria, viruses, or protists.
°
Fungi
and prions can also be pathogenic.
·
Parasites
are generally large, multicellular organisms, while most pathogens are
microscopic.
°
Many
pathogens are lethal.
·
Mutualism is an interspecific
symbiosis in which two species benefit from their interaction (+/+).
°
Examples
of mutualism include nitrogen fixation by bacteria in the root nodules of
legumes; digestion of cellulose by microorganisms in the guts of ruminant
mammals; and the exchange of nutrients in mycorrhizae, the association of fungi
and plant roots.
·
Mutualistic
interactions may result in the evolution of related adaptations in both
species.
·
Commensalism is an interaction that
benefits one species but neither harms nor helps the other (+/0).
°
Commensal
interactions are difficult to document in nature because any close association
between species likely affects both species, if only slightly.
°
For
example, “hitchhiking” species, such as the barnacles that attach to whales,
are sometimes considered commensal.
§
The
hitchhiking barnacles gain access to a substrate and seem to have little effect
on the whale.
§
However,
the barnacles may slightly reduce the host’s efficiency of movement.
§
Conversely,
they may provide some camouflage.
·
Coevolution refers to reciprocal
evolutionary adaptations of two interacting species.
°
A
change in one species acts as a selective force on another species, whose
adaptation in turn acts as a selective force on the first species.
°
The
linkage of adaptations requires that genetic change in one of the interacting
populations of the two species be tied to genetic change in the other
population.
§
An
example is the gene-for-gene recognition between a plant species and a species
of virulent pathogen.
§
In
contrast, the aposematic coloration of various tree frog species and the
aversion reactions of various predators are not examples of coevolution.
à
These
are adaptations to other organisms in the community rather than coupled genetic
changes in two interacting species.
Concept 53.2 Dominant and keystone
species exert strong controls on community structure
Species diversity is a fundamental aspect of
community structure.
·
A
small number of species in the community exert strong control on that
community’s structure, especially on the composition, relative abundance, and
diversity of species.
·
The
species diversity of a community is
the variety of different kinds of organisms that make up the community.
·
Species
diversity has two components.
°
Species richness is the total number of
different species in the community.
°
The
relative abundance of the different
species is the proportion each species represents of the total individuals in
the community.
°
Species
diversity is dependent on both
species richness and relative abundance.
·
Measuring
species diversity may be difficult, but is essential for understanding
community structure and for conserving biodiversity.
Trophic structure is a key factor in community
dynamics.
·
The
trophic structure of a community is
determined by the feeding relationships between organisms.
·
The
transfer of food energy up the trophic levels from its source in autotrophs
(usually photosynthetic organisms) through herbivores (primary consumers) and
carnivores (secondary and tertiary consumers) and eventually to decomposers is
called a food chain.
·
In
the 1920s,
°
A
food web uses arrows to link species according to who eats whom in a community.
·
How
are food chains linked into food webs?
°
A
given species may weave into the web at more than one trophic level.
·
Food
webs can be simplified in two ways.
°
We
can group species in a given community into broad functional groups.
§
For
example, phytoplankton can be grouped as primary producers in an aquatic food
web.
°
A
second way to simplify a food web is to isolate a portion of the web that
interacts little with the rest of the community.
·
Each
food chain within a food web is usually only a few links long.
°
Charles
Elton pointed out that the length of most food chains is only four or five
links.
·
Why
are food chains relatively short?
°
The
energetic hypothesis suggests that
the length of a food chain is limited by the inefficiency of energy transfer
along the chain.
§
Only
about 10% of the energy stored in the organic matter of each trophic level is
converted to organic matter at the next trophic level.
§
The
energetic hypothesis predicts that food chains should be relatively longer in
habitats with higher photosynthetic productivity.
°
The
dynamic stability hypothesis
suggests that long food chains are less stable than short chains.
§
Population
fluctuations at lower trophic levels are magnified at higher levels, making top
predators vulnerable to extinction.
à
In
a variable environment, top predators must be able to recover from
environmental shocks that can reduce the food supply all the way up the food
chain.
§
The
dynamic stability hypothesis predicts that food chains should be shorter in
unpredictable environments.
·
Most
of the available data supports the energetic hypothesis.
·
Another
factor that may limit the length of food chains is that, with the exception of
parasites, animals tend to be larger at successive trophic levels.
·
Certain
species have an especially large impact on community structure because they are
highly abundant or because they play a pivotal role in community dynamics.
°
The
exaggerated impact of these species may occur through their trophic interactions
or through their influences on the physical environment.
·
Dominant species are those species in a
community that are most abundant or have the highest biomass (the sum weight of all individuals in a population).
·
There
is no single explanation for why a species becomes dominant in a community.
°
One
hypothesis suggests that dominant species are competitively successful at
exploiting limiting resources.
°
Another
hypothesis suggests that dominant species are most successful at avoiding
predation or disease.
§
This
could explain why invasive species can achieve such high biomass in their new
environments, in the absence of their natural predators and pathogens.
·
One
way to investigate the impact of a dominant species is to remove it from the
community.
·
Keystone species are not necessarily
abundant in a community.
°
They
influence community structure by their key ecological niches.
·
If
keystone species are removed, community structure is greatly affected.
°
Ecologist
Robert Paine of the
°
Paine
removed the sea star Pisaster ochraceous
from rocky intertidal communities.
§
Pisaster is a predator on mussels
such as Mytilus californianus, a
superior competitor for space in the intertidal areas.
§
After
Paine removed Pisaster, the mussels
were able to monopolize space and exclude other invertebrates and algae from
attachment sites.
§
When
sea stars were present, 15 to 20 species of invertebrates and algae occurred in
the intertidal zone.
§
After
experimental removal of Pisaster,
species diversity declined to fewer than 5 species.
§
Pisaster thus acts as a keystone
species, exerting an influence on community structure that is disproportionate
to its abundance.
°
Some
organisms exert their influence by causing physical changes in the environment
that affect community structure.
§
An
example of such a species is the beaver, which transforms landscapes by felling
trees and building dams.
°
Such
species are called ecosystem “engineers” or “foundation species.”
§
These
influential species act as facilitators,
with positive effects on the survival and reproduction of other species.
The structure of a community may be controlled
from the bottom up by nutrients or from the top down by predators.
·
Simplified
models based on relationships between adjacent trophic levels are useful for
discussing how communities might be organized.
°
Consider
three possible relationships between plants (V for vegetation) and herbivores (H).
§
V à H V ß H V ßà H
§
Arrows
indicate that a change in biomass at one trophic level causes a change in
biomass at in the other trophic level.
·
We
can define two models of community organization.
°
The
bottom-up model postulates V à H linkages, in which the presence or absence of mineral nutrients (N) controls plant (V) numbers, which control herbivore (H) numbers, which control predator (P) numbers.
§
A
simplified bottom-up model is N à V à H
à
P.
°
The
top-down model postulates that it is
mainly predation that controls community organization.
§
Predators
limit herbivores, which limit plants, which limit nutrient levels through the
uptake of nutrients during growth and reproduction.
§
A
simplified top-down model is thus N ß V ß H
ß
P.
§
The
top-down control of community structure is also called the trophic cascade model.
§
The
effect of any manipulation thus moves down the trophic structure as a series of
+/− effects.
·
Many
intermediate models are between extreme bottom-up and top-down models.
°
For
example, all interactions between trophic levels may be reciprocal (ß à).
°
The
direction of interaction may alternate over time.
°
Communities
vary in their relative degree of bottom-up and top-down control.
·
Simplified
models are valuable as a starting point for the analysis of communities.
°
Pollution
has degraded freshwater lakes in many countries.
°
Because
many freshwater lakes seem to be structured according to the top-down model,
ecologists have a potential means of improving water quality.
§
This
strategy is called biomanipulation.
§
In
lakes with three trophic levels, removing fish may improve water quality by
increasing zooplankton and thus decreasing algal populations.
§
In
lakes with four trophic levels, adding top predators will have the same effect.
Concept 53.3 Disturbance influences species diversity and
composition
·
Stability is the tendency of a
community to reach and maintain a relatively constant composition of species
despite disturbance.
°
Many
communities seem to be characterized by change rather than stability.
·
The
nonequilibrium model proposes that
communities constantly change following a disturbance.
·
A
disturbance is an event that changes
a community by removing organisms or altering resource availability.
°
Storms,
fires, floods, droughts, frosts, human activities, or overgrazing can be
disturbances.
·
A
disturbance can have a beneficial effect on a community.
°
Disturbances
can create opportunities for species that have not previously occupied habitat
in a community.
°
Small-scale
disturbances can enhance environmental patchiness and thus maintain species
diversity in a community.
·
The
intermediate disturbance hypothesis
suggest that moderate levels of disturbance can create conditions that foster
greater species diversity than low or high levels of disturbance.
·
Frequent
small-scale disturbances may prevent a large-scale disturbance.
·
Increasing
evidence suggests that some amount of nonequilibrium resulting from disturbance
is the norm for communities.
Humans are the most widespread agents of
disturbance.
·
Human
activities cause more disturbances than natural events do.
°
Agricultural
development has disrupted the vast grasslands of the North American prairie.
°
Logging
and clearing for urban development have reduced large tracts of forest to small
patches of disconnected woodlots throughout North America and
°
Tropical
rain forests are disappearing due to clear-cutting.
·
Human-caused
disturbances usually reduce species diversity in communities.
Ecological succession is the sequence of
community changes after a disturbance.
·
Ecological succession is the transition in
species composition in disturbed areas over ecological time.
·
Primary succession begins in a lifeless area
where soil has not yet formed, such as a volcanic island or the moraine left
behind as a glacier retreats.
°
Initially,
only autotrophic prokaryotes may be present.
°
Next,
mosses and lichens colonize and cause the development of soil.
°
Once
soil is present, grasses, shrubs, and trees sprout from seeds blown or carried
in from nearby areas.
·
Secondary succession occurs where an existing
community has been removed by a disturbance such as a clear-cut or fire, while
the soil is left intact.
°
Herbaceous
species grow first, from wind-blown or animal-borne seeds.
°
Woody
shrubs replace the herbaceous species, and they in turn are replaced by forest
trees.
·
Early
arrivals and later-arriving species are linked in one of three key processes.
1. Early arrivals may facilitate the appearance of later
species by changing the environment.
°
For
example, early herbaceous species may increase soil fertility.
2. Early species may inhibit establishment of later species.
3. Early species may tolerate later species but neither
hinder nor help their colonization.
Concept 53.4 Biogeographic factors affect community biodiversity
·
Two
key factors correlated with a community’s biodiversity
(species diversity) are its geographic location and its size.
·
In
the 1850s, both Charles Darwin and Alfred Wallace pointed out that plant and
animal life were more abundant and varied in the tropics.
°
They
also noted that small or remote islands have fewer species than large islands
or those near continents.
·
Such
observations suggest that biogeographic patterns in biodiversity conform to a
set of basic principles.
Species richness generally declines along an
equatorial-polar gradient.
·
Tropical
habitats support much larger numbers of species of organisms than do temperate
and polar regions.
·
What
causes these gradients?
°
The
two key factors are probably evolutionary history and climate.
·
Over
the course of evolutionary time, species diversity may increase in a community
as more speciation events occur.
°
Tropical
communities are generally older than temperate or polar communities.
°
The
growing season in the tropics is about five times longer than that in a tundra
community.
§
Biological
time thus runs five times faster in the tropics.
°
Repeated
glaciation events have eliminated many temperate and polar communities.
·
Climate
is likely the primary cause of latitudinal gradients in biodiversity.
°
Solar
energy input and water availability can be combined as a measure of evapotranspiration, the evaporation of
water from soil plus the transpiration of water from plans.
§
Actual evapotranspiration, determined by the amount
of solar radiation, temperature, and water availability, is much higher in hot
areas with abundant rainfall than in areas with low temperatures or precipitation.
§
Potential
evapotranspiration,
a measure of energy availability, is determined by the amount of solar
radiation and temperature.
§
The
species richness of plants and animals correlates with both measures of
evapotranspiration.
Species richness is related to a community’s
geographic size.
·
The
species-area curve quantifies what
may seem obvious: the larger the geographic area of a community, the greater
the number of species.
°
Larger
areas offer a greater diversity of habitats and microhabitats than smaller
areas.
·
In
conservation biology, developing species-area curves for the key taxa in a
community allows ecologists to predict how loss of habitat is likely to affect
biodiversity.
Species richness on islands depends on island
size and distance from the mainland.
·
Because
of their size and isolation, islands provide excellent opportunities for
studying some of the biogeographic factors that affect the species diversity of
communities.
·
“
·
An
island is thus any patch surrounded by an environment unsuitable for the
“island” species.
·
Robert
MacArthur and E. O. Wilson developed a general hypothesis of island
biogeography to identify the key determinants of species diversity on an island
with a given set of physical characteristics.
·
Imagine
a newly formed oceanic island that receives colonizing species from a distant
mainland.
·
Two
factors will determine the number of species that eventually inhabit the
island:
1. The rate at which new
species immigrate to the island.
2. The rate at which species
become extinct on the island.
·
Two
physical features of the island affect immigration and extinction rates:
1. Its size.
2. Its distance from the
mainland.
·
Small
islands have lower immigration rates because potential colonizers are less
likely to happen upon them.
·
Small
islands have higher extinction rates because they have fewer resources and less
diverse habitats for colonizing species to partition.
·
Islands
closer to the mainland will have a higher immigration rate than islands that
are farther away.
·
Arriving
colonists of a particular species will reduce the chance that the species will
go extinct.
·
At
any given time, an island’s immigration and extinction rates are also affected
by the number of species already present.
°
As
the number of species increases, any individual reaching the island is less
likely to represent a new species.
°
As
more species are present, extinction rates increase because of the greater likelihood
of competitive exclusion.
·
The
hypothesis of island biogeography predicts that a dynamic equilibrium will
eventually be reached where the rate of species immigration equals the rate of
species extinction.
°
The
number of species at this equilibrium point is correlated with the island’s
size and distance from the mainland.
·
Studies
of plants and animals on many island chains, including the Galapagos, support
these predictions.
·
The
island equilibrium model has been attacked as an oversimplification.
°
Over
longer periods, abiotic disturbances such as storms, adaptive evolutionary
changes, and speciation may alter species composition and community structure
on islands.
Concept 53.5 Contrasting views of community
structure are the subject of continuing debate
·
The
integrated hypothesis of community
structure depicts a community as an assemblage of closely linked species locked
into association by mandatory biotic interactions.
°
The
community functions as an integrated unit, as a superorganism.
·
The
individualistic hypothesis of
community structure depicts a community as a chance assemblage of species found
in the same area because they happen to have similar abiotic requirements for
rainfall, temperature, or soil type.
·
These
two very different hypotheses suggest different priorities in studying
biological communities.
°
The
integrated hypothesis emphasizes assemblages of species as the essential units
for understanding the interactions and distributions of species.
°
The
individualistic hypothesis emphasizes single species.
·
The
hypotheses make contrasting predictions about how plant species should be
distributed along an environmental gradient.
°
The
integrated hypothesis predicts that species should be clustered into discrete
communities with noticeable boundaries because the presence or absence of a
particular species is largely governed by the presence or absence of other
species.
°
The
individualistic hypothesis predicts that communities should generally lack
discrete geographic boundaries because each species has an independent,
individualistic, distribution along the environmental gradient.
·
In
most cases where there are broad regions characterized by gradients of
environmental variation, the composition of plant communities does seem to
change continuously, with each species more or less independently distributed.
The debate continues with the rivet and
redundancy models.
·
The
individualistic hypothesis is generally accepted by plant ecologists.
·
Further
debate arises when these ideas are applied to animals.
·
American
ecologists Anne and Paul Ehrlich proposed the rivet model of communities.
·
This
hypothesis is a reincarnation of the interactive model and suggests that most
animal species are associated with particular other species in the community.
°
Reducing
or increasing the abundance of one species in a community will affect many
other species.
·
Australian
ecologist Brian Walker’s redundancy
model proposes that most animal species in a community are not closely
associated with one another.
°
Species
operate independently, and an increase or decrease in one species in a
community has little effect on other species.
°
In
this sense, species in a community are redundant.
°
If
a predator disappears, another predatory species will take its place as a
consumer of specific prey.
·
The
rivet and redundancy models represent extremes; most communities have some
features of each model.
°
We
still do not have enough information to answer the fundamental questions raised
by these models: Are communities loose associations of species or highly
integrated units?
°
To
fully assess these models, we need to study how species interact in communities
and how tight these interactions are.