Ecological Niche
• Adescription of the role played by a
species in a biologic community
and
• The total set of environmental
conditions/factors that determine a species
distribution
2.
Generalist
• A speciesthat can adapt to a wide range of
environments (“r-adapted”)
– raccoons, rats, wolves, dandelions
• Can adept quickly to changes
• Opportunistic - appear quickly
wherever an opening exists.
• Pioneer species - first to appear
3.
Specialist
• A speciesspecifically adapted to a very
narrow niche or range of conditions
(“K-adapted”)
– pandas, koalas, wild roses
• Much less resilient to change, adept
very slowly
4.
Law of Competition
•no two species will occupy the same
ecological niche and compete for exactly
the same resources in the same habitat for
very long.
– One group or the other will gain an advantage
forcing the other group to move or change
behavior or become extinct
– resource partitioning - adaptations geared to
reduce competition in the same habitat
5.
Species Interactions
• Predation
–Predator - any organism that feeds
directly on another living organism
(Carnivores prey on other animals,
Herbivores prey on plants,
Omnivore prey on both
• Parasites and pathogens can also be
considered predators
6.
• Competition
– Intraspecificcompetition
• competition within a species
– Interspecific competition -
• competition between species
Can result in Coevolution
7.
• Symbiosis
• theintimate living together of members of
two or more species
• Unlike predation and competition,
symbiosis can be beneficial to all involved
parties (but not always).
8.
• Commensalism: -"eating together at the
same table" - in this association one
member, usually the smaller, derives benefit
from the association, whereas for the other
member, the association is neither
beneficial or harmful. The relationship can
be that of sharing space, substrate, defense,
shelter, transport or food.
• Ex. Some species of barnacles are found
only as commensals on the jaws of whales.
9.
• The Remorafish (Echeniedea) is a long slender
fish which has its dorsal fin modified as a sucker-
like attachment organ. It attaches to the sides of
larger fish and turtles using them as transport
hosts but in addition, obtains food fragments
dropped from the host.
10.
• Mutualism: Asthe name would suggest this is an
association in which both organisms derive mutual
benefit.
• associations are seen in cleaning fish often seen
around sharks feeding on parasites in the mouth and
gills. The Egyptian plover performs a similar service
by cleaning the mouth of crocodiles.
• Tick birds on rhinos and ox pecker birds on various
antelopes also share a mutual relationship. In addition
to removing ticks and other irritating insects, the ox
peckers often signal the presence of predators to the
antelopes.
11.
• Parasitism
• "A parasite is an organism living in or on
another living organism, obtaining from it
part or all of its organic nutriment, usually
to the detriment of its host.“
• Examples of parasitism include: tick-dog;
tapeworm-human.
12.
Defensive Mechanisms
• Developmentof some mechanism by which
to hide better or to defend oneself from
attack. Toxins, smells, stingers or nettles,
body armor
14.
Mimicry
• Evolving tolook like something else
– looking like a more dangerous animal
– looking like something inedible
– looking safe - thereby preying on other
organisms
15.
• From leftto right are the Common Wasp, Vespula vulgaris,
and some of its mimics - the Hornet Moth, Sesia apiformis, the
Wasp Beetle, Clytus arietis, and the Hoverfly, Syrphus ribesii.
16.
Keystone Species
• aspecies or group of species whose impact
or involvement on its community/ecosystem
is larger or more influential than expected
from its mere abundance
• Absence of this/these species can reek havoc
on an ecosystem
17.
Biome
Biome
• “life zones”environments with similar
climate, topography, soil conditions, and
roughly similar biologic communities
– Tundra, Tropical Rainforest, Grassland, …
Biodiversity
Biodiversity
• the varietyof living things
– genetic diversity - The genetic diversity within a
species is primarily the variety of populations that
comprise it. (populations with different genes).
– species diversity- a “population” the individuals of a
species that live together, group from which mates
are chosen
– ecological diversity - the entire composition of a
biologic community
– habitat diversity- the variety of places where life
exists -- coral reefs, old-growth forests in the Pacific
Northwest, tallgrass prairie,
Benefits
• Food
• Drugsand Medicine (> 50% of all
medications contain some natural products)
• Ecological Benefits - soil production,
nutrient cycling, food production, water
cycling and purification
• Aesthetic and Cultural
Human Caused Reductions
•Habitat Destruction
– Fragmentation
• Hunting and Fishing
• Commercial Products
• Live Specimen Trade
• Predator and Pest Control
Exotic Species
• Exoticorganisms are organisms which are
introduced into habitats/ecosystems where
they are not native (i.e. did not evolve
within that community)
• one of the greatest threats to biodiversity
worldwide !
Purple Loosestrife
Introduced bygardeners in early 1800s for its pretty purple
flowers. Grows anywhere it is wet, chokes wetlands,
rendering them inhospitable to native plants and wildlife
Zebra
Mussels
Discovered in NorthAmerica in 1988. Marine biologists believe it
arrived by transatlantic ship-an undetected stowaway in ballast
water that was discharged, mussel larvae and all, into Lake St.
Clair, between Lakes Huron and Erie. Since then, the prolific
creature has spread rapidly throughout lakes and waterways of the
eastern United States and Canada, from the Great Lakes through the
Mississippi River drainage. It remains unchecked by predators or
Flathead Catfish
• Notall destructive alien species come from distant
lands. The flathead catfish poses no threat within
its native range of the lower Great Lakes,
Mississippi River basin, and parts of the Gulf
slope drainage. But when introduced to new
waters as a sportfish, it's a different story. Now
found in the rivers and reservoirs of 18 states
where it was previously unknown, this catfish is
depleting native fish populations.
Brown tree snake
•On the Pacific island of Guam, the forests are
strangely silent, devoid of bird song. There are no
bird songs because there are few birds. They have
been wiped out by the brown tree snake (Boiga
irregularis). A native of the Solomon Islands, Papua
New Guinea, and northern Australia, the reptile was
accidentally introduced to Guam in the 1940s. It
probably arrived via military transports after World
War II. Since then, the snake has spread throughout
the island, reaching numbers of 12,000 per square
mile in some forested areas.
If you areinterested in this more information can be
found at :
http://www.invasivespecies.gov/
www.natureserve.org/publications/leastwanted/
index.htm