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Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

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Page 1: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Lecture 8Exploitative and Mutualistic

Species Interactions

Principles of EcologyCollege of Forestry, Guangxi University

Eben Goodale

Page 2: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

The midterm

• Not fully graded, but clearly was difficult.• Don’t worry too much … grades will be

curved.• Biggest problems the essay.• Because writing may be difficult to you

especially in a timed framework, I will reassign the essays for homework.

Page 3: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Midterm homework• On website, find two short answer and essay

questions. Hand in your work next Saturday.• For essays, pick one essay topic that you did NOT

do in class exam.• VERY IMPORTANT. This assignment is to be done

by yourself and in your own words. If I find that your answers are similar to someone else’s or copied from some source, this is PLAGIARISM( 抄袭 ) and I will give you a 0.

• Grades from this assignment will be combined with the midterm.

Page 4: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Where we are in class

Page 5: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Review

• What levels of organization have we covered now?

• Individuals form populations; populations form species; these species interact.

• What is meant by competition being a - / - interaction?

Page 6: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Today: more species interactions

• Predator / Prey (+ / - )• Parasites (+ / - )• Mutualists ( + / +) or Commensalists (+ / 0)

Page 7: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Types of exploitive interactions

1) Predators: kill prey2) Herbivores: usually don’t kill the plants3) Parasites (寄生虫) : don’t usually kill host

Pathogens (病原菌;病原体) : induce disease Parasitoids: insect predators that put eggs in

insect host, then grow and kill host

Page 8: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Adaptations of prey to avoid predatorsArmor (装甲) , or other physical

defense (like running speed)

Aposematism: this animal is toxicand advertised that to predators with bright colors.

Cryptic (隐藏,隐蔽的 ) : looks like background

Mimicry (拟态) : looks like somethingthat is dangerous

Movie hereon caterpillarthat acts like snake

Page 9: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

And counter-measures by predators

• Predators can use crypsis and mimicry themselves.

• Evolutionary “arms-race” (防卫装备) .

Page 10: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Herbivores / plants also show arms race

• Many plants produce “secondary compounds” which are toxins (毒素) that repel herbivores.

• Some herbivores, especially insects, have evolved to resist these secondary compounds.

• This may be reason that there are a lot of specialist (专业,专家) herbivores.

Milkweed plant produced toxin.Monarch caterpillar resistant to toxin.Eating milkweed makes caterpillarand butterfly poisonous to birds.

Page 11: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Besides refuges, another prey strategy: swamping (食物来源) the predator

• Many taxa produce offspring on masse, too many for the predator to quickly react to.

Acorn masts

13 year cicadas

Page 12: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Effects on prey by predator can be severe

Cactoblastis cactorumAnd prickly pear

The cactoblastismonument in Australia … one ofworld’s only monuments toan insect…

An example of ‘biological control’: (生物防治)Introducing predators to control invasive prey population

Page 13: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Herbivores can alter structure of community

• Darwin first realized that in many pastures there are both grasses and small trees and cows eat both.

• Both grasses adapted to regrowing, trees not.

• Without cows, trees rapidly replace grasses

• True in natural grasslands, too

Page 14: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Predators too can have community-wide effect

• Foxes introduces to Aleutian islands.

• Eat birds.• Fewer birds = lesser

guano (bird droppings, a very good fertilizer)

• Less guano = less grasses

• Shift in plant composition

Page 15: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Predator change balance of competition

• Famous research of Robert Paine.

• Showed that if remove a predator, one kind of mussel (shellfish) outcompetes all other species in intertidal zone.

• Predator keeps diversity of system

From Paine 1966

Page 16: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Taken together, preys’ effect on predators and predators’ effect on prey can lead to

oscillations

Hudson Bay Co

The famousSnowshoe-lynx cycles

Note how blue peaksUsually after red ones

Hare

Lynx

Page 17: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Taken together, preys’ effect on predators and predators’ effect on prey can lead to

oscillations

But not so simple….

Oscillations not justcaused by hare-lynxrelationship…

What other factors?

Hares overshoot theirown carrying capacitycausing plant die-offs, plants to increase toxins,and disease epidemics.

Page 18: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Oscillations: a mathematical model

dN

dt

= rmax (N) Exponential growth equation

K

dN

dt

= rmax (N) (1 - )N

Logarithmic growth equation

dP

dt

= baNP- mP When N = 0, predators die offdue to their mortality (m).When N are present, predator increase in #,in accordance with their efficiency in killing prey, and their efficiency in converting preyinto new offspring (b)

a = efficiency with whichpredators kill prey

N stands forPrey

P stands forPredator

dN

dt

= r (N) - aNP

Lotka Volterra

Page 19: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Oscillations: a mathematical model

dP

dt

= baNP- mP dN

dt

= r (N) - aNP

0 = r(N) – aNPaNP = rNP = r/a

0 = baNP – mPmP = baNPN = m/ba

Page 20: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Oscillations: a mathematical model

Page 21: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Oscillations: hard to get to in labExperiments by Huffaker (1950s):1) Apples and oranges.2) Mites eat oranges, increasein number.3) Add predator, predator increases for a while, then both populations goextinct.

Page 22: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Oscillations: hard to get to in lab2nd experiment: Sticky substance added that Partially blocks predator’s movement. Small sticks on top of oranges allow prey to “balloon”.

Prey disperse to unoccupied places, increase in #.Predators find prey, eat them all but not before a few disperse.Population cycles.

Page 23: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Today: more species interactions

• Predator / Prey (+ / - )• Parasites (+ / - )• Mutualists ( + / +) or Commensalists (+ / 0)

Page 24: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Parasitoids … aliens! (异形)

Picture from ‘Alien’ (1979)

Example of worm that grows inside cricket, Changes behavior of cricket so cricket jumps Into water, and then hatches out (movie).

Page 25: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

More pathogen and parasites’ clever tactics (策略) for transmission (传播途径)

Snail-fluke (蜗牛 - 吸虫)infects snails and makes themseek light.Snails climb to the top of grasseswhere they areconsumed by birds,the next hostin the fluke’slifecycle

Page 26: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

More pathogen and parasites’ clever tactics

One recentlyreported parasitoidhatches out of hostbut doesn’t kill it …Instead affects hostso that it stands around and defendsparasitoid cocoons!

From Grosmanet al., 2008,(PLoS)

Page 27: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Some generalizations (补充,推广) about parasites

• They usually reproduce more rapidly than hosts.

• They usually only interact with one of a few hosts in their lifetime.

• High specialization.(选择专向性)

• > 50% of all species on earth parasites?

Page 28: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Some parasites are pathogensSneeze conservativelyPlaced at 150 km/hour,~ 40,000 microscopic droplets

Malaria replicates in blood so increases chanceit gets into mosquito

• Pathogens produce diseases.

• Malaria (疟疾) is a good example.

• Diseases, just like the parasites we talked about before, need to ensure their transmission

Page 29: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

The idea of evolutionary medicine

• A paradox (疑难问题) : why would a pathogen want to kill its host? It will kill itself, too!

• But if a pathogen is very good at transmission, then it can afford to kill host.

• This idea predicts that very “virulent” (致死的) pathogens are ones that transmit to many hosts quickly.

(医学发展)

Page 30: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

The idea of evolutionary medicine

Some evidence for this idea:

Freeman (2004)

Waterborne (水环境,水基)diseases =very hightransmissionrates

What does this ideasuggest for how diseasecan be stopped?

Perhaps if we lower transmission rate,we also lower disease virulence.

Page 31: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Model of disease transmission

• How is a disease transmitted?: a model.I = # infected, S = # susceptible (not infected)• dI/dt … change in infected individuals over

time = βSI – mIβ = transmission coefficient. How easily spreads.m = rate that infected people become

uninfected (by dieing or recovering).

Page 32: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Model of disease transmissiondI/dt = βSI – mIWhat should we do now with this equation?What happens when dI/dt > 0βSI – mI > 0βSI > mIβS > m S > m/β. When ST = m/β, disease will spread.

For the disease to spread, we need to have a certain amount (a threshold 阈值 , ST) of susceptible people.

Ways to combat disease:-Reduce S by killing animals (bird flu)-Reduce S by immunization (human disease)-Increase m by helping people recover.-Reduce β by teaching people not to transmit (hand-washing)

Page 33: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Turning to mutualism / commensalism

• Commensalism (偏利作用) (+ / 0) is everywhere.

• Where a tree shades a small plant: Small plant benefits, tree unaffected.• Mutualism is different in that for both sides

benefit > cost. ( + / +)• Mutualism involves co-evolution

Page 34: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Mutualism Can Vary in Intensity

– Mutualism can be obligatory (强制性的,专性的) , which means that one or the other or both the mutualists can’t survive without the other partner.

– Or mutualism can be facultative (兼性) , which means that the partners sometimes engage in the relationship and sometimes don’t

Exampleobligatory Relationship?

Example, facultative relationship?

Corals and zooxanthellae

Ants andsunflowers

Page 35: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Very important mutualisms

• Mycorrhizae and plants• Nitrogen fixing bacteria and plants (especially

legumes)• Plants and pollinators• Plants and seed-dispersers• Plants and protectors like ants• Corals and zooxanthellae• Corals and protectors like crabs• Mixed groups of birds and mammals

Page 36: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Some amazing mutualisms: Mycorrhizae 菌根

• Mutualism between plants and fungi that interact with plant roots.• Fungi get sugar from plants, help plants absorb nutrients from soil.• 80% flowering plants, all conifers have mycorrhizae.• Mycorrizae can coat outside of plants or even be inside plant cell

walls in very complex morphology.

Page 37: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Some amazing mutualisms: Corals 珊瑚

Zooxanthellae :Mutualistic partner of coral; photosynthesize giving coral sugars.Coral gives them protection, nitrogen

Page 38: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Some amazing mutualisms: CoralsCorals: a worrisome development…“Bleaching events” where zooxanthellae are expelled. Appears to be related to water temperature.

Page 39: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Some amazing mutualisms: fig trees (榕树)

Found throughout tropics.

Many grow as parasites on other trees, eventually killing them, but becominghuge trees themselves.

Year-round source of food for many animals

Page 40: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

But figs have no flowers!

Their flowers are actually inside the fig.

How are they pollinated?

Figs are pollinated only by small wasps

Fig wasps, in turn, only live inside figs

Wasp lays eggs inside fig and simultaneouslypollinates them.

Some amazing mutualisms: fig trees

Page 41: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Some amazing mutualisms: cleaner fish

Page 42: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Evolution of mutualism … an example from communication (交流,信息传递)

From Kostans 2002Increasing complexity and mutuality

Page 43: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Evolution of mutualism … an example from communication

From Kostans 2002

Beginning steps:

One animals listens to calls of another animal

Eavesdropping. Example downy woodpeckers listen to the alarmcalls (警报) of chickadees

Page 44: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Evolution of mutualism … an example from communication

From Kostans 2002

Next step:

Two animals listen to each other.

Example: both yellow-bellied marmots (土拨鼠) and golden-mantledGround squirrels (松鼠) listen to each others alarm calls.

Page 45: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Evolution of mutualism … an example from communication

From Kostans 2002

Next step:

One animal gains from response of other animal to its calls

Example: caterpillars make call that attacts ants to them.Actually mimics a call ants make. In this case, ants benefit bygather secretions of caterpillars (so true mutualism, althoughcommunication asymmetric).

Page 46: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Evolution of mutualism … an example from communication

From Kostans 2002

Final step:

Both animals gains from their mutual responses to each others calls

Example: humans/ratels and honeyguides (向蜜鸟,蜜鴷)

Read this article.It is not too difficult.Concentrate on whatevidence the authors give to demonstrateit’s a mutualism.

Page 47: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Evolution of Mutualism: Cheaters a Problem

• What happens if there are cheaters (伪装) ?

• Cheaters might negatively affect their partners, hence negatively affecting themselves.

• Some mutualists have mechanisms to prevent over-exploitation (过度开发) .

• Example yucca moth. Pollinates yucca and leaves some eggs. But if leaves too many eggs, whole flower drops.

Page 48: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Mutualists can co-speciate (协同进化) together

Evolutionary historyof a clade oforchids isclosely relatedto the evolutionaryhistory ofits pollinators

Page 49: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Mutualisms can have major effects on communities

• For example, if cleaner fish removed, species diversity of fish goes down.

• Likewise if mycorrhizae fungi are eliminated, plants may not be able to live in some environments.

Page 50: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Mutualisms may occur more in stressful conditions

This slide shows that the “RelativeNeighbor Effect (RNE)” –the effect that a plant has on its neighbor –is positive at high elevations (high stress)but negative at low elevations

Page 51: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Homework

• For next Saturday: Take-home portion of midterm.

• Read summary of Chapters 16, 17 (I will e-mail you them).

• Read Isack and Reyes (honey-guides).• I will look for primary reading for next

Saturday.

Page 52: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Key concepts

• Predator-prey interactions and herbivory / plant relationship involve co-evolutionary arms-race.

• Predation /herbivory has major effects on distribution/abundance of prey and even on communities.

• Parasites are frequent in nature and adapted to transmission between hosts

• Commensalism is when one species benefits and the other is unaffected and is also common.

• Mutualism is when both partners benefit and involves coevolution.

• Mutualisms vary in intensity; very intense ones are obligate, where partners cannot live without eachother.

Page 53: Lecture 8 Exploitative and Mutualistic Species Interactions Principles of Ecology College of Forestry, Guangxi University Eben Goodale

Tips for listening, reading

Listening:http://www.artsci.utoronto.ca/current/advising/ell/pdfs/ELL_Strengthening_Listening_Comprehension.pdf

Reading to write:http://www.artsci.utoronto.ca/current/advising/ell/pdfs/Reading_to_Write_Previewing.pdf