84

Honors - Communities 1112

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 2: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 3: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 4: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 5: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 6: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 7: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 8: Honors - Communities 1112

Parrotfishes• Conversion of primary

production to fish-based trophic pathways

• Provision of suitable settlement substrata for new corals

• Mediation of competition between corals and macroalgae

Page 9: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 10: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 11: Honors - Communities 1112

Diadema antillarium

Page 12: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 13: Honors - Communities 1112

Epinephelus striatus

Page 14: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 15: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 16: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 17: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 18: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 19: Honors - Communities 1112

Relationships

• Predation & herbivory• Symbiosis (mutualism, commensalism,

parasitism)• Disease• Competition (competitive exclusion)

Page 20: Honors - Communities 1112

Kane’ohe Bay

Page 21: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 22: Honors - Communities 1112

Eucheuma denticulatum

Page 23: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 24: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 25: Honors - Communities 1112

Urchin Side

Page 26: Honors - Communities 1112

Non-urchin Side

Page 27: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 28: Honors - Communities 1112

Intertidal Community

Page 29: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 30: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 31: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 32: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 33: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 34: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 35: Honors - Communities 1112

– Chthalamus more tolerant of dessication than Balanus

– Balanus a more successful competitor

– Chthalamus restricted to upper intertidal zone

– realized niche < fundamental niche

Competition and niche differentiation in barnacles

(Connell 1961)

Page 36: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 37: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 38: Honors - Communities 1112

– Testing the competitive exclusion principle• Two species of barnacles on intertidal rocks• Remove Balanus -- Chthamalus spread• Chthamalus distribution limited by Balanus

Chthamalus

Balanus

High tide

Chthamalusrealized niche

Balanusrealized niche

Low tide

Ocean

Figure 37.2A

Page 39: Honors - Communities 1112

Niches: fundamental and realized

The realized niche is often smaller than the fundamental niche

• restricted by factors eg, competition, predation, parasitism.

The fundamental niche is the n-dimensional hypervolume describing the full range of conditions that the species can use in the absence of competition

• defined by an organism’s adaptations to persist in a given abiotic environment

Page 40: Honors - Communities 1112

Modes of Competition

• Intraspecific: – Competition among members of the same species.

– e.g. density dependent factors

• Interspecific: – Competition among individuals of two or more

different species • reduces fitness of both. • Interspecific competition can occur only if species have

similar resource requirements– i.e. must have overlapping niches.

Page 41: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 42: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 43: Honors - Communities 1112

Predation

Page 44: Honors - Communities 1112

Fig. 54-6

Page 45: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 46: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 47: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 48: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 49: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 50: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 51: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 52: Honors - Communities 1112

Fig. 54-5

Canyon tree frog

(a) Crypticcoloration

(b) Aposematiccoloration

Poison dart frog

(c) Batesian mimicry: A harmless species mimics a harmful one.

Hawkmothlarva

Green parrot snakeYellow jacketCuckoo bee

Müllerian mimicry: Two unpalatable speciesmimic each other.

(d)

Page 53: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 54: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 55: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 56: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 57: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 58: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 59: Honors - Communities 1112

Producers

Page 60: Honors - Communities 1112

Benthic non-motile consumers

Page 61: Honors - Communities 1112

Benthic motile consumers

Page 62: Honors - Communities 1112

Keystone Predator

Page 63: Honors - Communities 1112

Yellowstone Data Set

Page 64: Honors - Communities 1112

Cottonwoods

Page 65: Honors - Communities 1112

Willows

Page 66: Honors - Communities 1112

DBH

Page 67: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 68: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 69: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 70: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 71: Honors - Communities 1112

Figure 1-1. The number of narrowleaf cottonwood trees established during 20-year intervals in a 9.5 km2 area of the Lamar Valley, northern Yellowstone National Park. Ages were derived from size class data collected in 2001. Open bars represent numbers of cottonwoods on floodplain sites; closed bars are cottonwood numbers on meander sites (see “Student Instructions” for more information). The floodplain and meander tree populations were kept separate, because trees grow at different rates in these locations, requiring different age estimates based on tree diameter. The black bar represents an estimate of cottonwood seedling density on the entire study site in 2001, and is on a different scale (thousands vs. 50-60). The shaded area indicates expected numbers of cottonwoods in each age class under conditions of frequent/regular recruitment. From Beschta (2003).

Page 72: Honors - Communities 1112

Figure 1-2. Twentieth century time series of the status of riparian willow communities on the Gallatin River, within and adjacent to northern Yellowstone National Park. Willow height and abundance were estimated from historical photographs as well as historical records and field measurements; “tall” willows are those > 100 cm (but note that the shrub willows in this region may reach heights of 3 m or more under good conditions). The shaded region between dashed lines reflects the range of variability/uncertainty in the data, since they are based mainly on qualitative assessments as opposed to absolute measurements. After Ripple and Beschta (2004a).

Page 73: Honors - Communities 1112

what has happened to the woody riparian vegetation in these

valleys?

Page 74: Honors - Communities 1112

Climatic factors such as drought or low stream flows: Cottonwood seedling establishment occurs most frequently in years with peak flows > 290 m3/second, which is the peak flow for a 5-year return interval on the Lamar River and similar-sized streams in the Yellowstone area (Beschta 2003). Growth of existing riparian vegetation like willows may also be affected by the availability of shallow groundwater, and so it is possible that willow height could be suppressed during drought years or low stream-flow years.

OR

Biotic factors such as over-browsing by ungulates (e.g. elk): In their winter range, elk may switch from their preferred food (grass) to more nutritious woody plants like willow and cottonwood seedlings. In the setting of a National Park, where human hunting is not allowed, and in the absence of their natural predators (e.g. wolves), elk browsing might have a major impact on the vegetation.

Page 75: Honors - Communities 1112

Figure 2-1. (a) Time series of annual peak flows for the Lamar River and the Clarks Fork River in Yellowstone National Park, for their periods of record. For these streams, 5-year peak flow events average ~ 290 m3/s (305 m3/s for Lamar River, 275 m3/s for Clarks Fork). From Beschta (2003). (b) Annual maximum snowpack depth, annual peak flow, and July streamflow from 1996-2002 in the upper Gallatin Basin of southwestern Montana, adjacent to Yellowstone National Park. The long-term average (from the 1930’s to 2002) for each variable is shown by the horizontal line. The shaded area in the figure represents a period of increasing willow height. From Ripple and Beschta (2004a).

Page 76: Honors - Communities 1112

Figure 2-2. (a) Repeat photographs for an ungulate exclosure (inside the fenced area – note fence posts are ~3 m tall) in the Gallatin River basin adjacent to Yellowstone National Park, showing the status of willows within and outside of the exclosure during 1969 (winter), 1999 (spring), and 2003 (summer). (b) Percentage of willow leaders (= new shoots) browsed by elk, and average height (error bars = standard deviation) of willow leaders outside of the grazing exclosure shown above from 1998 to 2002. From Ripple and Beschta (2004a).

Page 77: Honors - Communities 1112

•"Why was elk browsing on cottonwoods and willows so intense during much of the 20th century in Yellowstone National Park?"

•Were they most likely growing, declining, or relatively constant, and why?

•Write down your predictions.

Figure 3

Page 78: Honors - Communities 1112

Figure 3. Twentieth century time series of (a) wolf populations and (b) elk population estimates and trend line for the Upper Gallatin Basin in the Yellowstone area. Shaded portions of a graph reflect uncertainty; elk census data are represented by closed diamonds. From Ripple and Beschta (2004a).

Page 79: Honors - Communities 1112

Figure 4-1. Repeat photo pair showing riparian willow habitat on Blacktail Creek in the Yellowstone Northern Range: from 1996 (left), after 70 years of wolf extirpation; and in 2002 (right) after 7 years of wolf recovery. Notice the larger size and abundance of willows in 2002. From Ripple and Beschta (2004b).

Page 80: Honors - Communities 1112

Figure 4-2. Repeat photo pair of upland willow habitat and browsing exclosure in the Gallatin River Basin, Yellowstone Northern Range: from 1995 ((a), top), after 70 years of wolf extirpation; and in 2003 ((b), bottom) after 8 years of wolf recovery. In this habitat, the difference in willow height inside and outside of the exclosure is the same in both photos; arrows indicate location of willows in and out of the exclosure. From Ripple and Beschta (2004a).

Page 81: Honors - Communities 1112

Figure 4-3. Photo pair of aspen in riparian (A - top) vs. upland (B-bottom) habitat along the Lamar River in 2006. In riparian habitat there has been abundant recent recruitment of young aspen (3-4 m tall), while in an adjacent, more open upland there has been little recruitment (aspen <1 m tall). The dark, furrowed bark comprising approximately the lower 2.5m of aspen boles in (B) represents long-term damage due to bark stripping by elk. From Ripple & Beschta 2007.

Ecology of Fear?

Page 82: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 83: Honors - Communities 1112
Page 84: Honors - Communities 1112

Figure S1. Cow (female) elk were killed less often than would be expected ifwolf kills were random with respect to sex, while bull elk were killed more oftenthan expected. Numbers within bars are the number of wolf kills observed (blackbars) and the number expected on the basis of the population’s composition(shaded bars). N = 124 kills in the Gallatin Canyon population, with similarpatterns reported for other populations in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem(S4).