Lecture Community Interactions
Lecture Community Interactions
Lecture Community Interactions
www.worldwildlife.org/newguinea/spec_pigeons.cf
Community
All
habitat
Habitat
structure
Communities
Dont
Available
interactions disturbances
Physical
Niche
Sum of activities and relationships in which a species engages to secure and use resources necessary for survival and reproduction
niche
niche
Species Interactions
Most
Commensalism
The commensal shrimp Periclimenes imperator on Chromodoris tinctoria, Koumac, New Caledonia, Oct, 1993. www.seaslugforum.net Photo: Bill Rudman.
Mutualism
Clownfish and Sea Anemone
From
Species Interactions
Interspecific
competition has a
Alligator
Symbiosis
Living
mutualism, and
Mutualism
Both
Many Some
of an obligatory mutualism
www.bobjensenphtography.com
Mycorrhizae
Obligatory
mutualism between
Laccaria bicolor basidioma developing on a Pinus strobus seedling under controlled environment.
Competition
Interspecific Intraspecific
same species
Intraspecific
www.sms.si.edu
Forms of Competition
Competitors
www.save-the-elephants.org
Paramecium caudatum
Paramecium aurelia
Keystone Species
A
structure
Removal
Lubchenco Experiment
Periwinkles promote or limit diversity in different habitats
Tidepools
Resource Partitioning
Predation
Predators
living organisms
Predators
Coevolution
Natural
Predator-Prey Cycles
Predator
PREDATOR POPULATION
Variation in Cycles
An
Prey Defenses
Camouflage Warning Mimicry Moment-of-truth
coloration
defenses
Predator Responses
Any
Parasitism
Parasites
Types of Parasites
Microparasites Macroparasites Social
parasites
Parasitoids
Human tapeworm
Trypanosome, malaria
Social Parasites
Once limited to grasslands, brown - headed cowbirds have extended their range to all 48 contiguous states and Canada. They are a major threat to songbirds.
Of 220 species known to have been parasitized by Brown-headed Cowbirds, and 144 have raised young Brown-headed Cowbirds successfully. http://www.birds.cornell.edu/bfl/speciesaccts/parasites.html
Parasitoids
Male butterflies of the genus, Pieris, pass an anti-aphrodisiac during mating to females. This chemical, benzyl cyanide, renders the mated females less attractive to other males. This strategy tends to maximize the mating males chances of getting their genes into the next generation. Or so it was thought.
The female wasps are attracted to the anti-aphrodisiac of the mated female butterflies. Often they will hitch a ride on the female butterfly. When butterfly lays her eggs, the wasp inserts her egg into the butterfly egg. The larval wasp eats its host alive.
This parasitism constrains the the butterfly populations. If this fascinating strategy is wide spread in nature, it could severely constrain the evolution of sexual communication between hosts. The wasp is tiny (.5 mm) It is located below the eye Of the butterfly.
NATURE|VOL433|17 FEBRUARY 2005| page 704
HONG KONG (AFP) - A Hong Kong woman hiker who washed her face in a freshwater stream unwittingly returned home with a leech embedded in her left nostril.
Doctors finally managed to remove it using a nasal spray to anaesthetise the five-centimetre-long (two-inch) bloodsucker a month after it had invaded her nostril. 4/15/05
Succession
Types of Succession
Primary
succession - new
environments
Secondary
succession -
Primary Succession
Secondary Succession
Over time, old fields are gradually and naturally converted to mature and healthy forests.example: Westminsters forests.
Pioneer Species
Species Lichens,
cycles
Improve
Climax Community
Stable
predictably toward a specific climax community; other stable communities may persist
Cyclic Changes
Cyclic,
tropical forests
Fires
in sequoia forests
Restoration Ecology
Natural
restoration of a damaged
Restoration Ecology
http://www.planetdrum.org/toc.htm
Community Instability
Disturbances
Species Introductions
Introduction
of a nonindigenous
Can
Species interactions
Exotic Species
Species
effects on a community
Predators in Paradise
EVERGLADES NATIONAL PARK, Florida (CNN) (10/22/04) -- A dangerous intruder has invaded Everglades National Park, and it's putting the native wildlife at risk.
http://www.cnn.com/2004/TECH/science/
February 3, 2005 In their growing battle against giant pythons that have invaded the Florida Everglades, national park officials there have recruited an unlikely ally: a beagle puppy nicknamed "Python Pete."
Nile Monitors
Recently
(Sept. 2005) a small population of around 1000 Nile Monitors have begun to rise in the area around Cape Coral Florida. They are most likely the offspring of a few Monitors let free by local pet owners.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nile_monitor
Nile Monitor
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nile_monitor
http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/Gallery/Descript/RedLionfish/RLionfish.html
Accidental Release.
The native distribution of the red lionfish is restricted to appropriate reef habitats of the Indo-Pacific. Recently, a number of specimens of red lionfish have been observed and/or captured off the eastern coast of the United States in various locales from Florida to New York. Its presence in these waters may stem from the release of captive specimens along the southeast coast of the United States.
/www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/Gallery/Descript/RedLionfish/RLionfish.html
Endangered Species
A
vulnerable to extinction
Close
to 70 percent of endangered
Plants -- 22 StatusListingTAmphianthus, little ( Amphianthus pusillus )ERattleweed, hairy ( Baptisia arachnifera)EConeflower, smooth ( Echinacea laevigata)TPink, swamp ( Helonias bullata)EQuillwort, black spored ( Isoetes melanospora)EQuillwort, mat-forming ( Isoetes tegetiformans)TPogonia, small whorled ( Isotria medeoloides)EPondberry ( Lindera melissifolia )TButton, Mohr's Barbara ( Marshallia mohrii)EDropwort, Canby's ( Oxypolis canbyi)EHarperella ( Ptilimnium nodosum)ESumac, Michaux's ( Rhus michauxii )TWater-plantain, Kral's ( Sagittaria secundifolia)EPitcherplant, green ( Sarracenia oreophila)EChaffseed, American ( Schwalbea americana)ESkullcap, large-flowered ( Scutellaria montana)ECampion, fringed ( Silene polypetala )TSpiraea, Virginia ( Spiraea virginiana)ETorreya, Florida ( Torreya taxifolia)ETrillium, persistent ( Trillium persistens )ETrillium, relict ( Trillium reliquum)EGrass, Tennessee yellow-eyed ( Xyris tennesseensis)
http://www.endangeredspecie.com/states/ga.htm
perch were introduced into Lake predator ate native cichlids; Nile perch species is close to
crashing
Nile Perch
Nile Perch
Food
fish
Rabbits in Australia
Rabbits
hunting
Without
soared
Attempts
Rabbits in Australia
Environment minister endorses violent means to slow toxic toads' spread across Australia
Campbell endorsed the bloody response advocated by the government lawmaker who represents Darwin, David Tollner. Tollner created public outrage last week when he said the best way to stop the toads' spread was to bludgeon them on the head with golf clubs or cricket bats as he did as a child. (Thursday April 14, 9:51 PM AP News)
foremost animal welfare agency, the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, responded by warning that anyone caught causing pain and suffering to a cane toad could be fined or jailed. Animal welfare groups say the best way to kill them is to freeze them.
A handful of trouble.
Non-native Caribbean frogs* have become established in some areas in Hawaii (*coqui and greenhouse frogs: Eleutherodactylus spp. [not true 'tree frogs', as some have called them]). They cause both environmental problems and problems for people. These creatures have a special appeal to some people; however, these frogs are not native to Hawaii, and their existence in Hawaii poses a great threat to native species in Hawaii . Although the call of the coqui is often beloved by residents of the coqui's native habitat, the extremely loud noise they make in Hawaii (presumably louder than in native habitats because of higher concentrations of populations) has been reported to be extremely annoying to numerous Hawaii residents and visitors. (For example, a recent article in a health-related magazine cites coqui as causing sleepless nights on the island of Oahu.) http://www.hear.org/AlienSpeciesInHawaii/species/frogs/#frogc
Coqui chorus ..
The frog -- which subsists on the same diet of insects as native birds -- could be the greatest threat to state's ecosystem that anyone has ever seen before, Kim said. http://starbulletin.com/2005/02/13/news/story12.html
(a) huge relative to our native frogs," said John Jensen, Georgia's state herpetologist with the Department of Natural Resources. "Like pretty much all frogs, they eat anything they can catch and fit in their mouths." http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/1
Picture link
USGS SCIENTISTS FIND NEW INVASIVE FISH SPECIES IN FLORIDA (Georgia too!)
In North America, the species is sometimes kept as an aquarium fish, although scientists can only speculate that the species may have escaped or been released into the state's waters. In 1995, swamp eels were found in several ponds at the Chattahoochee Nature Center north of Atlanta, Ga.
http://cars.er.usgs.gov/Nonindigenous_Species/Swamp_eel_FAQs
Monopterus albus It breathes air and can move across land. This gives it the potential to spread rapidly and makes control difficult.
Kudzu in Georgia
Imported No
natural herbivores, pathogens, or competitors over landscapes and cannot be dug up or burned out turn out to have some commercial use
Grows May
Kudzu
ALL: Kudzu Japan invades. Far Eastern vines Run from the clay banks they are Supposed to keep from eroding. Up telephone poles, Which rear, half out of leafage As though they would shriek, Like things smothered by their own Green, mindless, unkillable ghosts. In Georgia, the legend says That you must close your windows At night to keep it out of the house. The glass is tinged with green, even so, As the tendrils crawl over the fields. and so on
http://www.breakoutofthebox.com/kudzu.htm
Diversity by Latitude
Diversity
Ant diversity
diversity is self-reinforcing
tropics
Distance Effect
The
farther an island is from a islands receive more that reach islands far from
immigrants
Species
Distance Effect