Exploring Ecology: Interactions, Distribution, and Population Dynamics

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Ecology delves into the relationships between organisms and their environment, understanding factors that limit species distribution, major interactions like competition and predation, as well as population growth patterns. This includes the influence of biotic and abiotic factors, ecological succession, and the impact of climate on biome distribution. Through analyzing population ecology, researchers uncover the factors shaping population sizes over time, considering concepts like carrying capacity and logistic growth.


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  1. Principles of ecology Chapter 26 Lecture Outline: What is ecology? Interactions between organisms and their biotic (living) and abiotic (non-living) environment limit the distribution of species Tenets of population growth and the global human population Major biotic interactions (competition, predation, herbivory, parasitism, & mutualism) Ecological succession: primary and secondary The distribution of terrestrial biomes are influenced by climate Plants in the Vermont ecotone

  2. What is ecology? Greek: oikos = home The study of how organisms interact with other living organisms and their environment. An ecologist may ask... where do species occur and why? Ecology environmentalism

  3. Thinking like an ecologist what factors may limit the distribution of a species? 1. Biotic (living) factors 2. Abiotic (non-living) factors 3. Dispersal 4. Habitat selection Sugar maple (Acer saccharum) distribution: SE Canada, eastern US west to central Iowa

  4. Population ecology analyzes what factors affect population size and how and why it changes through time. http://www.plantanswers.com

  5. Exponential (J-shaped) population growth 2,000 Growing more quickly Population size (N) 1,500 Growing more slowly = 1,000 500 0 0 5 10 15 Time (# generations)

  6. Carrying capacity carrying capacity (K) - the maximum number of individuals (N, population size) that can be supported by the available resources. What resources do plants need? nutrients water light

  7. Logistic (S-shaped) population growth 2,000 Exponential Exponential growth growth Population size (N) 1,500 Carrying capacity = 1,500 individuals Logistic growth Logistic growth 1,000 500 0 0 5 10 15 Time (# of generations)

  8. Ecological interactions between species include... Competition (-/-) Predation (-/+) Herbivory (-/+) Parasitism (-/+) Mutualism (+/+)

  9. Pollination is an example of a mutualism Cacao flowers To produce the fruits that are used to make chocolate, first flowers must be pollinated by midges. Cacao fruits Fruits (pods) of the chocolate tree (Theobroma cacao)

  10. Hornworm caterpillar (herbivore) - - Tomato plant Braconid wasp (parasite) +

  11. Succession - following disturbance, species colonize and transform the habitat in a predictable sequence Exposed rocks Lichens, mosses, small invertebrates Sedges, grasses, larger invertebrates, small mammals Shrubs, pines, birch, larger mammals, birds, oaks

  12. Secondary Succession 12

  13. Secondary succession occurs where an existing community has been cleared by some event, but the soil is left intact. 13

  14. Secondary succession on an abandoned farm in Vermont Annuals (weeds like crabgrass) 1-2 years Perennials (herbs and tall grasses) 2-5 years Young pine seedlings in tall grass 5-10 years Pine forest 10-150 years Deciduous hardwood forest (climax) 150+ years

  15. ca. 1830: the height of land cleared for agriculture

  16. ca. 1850: Farm abandonment 16

  17. ca. 1910: white pine established on old fields 17

  18. ca. 1915: young hardwoods establishing among older pines 18

  19. ca. 1930: vigorously growing young hardwood forest 19

  20. Today: an established hardwood forest

  21. Global distribution of Earths biomes

  22. Temperate grassland Desert Tropical forest 30 Annual mean temperature ( C) Temperate broadleaf forest 15 Northern coniferous forest 0 Arctic and alpine tundra 15 0 100 200 400 300 Annual mean precipitation (cm)

  23. Vermont is an ecotone between the temperate broadleaf forest and northern coniferous forest A survey of spring native plants of Vermont

  24. serviceberry Amelanchier laevis, Allegheny serviceberry Rose Family, Rosaceae

  25. Spring beauty, Claytonia caroliniana Purslane Family, Portulacaceae

  26. Dicentra cucullaria, dutchman's breeches Fumariaceae (Fumitory Family)

  27. By Basefilm - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=10350976 Photo by Laura Hill

  28. Wild leeks/ramps, Allium tricoccum Amaryllis family, Amaryllidaceae

  29. POISON!!! Veratrum viride false hellebore, a poisonous plant in the lily family (Liliaceae)

  30. Lecture Review, Chap 26 What are 4 possible factors that limit where a species can exist? Define primary and secondary succession. During both primary and secondary succession, how might the early pioneer species facilitate the arrival of another species? Why do Vermont forests consist mostly of temperate broadleaf and northern coniferous forest species? Compare and contrast exponential and logistic population growth. What does logistic growth take into consideration that exponential growth does not? Explain how biotic and abiotic factors both work to control a population s growth How are populations kept in check so they do not overexploit the environment? What are the major categories of interspecific interactions? Give an example from nature of each kind of interaction. Distinguish between the following sets of terms: competition, predation, herbivory, symbiosis; parasitism, mutualism.

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