Species Interactions, Ecological Succession, and Population Control

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35 Terms

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Species Interaction

- Interspecific competition

- Predation

- Parasitism

- Mutualism

- Commensalism

• All of these affect resource use and population size

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- Food

- Shelter

- Space

Most Species Compete with One Another for

shared limited resources

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Interspecific Competition

The most common type of interaction:

- When two species compete for the same resource, their niches overlap

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Resource partitioning

• Occurs when competing species evolve specialized traits that allow them to use shared resources at different times, in different ways, or in different places

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Predation

When an individual of one species feeds directly on another plant or animal species

- This has a strong effect on population size and other factors

- predator-prey relationship

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Chemical warfare

- poisons, irritating (stinging), foul-smelling or bad tasting (can be poisonous)

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Physical protection

- shells, thick bark, spines

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Mimicry

- when a non-poisonous species looks like a species that is poisonous

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Behavior strategies

- such as scaring off, puffing up, spreading wings, mimicking a predator, living in large groups (schools), or exhibiting warning coloration (indicating "eating me is risky")

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Coevolution

- when populations of two different species interact over a long period of time, changes in the gene pool of one species can lead to changes in the gene pool of the other

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Parasitism

occurs when one species feeds on the body of, or the energy used by another organism - usually by living on, or in the host

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Mutualism

occurs when two species behave in ways that benefit both

- Providing each with food, shelter, protection, or some other resources

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Commensalism

occurs when one species benefits from species interaction, and the other is not affected or harmed at all

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Ecological succession

- The normal, gradual change in species composition in a given geographic area

- The species composition of an ecosystem or community can change in

- Natural geological restoration

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Primary Ecological Succession

The gradual establishment of biotic communities in lifeless areas where there is no soil in a terrestrial ecosystem or no bottom sediment in an aquatic system - Takes hundreds to thousands of years

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Secondary Ecological Succession

Occurs where communities or ecosystems have been disturbed, removed or destroyed, but retain some soil or bottom sediments

• Enriches biodiversity of communities and ecosystems by increasing species diversity and interaction among species

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Living Systems

Are Sustained Through Constant Change

• Contain complex processes that interact to provide some degree of stability or sustainability

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Two aspects of stability/sustainability

inertia (persistence) and resilience

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Limits of population growth

- Limitations on resources

- Competition among species for these resources

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population

is a group of interbreeding individuals of the same species, living together in the same geographic area

- Births/deaths

- Immigration (arrival of individuals from outside the population)

- Emigration (departure of individuals from the population)

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tolerance

- its ability to survive under various physical and chemical environmental conditions

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Population density

the number of individuals in a given geographic area

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J-Curves

Some species reproduce and grow exponentially

- Members reproduce at an early age; many offspring in each generation; time between generations is short

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Density-dependent factors

become more important as a population size increases

• Parasites and diseases spread more easily

• Sexually reproducing individuals can find mates more easily

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Density-independent factors

• Drought and climate

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Density-independent factors

Drought and famine

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Environmental resistance

- The sum of all factors that limit the growth of a population

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Carrying capacity

- The maximum population of a given species that a habitat can sustain indefinitely

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S-curve

As population reach its carrying capacity, its J-curve becomes an ____ of fluctuating logistic growth.

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Population Crash

When a population overshoots the carrying capacity, the population sharply declines

- Dieback

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r-selected species

species that have a capacity for a high rate of population increase

- Have short life spans

- Have many, usually small offspring

- Do not provide much parental care/protection

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Opportunists

reproduce rapidly under favorable environmental conditions

- Often occurs after a fire or clearing an area that opens up a new habitats or niches for invasion of a new species

- May crash after growth or when yet another species invades the area

- Go through irregular and unstable boom-and-bust cycles

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k-selected species

- Reproduce later in life

- Have smaller numbers of offspring with longer life spans

- Typically develop inside their mothers and are born fairly large

- After birth, they mature slowly and are protected by one or both parents

do well in competitive conditions when population size nears carrying capacity

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survivorship graph/curve

different species have different reproductive rates, they also have different life expectancies, illustrated by...

- Late loss

- Early loss

- Constant loss

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technological, social, and cultural changes

The earth's carrying capacity for humans is expanding due to..