our ecological footprint - 1. 6…. ch 20 community ecology: species abundance + diversity

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OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…

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Page 1: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

OUR Ecological Footprint - 1.

6…

Page 2: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Ch 20 Community Ecology:Species Abundance + Diversity

Page 3: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Objectives

• Species relative abundance

• Species diversity

• Measures to quantify and compare SD

• Species-area

relationship

• Factors affecting

local SD

• Regional influences

• Species sorting

Page 4: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Species in communities vary in relative abundance. Are most species rare or common?

Figure 1 % quadrats occupied

Page 5: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

What is the likelihood of sampling a rare species? A common species? How accurate are the data for rare species?

Page 6: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Species abundance (dominance diversity) curves…Which community has 1) most species? 2) most variation in relative abundances?

Log scale…

Figure 2

Page 7: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

How can community structure be quantified and compared?

Page 8: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

*** Which variables can be used to describe the species diversity of a local community?

Which community is more diverse?

• Species richness

• Species relative

abundance

Figure 3

Page 9: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

• Species richness: # of species BUT species differ in abundance and thus in

role

• Species diversity: weight species by their relative abundance

• Shannon-Wiener index: H' = - pi ln pi

Measures of community structure

Page 10: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Calculate Species Diversity:

Species No. Ind. pi pi2

ln pi pi ln pi

1 5 .25 .0625 -1.386 -.3465 2 4 .20 .0400 -1.609 -.3218 3 3 .15 .0225 -1.897 -.2846 4 4 .20 .0400 -1.609 -.3218 5 4 .20 .0400 -1.609 -.3218Total (N) 20 1.00 ∑=.205 ∑= -1.5965

•H' = -∑ pi ln pi = 1.5965

Page 11: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Comparisons of diversity indices among communities.

•Which community is most diverse?•What factors increase species diversity?• more species.• less difference in relative abundance among species.

C1C2C3C4C5

Figure 4

Page 12: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

What is the relationship between species # and area? What scales are used?

log

logFigure 5

Page 13: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Species - area relationship:

• S = c Az

• S = # of species• A = area• c and z = fitted constants• • log S = log c + z log A = linear• z = slope of line

Page 14: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

***Why do larger areas have more species?

• in part because… • larger areas -->larger samples but also…• greater habitat heterogeneity (sample more types of habitats)• larger islands---> bigger target for immigrants• larger populations --->

– greater genetic diversity– broader distributions over habitats– less stochastic extinction

Page 15: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

What contributes to these species-area relationships?.

Figure 6

Page 16: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Figure 7

• Local

• Regional

• World

Slope (z) of species-area relationship: affected by different processes at different scales

Page 17: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Multiple scales of species diversity

• Local

• Regional

• Latitudinal

• Continental

• Global

Page 18: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Factors Affecting SD at Local Scale:

• Abiotic factors

• Biological interactions

• Dispersal limitation

• Human introduction

• Chance

Page 19: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

QUESTION: Abiotic factors + Diversity

• A 100-yr experiment tested the effect of fertilizer on species diversity (H’) in a grassland.

• RESULTS: H’ of unfertilized remained steady.• H’ of fertilized decreases through time.

1) Summarize the major result of the study.

2) What 2 components of a community does the

Shannon-Wiener Index (H’) incorporate?

3) What combination of these components yields

the greatest value of H’?

4) Explain the results in terms of competition and

niche theory. Figure 8

Page 20: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Compare the relationship of climate variablesand species richness along latitude.

Figure 9

Page 21: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Biotic Hypotheses to explain variation in species richness

1 Heterogeneity in space and time

e.g. (Vegetation and food complexity)

2 Herbivore and pathogen pressure

3 Competition/niches

Other hypotheses

4 Disturbance

5 Equilibrium models

Page 22: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

1 Heterogeneity in space and time hypothesis

• Relates to niche arguments (see below)

Page 23: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Bird richness increases with greater structural complexity.

Page 24: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Species richness increases as a stream becomes larger and has more habitat and food diversity.

Page 25: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

2) Pest pressure (herbivores + pathogens) hypothesis for maintaining tree species richness

Figure 10

Page 26: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Distance-dependent (+/or) density-dependent) mortality is consistent with the pest pressure hypothesis.

Figure 11

Page 27: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Summarize two results relating to howpathogens could enhance species richness.

Figure 12

Page 28: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

3 Competition hypothesis:

• High richness --> less competitive exclusion?--> more species

• Why? By what means?

Page 29: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Niche metrics

Page 30: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

How can more species be added to a community?

• Increase total niche space

• Increase niche overlap

• Decrease niche breadth

Figure 13

Page 31: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

4 Competition hypothesis, cont.:

• High richness --> less competitive exclusion?• Why? By what means?• greater specialization (narrower niche)• greater resource availability (greater niche space); less niche overlap • reduced resource demand (smaller populations)

• Greater niche space from greater number of niche axes and length of each axis?

• relates to hypothesis of heterogeneity in space/time

Page 32: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Does increase in niche diversity --> increase in species richness? As s.r. increases, so does morphological diversity.

Page 33: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Populations in regions with few species show ecological release (and larger realized niches).

Page 34: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

• Realized niche is always smaller than fundamental niche,

• but with ecological release ---> larger realized niches

Page 35: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

4 Intermediate Disturbance Hypothesis

• Richness peaks at intermediate levels

• Too low disturbance -->

competitive exclusion

• Too high disturbance -->

limited number of species adapted

Page 36: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

5 Equilibrium hypothesis• Richness reaches an equilibrium when factors • removing species = factors adding species.

• What process adds species?• What process removes them?

more additions (e.g. speciation) or and/or fewer deletions (e.g. extinctions) = greater species richness.

Page 37: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Hubbell’s Neutral Model of Random Drift • Species competitively equivalent (neutral)

• Pests + recruitment limitation reduce comp.• Limited ecological specialization• Stochastic processes of B and D --> reduce community to 1 species

• Species richness depends on speciation and immigration

Figure 14

Page 38: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Multiple scales of species diversity

• Local

• Local Affected by Regional

• Regional

• Latitudinal

• Continental

• Global

Page 39: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Local diversity as f (regional diversity).

Figure 15

Page 40: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Species richness (# species) has both local and regional components. (alpha) = local # species in small area of homogeneous habitat (beta) = # species turnover between

habitats (gamma) = (landscape) regional: total #

species in all habitats within a barrier-free geographic area

Page 41: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Above species richness measures determined by ecology and regional pool

(delta) = available pool of species within dispersal distance (up to continental scale)

• determined evolutionarily

Page 42: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

What are two patterns of species turnover (beta diversity) at larger scales?

Figure 16

Page 43: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

What is the major change in longitudinal beta diversity with increasing latitude?Which latitude has more climatic uniformity?

Figure 17

Page 44: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Regional diversity sets limit on local diversity.Local then determined by many factors.

Figure 18

Page 45: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Local communities contain a subset of the regional species pool.

• ***What determines whether a species can be a member of a given community?

1 Adaptations of species to environmental conditions (habitat selection)2 Persistence in face of competitors,

predators, and parasites3 Stochastic extinction

Page 46: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Local communities are assembled from the regional species pool.

• Species sorting = processes that determine local community composition.

Page 47: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Experimentally-composed communities show species sorting. What caused the sorting?

Fertility:lowhigh

Regional: # speciesavailable

Local: realized #

Figure 19

Page 48: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

Environmental filters eliminate species thatcan’t tolerate conditions---> species sorting

Figure 20

Page 49: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

What is the major and minor factor sorting species in this community?

Figure 21

Page 50: OUR Ecological Footprint - 1. 6…. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity

H1:Species sorting should be greatest where regional species pool is largest.

• When species pool is smaller, competition should be relaxed--->

• ecological release = species expand into habitats normally filled by other species and

increase in population density

• Ecological release provides evidence for hypothesis of local interactions controlling species diversity.

• (e.g. competition for resources structures communities and limits # species)