HUMAN POPULATION I NTERACTIONS IN A C OMMUNITY A.R. Farmer 13 July 2011.

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Transcript of HUMAN POPULATION I NTERACTIONS IN A C OMMUNITY A.R. Farmer 13 July 2011.

HUMAN POPULATIONINTERACTIONS IN A

COMMUNITY

A.R. Farmer13 July 2011

Community Ecology

Community Producers, Consumers, Decomposers Predation Competition Intraspecific; Interspecific; Competitive exclusion; Symbioses - 3 typesparasitism mutualism commensalism

IMPORTANT CONCEPTS

CommunityA group of populations occuring in a particular area, e.g. zebras, hyenas, giraffes in the Kruger National Park

Trophic levels:• Produces(mainly plants)

Consumers Primary (herbivores) Secondary (carnivores) Tersiary (Carnivores)• Decomposers(bacteria

and fungi - saprophytes

Feeding levels in a community

Interactions within a Community

The five main types are:

Predation

Competition

Parasitism

Mutualism

Commensalism

PREDATION

In predation, one individual, the predator, captures, kills, and consumes another individual, the prey.

Predators, Prey, and Natural Selection

Natural Selection favors adaptations that improve a predator‘s efficiency at finding, capturing, and consuming prey.

These adaptations include a shark’s jaws, a scorpion’s claws and stinger, and a spider’s web and fangs

Prey Adaptation

Some animals are very fast and can escape capture simply due to their speed

Other prey animals depend on

camouflage, hoping to avoid

detection

Some organisms are poisonous and use bright colors (often yellow and black) to warn other organisms of their toxicity

Mimicry

In mimicry, a harmless species resembles a poisonous or distasteful species.

The harmless species is protected because it is often mistaken for the dangerous look-alike

Examples of mimicry

                                                                                                        

                                                                                          

Prey-predation interaction

A

The cycles of increase and decrease reflects a predator –prey intercation

e.g lions feeding on impalas, lynx feeding on rabbits

Prey population reaches higher density than predator population

Portion A = geometric phase- rapid increas of prey, predator pop too low to hinder increase

More prey means more food for predators and the population increases

More predators = increase in mortality of prey Less prey could cause predators to emigrate /

die , hence prey population can increase again

Graph interpretation

Competition

Competition occurs when organisms in the same community seek the same limiting resource. This resource may be prey, water, light, nutrients, nest sites, etc.

Competition among members of the same species is intraspecific.

Competition among individuals of different species is interspecific.

Intraspecific Competition

Competition between organisms of the

same species

Interspecific Competition

Panthera leo

Crocuta crocuta

Competition between

organisms of the same species

Outcomes of Competition Niches of similar species may overlap. Two

species cannot compete for the same limiting resource for long.

eventually one species outcompetes the other

One species survive, other emigrates OR dies out

Even a minute reproductive advantage leads to the replacement of one species by the other.

This is called the COMPETITIVE EXCLUSION PRINCIPAL.

Evidence for Competitive

Exclusion the Russian ecologist, G.F. Gausse demonstrated that Paramecium aurellia outcompetes and displaces Paramecium caudatum in mixed laboratory cultures, apparently confirming the principle.

Resource Partitioning

When two or more similar species coexist, such as

these varieties of warbler, each species only uses part of the

available resources. This is called resource

partitioning. (species sharing

resources)

Resource partitioning

Resource Partitioning

PARASITISM Parasitism is a species interaction that

resembles predation in that one individual is harmed while the other benefits.

However, in parasitism, the parasite feeds on the host individual.

This does not result in the immediate death of the host. Rather, the parasite may feed on the host for a long time instead of killing it.

Ectoparasites

Ectoparasites are external parasites.

They live on their hosts body, but do not enter it.

Examples include ticks, fleas, lice, lampreys, leeches and mosquitoes

Ectoparasites

Endoparasites

Endoparasites are internal parasites, and live inside the host’s body

Endoparasites include bacteria and other micro-organisms, and many worms

Mutualism Mutualism is a symbiotic relationship in which both

members of the association benefit. Often help organisms obtain food or avoid predation.

Bacteria in human intestinal tact. Need not be equally beneficial to both species.

Cleaning Symbiosis

Cleaning Symbiosis

Pollination

Pollination is the most important of the mutualistic relationships.

The plant provides food for the pollinators, which in turn carries the pollen to another flower

COMMENSALISM

Is a relationship in which one species benefits and the other is not affected

INTERACTION IN A COMMUNITY