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Community Ecology Structure and Species Interaction Connor McNeil and Daniel Crawford

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Community Structure (aka Spatial Distribution) Described by:  Physical Appearance: stratification, distribution, and relative sizes of population and species  Species Diversity (Richness): number of different species  Species abundance: number of individuals of each species  Niche Structure: number of ecological niches, how the resemble of differ from each other and how they interact

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Page 2: Community Ecology Structure and Species Interaction Connor McNeil and Daniel Crawford

Community EcologyStructure and Species Interaction

Connor McNeil and Daniel Crawford

Page 3: Community Ecology Structure and Species Interaction Connor McNeil and Daniel Crawford

Community Structure (aka Spatial Distribution)Described by: Physical Appearance: stratification,

distribution, and relative sizes of population and species

Species Diversity (Richness): number of different species

Species abundance: number of individuals of each species

Niche Structure: number of ecological niches, how the resemble of differ from each other and how they interact

Page 6: Community Ecology Structure and Species Interaction Connor McNeil and Daniel Crawford

Species InteractionCompetition and Predation Intraspecific competition: members of the

same species compete for resources Territoriality: Patrolling, marking, and/or defending

home/nest/feeding sight Interspecific Competition: Competition

between two or more species for resources

Page 7: Community Ecology Structure and Species Interaction Connor McNeil and Daniel Crawford

Competition Interference Competition: one species limits

another’s access to resources Exploitation Competition: species have equal

access to resources, but vary in speed and efficiency of exploitation.

Page 8: Community Ecology Structure and Species Interaction Connor McNeil and Daniel Crawford

Predator-Prey Relations Predator feed directly on Prey

Individually harmful However, through predation, Prey species limited

in abundance and increased access to food and genetic stock improved

Use eyesight, speed, pack-hunting, etc Pursuit and ambush

Page 11: Community Ecology Structure and Species Interaction Connor McNeil and Daniel Crawford

Symbiotic Species Both species helped:

Parasitism* Lichens, Bacteria, Algae

*Can be considered special type of predation

Page 12: Community Ecology Structure and Species Interaction Connor McNeil and Daniel Crawford

Commensalism One species helped; one unaffected

Ex: Raccoons and human garbage