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Fisheries Ecology. Biological factors. Physical factors. Temperature, pH, oxygen, light, salinity, etc. Predation, competition, disease. Diversity and Abundance. Human factors. Fishing, land use, dams, pollution, introduced species, etc. Sub-disciplines of Ecology. Nutrient cycling - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Diversity and Abundance
Human factors
Biological factors
Physical factors
Temperature, pH, oxygen, light, salinity, etc.
Predation, competition, disease
Fishing, land use, dams, pollution, introduced species, etc.
Fisheries Ecology
Sub-disciplines of Ecology
Nutrient cycling
Physiological
Behavioral
Evolutionary
Population
Community
Landscape
Primary focus of the class
Physiological and Morphological Aspects of Ecology
1.Limitation
2.Tolerance
3.Temperature Units
4.Biological rhythms
5.Behavioral regulation
6.Morphological constraints
Law of the Minimum:
“Under steady-state conditions the essential material available in amounts most closely approaching the critical minimum needed will tend to be the limiting one.”
For example:
In a lake, primary production may be limited by Phosphorous rather than by Nitrogen, and addition of Nitrogen may have no effect on production. At other times of the year light may be limiting.
Limitation and Tolerance
From: Odum’s Ecology text
Law of Tolerance:
“The presence and success of an organism depend upon the completeness of a complex of conditions. Absence or failure of an organism can be controlled by the qualitative or quantitative deficiency or excess with respect to any one of several factors which may approach the limits of tolerance for that organism.”
For example:
The ability to exist and thrive may depend on such physical factors as dissolved oxygen, temperature, salinity, pH, etc.
“Steno” refers to species with narrow tolerances (e.g., stenothermal = narrow temperature tolerance); “eury” refers to those with wide tolerances (e.g., euryhaline = wide salinity tolerance).
Limitation and Tolerance
From: Odum’s Ecology text
Time and Temperature
For poikilotherms, physiological processes, including development of embryos, progress at a rate determined by temperatures. In many cases, the stage of development reflects a rough correspondence between time (number of days) and temperature (number of ºC > 0).
Thus, for example, coho salmon embryos develop from fertilization to hatching in about 500 temperature units (TUs). This might occur after 50 days at 10º or 100 days at 5º.
10º X 50 days = 500 TUs
5º X 100 days = 500 TUs
9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 1760
80 1
00 1
20 1
40
160
180
200
Mean temperature (oC)
Tim
e (h
ou
rs)
fertilization to hatch
4
6
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10
12
1
4
16
Tim
e (d
ays)
Effect of temperature on the development rates of European sea bass
(Jennings and Pawson 1991)
hatch to 50% mouth opening
What is the relationship between feeding, temperature, and
growth?
Temperaturelow high
Gro
wth
rat
e
?
-0.8
-0.6
-0.4
-0.2
0.6
0.8
1
1.2
1.4
1.6
5 10 15 20 25
0.2
0.4
0
Temperature CoLe
thal
Tem
pera
ture
Starved
4.5%
6%
3%
1.5%
Excess
Spe
cific
Gro
wth
Rat
e (%
wei
ght
/day
)
0
Growth (gain or loss in weight) depends on the interaction between food and temperature.
Morphological Constraints
Just as some organisms are specialists or generalists in terms of physiological tolerance, some are specialists and others are generalists in terms of morphology (shape). Careful examination of the mouth parts, fins, and shape indicates the extent to which the species is adapted for particular kinds of prey and movement, or is adapted to prey on a wider range of organisms and show a wider range of locomotion patterns.
These attributes, along with patterns of physiology, may determine the range or a species and its responses to changing conditions.
Biological Rhythms
We are strongly controlled by internal (endogenous) circadian rhythms affecting temperature, physiology, behavior, etc. External “zeitgebers” set the clock each day.
Physiology and behavior are strongly controlled by such rhythms, with periods of a year, a lunar month, a day, or a tidal cycle. The reproductive biology and feeding patterns are intimately linked to such rhythms. Examples include vertical feeding migrations from deep water towards the surface to feed on plankton, annual migrations from feeding to breeding grounds, synchrony of breeding on spring high tides, and movement from the bottom to the middle of the water column on high and low tides.
Behavioral Regulation
In addition to the physiological capacity to tolerate a range of conditions (e.g., temperature, salinity, oxygen, etc.), mobile organisms often move to adjust their environment, searching for physiologically optimal conditions. For example, manatees leave salt water in winter for warm springs, and are attracted to the heated effluent from power plants.
However, areas that are optimal for some environmental features may not be optimal for others, and behavioral regulation may conflict with other needs such as feeding and reproduction.
Approaches to studying physiological ecology:Example: salinity and the distribution of starry flounder
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
23.5 24 24.5 25 25.5 26 26.5 27 27.5 28 28.5
Estuarine salinity (ppt)
Cat
ch p
er t
ow
of
larv
al f
lou
nd
er1. Correlate larval catch rate of flounders with average salinity among years to study recruitment success
Approaches to studying physiological ecology:
Example: salinity and the distribution of starry flounder
2. Conduct surveys and correlate the catch rate of adult flounder with the salinity of the water to study behavior
02
46
81012
1416
1820
1 6 11 16 21 26 31
Salinity (parts per thousand)
Ca
tch
ra
te o
f fl
ou
nd
er
Approaches to studying physiological ecology:
Example: salinity and the distribution of starry flounder
3. Conduct an experiment to determine the ability of flounder to survive at different salinities
0
20
40
60
80
100
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35
Salinity (parts per thousand)
% s
urv
ivin
g 2
4 h
ou
rs
starry
English
Approaches to studying physiological ecology:
Example: salinity and the distribution of starry flounder
4. Conduct a behavioral experiment on the salinity preferences of individual flounder
0
5
10
15
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25
30
35
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35
Salinity (parts per thousand)
% o
f fl
ou
nd
er
Behavioral Ecology
Perspectives on behavior (why animals do what they do)
1. Mechanism: how does it work (e.g., vision, reflex, etc.)?
2. Ontogeny: how does it develop in an individual (learning)?
3. Ecological significance: how does it help an animal survive?
4. Phylogeny: how did it evolve?
Analogy: Why do we stop at red lights?
1. Light of a particular wavelength is perceived by pigments in the retina, sending a message via the optic nerve, etc.
2. We are taught by our parents that red indicates danger.
3. Stopping at lights increases our odds of surviving to reproduce.
4. Red is the color of fire and of blood, hence we have evolved instinctive wariness upon seeing the color.
Behavioral EcologyNatural and sexual selection:
1. Individuals vary in heritable phenotypic traits
2. More individuals are produced than the habitat can support
3. Individuals possessing appropriate traits tend to survive
4. Individuals surviving to maturity vary in reproductive success, related to competition and mate choice
Natural selection can be balancing, directional or disruptive
0
5
10
15
20
25
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
Some quantitative trait
Fit
ne
ss
of
ind
ivid
ua
ls
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
Some quantitative trait
Fit
nes
s o
f in
div
idu
als
Behavioral Ecology
Spatial distribution:
1. Territory: resources (food, nesting site) actively defended, within or among species
2. Home range: area routinely used but not actively defended
3. Migration: movements of individuals between habitats, coordinated in time and space
4. Schooling: synchronous, polarized movements of individuals (sometimes distinguished from shoaling)
Behavioral Ecology
Foraging: (we need to eat, but it is not our only need)
1. Organisms differ greatly in activity, metabolic demand, and food consumption.
2. Energy maximizers: high intake rate, active, often short lifespan, high risk
3. Time (or risk) minimizers: low intake rate, inactive, long lifespan, low risk
Tuna: an energy
maximizer
Rockfish: a time minimizer
Behavioral EcologyReproduction and Parental Investment
1. Sex determination (genetic vs. environmental; determinate vs. hermaphroditic, protandrous, protogynous, or simultaneous; all-female species)
2. Mating system (monogamy, polyandry, polygyny, etc.)
3. Mode of reproduction (broadcast spawning, single pair, internal or external fertilization)
4. Parental investment: anisogamy (females produce a smaller number of larger gametes than males, and so are generally more “choosy” regarding mates). Females also typically have a larger total investment in gametes than males.
5. However, in most animals, everyone has a mother and a father. Thus the average reproductive success of males and females is the same but there is usually more variation in males than in females (e.g., elephant seals and other species with “harems”).
Behavioral Ecology
Life history traits: link behavioral and population ecology
1. Age and size at first reproduction
2. Longevity and maximum size
3. Number of eggs (fecundity, clutch or brood size) and size of eggs or offspring
4. Frequency of reproduction (iteroparous or semelparous, annual or otherwise)
5. Parental care
These traits are all related to patterns of mortality on adults and juveniles
Behavioral Ecology
Fitness: probability of surviving to a given age, multiplied by the reproductive success (e.g., egg production) at that age, summed over the individual’s whole life.
Where l = age-specific survival and b is age-specific reproductive success, and x is age. This simple equation allows us to compare the fitness of different life history patterns.
W = Σ (lx * bx)
Age form length survival number fecundity fitness
1st spring kokanee 28 0.1 50
sockeye 28 0.1 300
1st fall kokanee 60 0.4 20 3 0.12
sockeye 60 0.4 120 3 0.12
2nd spring kokanee 80 0.5 10
sockeye 80 0.5 60
2nd fall kokanee 120 0.8 8 24 0.38
sockeye 180 0.3 18 85 0.51
3rd fall kokanee 180 0.6 4.8 85 0.82
sockeye 360 0.4 7.2 700 1.68
4th fall kokanee 300 0.8 3.84 500 3.84
sockeye 560 0.8 5.76 3000 5.76
Life history comparison of anadromous and non-anadromous sockeye
Population Ecology
Abundance (number of organisms)
Biomass (weight)
Density (number or biomass per unit of distance, area or volume)
Production (number or biomass per area or volume per time)
Population Ecology
Survivorship patterns:
Species with high rates of juvenile mortality and low rates of adult mortality will tend to be long-lived, iteroparous, fecund and slow-growing (e.g., rockfish)
Species with high rates of adult mortality and low rates of juvenile mortality will tend to be short-lived, semelparous and fast growing (e.g., salmon)
Species with low rates of adult and juvenile mortality and large offspring will tend to reproduce late in life, and reproduce at a low rate (e.g., sharks, whales)
Population Ecology
Density-dependent mortality:
“Compensatory mortality” increases as the density of organisms increases. This means that at low densities, populations tend to increase but at high densities, fewer offspring are produced per capita, and the population levels off or even declines. Competition for food, limited breeding sites, and disease are common causes of compensatory mortality.
0
5,000
10,000
15,000
20,000
25,000
0 5,000 10,000 15,000 20,000 25,000
Spawning adults
Ad
ult
off
spri
ng
Ricker
Beverton-Holt
1:1 replacement
Spawner-recruit relationships
0
15,000
30,000
45,000
60,000
0 5,000 10,000 15,000 20,000 25,000
Spawning adults
Ad
ult
ofs
pri
ng
Spawner-recruit relationships: Iliamna Lake sockeye salmon
Population Ecology
Density-dependent mortality:
“Depensatory mortality” increases as the density of organisms decreases. This means that at low densities there are higher per capita mortality rates, and the population can fluctuate widely. This kind of mortality can result from predators that take a fixed number rather than a fixed percentage of the population.
The number of salmon killed by bears each year on Hansen Creek rises to an asymptote and then levels off; the proportion killed decreases with density.
0
1000
2000
3000
4000
5000
0 5000 10000 15000
Number of adult salmon
# ki
lled
~ 60%~ 25%
Population Ecology
Density-independent mortality:
Some forms of mortality do not vary with density but result from physical factors that operate without regard to density. However, even some of these factors (freezing, flooding, high temperatures) may interact with density. For example, at high densities, some organisms may be forced to breed in marginal habitats, where they are more vulnerable to adverse physical conditions.
Population Ecology
“Strong year class” Phenomenon:
In long-lived organisms that breed many times over their lives, most seasons of reproduction produce no offspring at all. However, when environmental conditions are good, high survival results. In such cases, the “year class” spawned in that year dominates the population for (and often sustains the fisheries) for years to come.
Per
cen
tag
e o
f sa
mp
le
Age of herring (years)
Age composition of herring caught in the North Sea.
Data from Hjort (1914), diagram from Jennings et al. Marine Fisheries Ecology
Community Ecology
Characterization of communities:
1. Abundance (number or density of organisms)
2. Diversity (number of species)
3. Evenness or dominance (extent to which the species are equally abundant)
4. Resistance (the ability or tendency of a community to remain the same in the face of environmental change)
5. Resilience (the speed with which a community returns to its former state after it has been perturbed)
Community Ecology
Perspectives on the controls over communities:
1. Non-equilibrium perspective
2. Equilibrium perspective
3. Biotic factors: a) predation b) competition c) disease
4. Abiotic factors: a) habitat ageb) opportunities for colonizationc) stability
Community EcologyWhy do the Hawaiian islands have fewer species of
fishes and corals than are found in the Philippines?
Why are many species in Hawaii endemic?
What factors controls the extent and diversity of fish and coral species among the different Hawaiian islands?
Community Ecology
Mature vs. Pioneer communities:
# of species large small
Dominance? no yes
Life span long short
Diet specialized generalized
Growth slow fast