21
13. Coexistence Who are our friends?

Who are our friends? - University of Southern Mississippiocean.otr.usm.edu/~w777157/S2010Lec13_Coexistence_online.pdf · Honey Bees Pollinators of agriculture (30%) - fruit trees,

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    0

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Who are our friends? - University of Southern Mississippiocean.otr.usm.edu/~w777157/S2010Lec13_Coexistence_online.pdf · Honey Bees Pollinators of agriculture (30%) - fruit trees,

13. Coexistence

Who are our friends?

Page 2: Who are our friends? - University of Southern Mississippiocean.otr.usm.edu/~w777157/S2010Lec13_Coexistence_online.pdf · Honey Bees Pollinators of agriculture (30%) - fruit trees,

Species

http://neatorama.cachefly.net/images/2008-12/species-population-size.jpg

About 1,500,000 species identified

Insects – 750,000

Other Arthropods – 123,000

Page 3: Who are our friends? - University of Southern Mississippiocean.otr.usm.edu/~w777157/S2010Lec13_Coexistence_online.pdf · Honey Bees Pollinators of agriculture (30%) - fruit trees,

ArthropodsMeans Jointed appendages

First repetitive body segments (adaptation)

Dominant life on Earth based on species

Exoskeleton (molt to get larger)

Live in all habitats

Page 4: Who are our friends? - University of Southern Mississippiocean.otr.usm.edu/~w777157/S2010Lec13_Coexistence_online.pdf · Honey Bees Pollinators of agriculture (30%) - fruit trees,

Arthropod Classes

Trilobites:

extinct

Crustaceans

Chelicerates

Myriapods

Hexapods (insects)

65% (1.5 million species)

crabs, shrimp, lobsters

spiders, scorpions, ticks, mites

centipedes, millipedes

Page 5: Who are our friends? - University of Southern Mississippiocean.otr.usm.edu/~w777157/S2010Lec13_Coexistence_online.pdf · Honey Bees Pollinators of agriculture (30%) - fruit trees,

Hexapoda: Insect Species

Beetles: 300,000

1of 5 species on Earth!

Butterflies & Moths: 170,000

Flies: 120,000

Bees, Wasps, & Ants: 110,000

Grasshoppers: 20,000

Dragonflies: 5,000

Preying mantis: 2,000

Page 6: Who are our friends? - University of Southern Mississippiocean.otr.usm.edu/~w777157/S2010Lec13_Coexistence_online.pdf · Honey Bees Pollinators of agriculture (30%) - fruit trees,

Insect Body Plan

Body Segments

Head: senses

Thorax: movement

Abdomen: organs,

reproduction

Appendages

Antennae

Legs

Wings

Adaptation of these structures has led to the

diversity of insect forms

Page 7: Who are our friends? - University of Southern Mississippiocean.otr.usm.edu/~w777157/S2010Lec13_Coexistence_online.pdf · Honey Bees Pollinators of agriculture (30%) - fruit trees,

Insect importanceDecomposition of dead organic material

Products

silkhoney shellac

http://www.radiomuseum.org

/forumdata/upload/FlakeShell

ac_Finish.jpg

Food source for animals

birds

reptiles

arthropods (spiders)

mammals (humans)

Pollinators

Pests and disease

Page 8: Who are our friends? - University of Southern Mississippiocean.otr.usm.edu/~w777157/S2010Lec13_Coexistence_online.pdf · Honey Bees Pollinators of agriculture (30%) - fruit trees,

Co-evolution of plants and insects

Coevolution:

adaptation of two

species to each

other for their

mutual survival

Certain flowers and

insects have co-

evolved

Explains the

diversity of forms

plants and insects

Page 9: Who are our friends? - University of Southern Mississippiocean.otr.usm.edu/~w777157/S2010Lec13_Coexistence_online.pdf · Honey Bees Pollinators of agriculture (30%) - fruit trees,

Darwin’s Hawkmoth

Charles Darwin (in 1822)

Comet orchid with 12” nectar

tube

Predicted there must be an

insect with a 12” tongue

http://faculty.washingt

on.edu/jrw/110/darorc

h.JPG

Page 10: Who are our friends? - University of Southern Mississippiocean.otr.usm.edu/~w777157/S2010Lec13_Coexistence_online.pdf · Honey Bees Pollinators of agriculture (30%) - fruit trees,

Darwin’s Hawkmoth

Co-evolution

Orchid tube is too long:

moth starves

orchid dies off

Orchid tube is too short:

moth does not pollinate

orchid dies off

Balance for the mutual benefit

Page 11: Who are our friends? - University of Southern Mississippiocean.otr.usm.edu/~w777157/S2010Lec13_Coexistence_online.pdf · Honey Bees Pollinators of agriculture (30%) - fruit trees,

Honey BeesColony Collapse Disorder (CCD)

Death of hives in a matter of days

2006 and 2007: 30% of U.S. hives

2008: lost 35% of 2.5 million hives

Severe consequences to human agriculture

Cause of CCD?

GM crops

use of monocultures

insecticides and herbicides

diseases/pests

unknown

multiple causes

Page 12: Who are our friends? - University of Southern Mississippiocean.otr.usm.edu/~w777157/S2010Lec13_Coexistence_online.pdf · Honey Bees Pollinators of agriculture (30%) - fruit trees,

Importance of insects:

Honey Bees

Pollinators of agriculture (30%)

- fruit trees, vegetables, berries

Bees for hire!

Very successful

High organized society (Eusocial):

Queen, Drone (reproductives)

Workers (sterile daughters, specific tasks),

General pollinators (variety of flowers)

Intelligent (memory, complex maps,

communication)

Page 13: Who are our friends? - University of Southern Mississippiocean.otr.usm.edu/~w777157/S2010Lec13_Coexistence_online.pdf · Honey Bees Pollinators of agriculture (30%) - fruit trees,

Leaf cutter ants39 species

Eusocial society: different castes

Soldiers, workers

Cut, move leaves back to nest

Chew and feed the leaves to fungi

Eat the fungi (species specific)

Page 14: Who are our friends? - University of Southern Mississippiocean.otr.usm.edu/~w777157/S2010Lec13_Coexistence_online.pdf · Honey Bees Pollinators of agriculture (30%) - fruit trees,

Leaf cutter and foreign fungiCarry around bacteria (antibiotics!)

Ant, fungi, bacteria relationship

Page 15: Who are our friends? - University of Southern Mississippiocean.otr.usm.edu/~w777157/S2010Lec13_Coexistence_online.pdf · Honey Bees Pollinators of agriculture (30%) - fruit trees,

Normal human fauna

>1,000 species

Bacteria (100,000 billion)

Fungi

Protozoans

Multicellular organisms

follicle mites

parasites

Humans as an ecosystem

Page 16: Who are our friends? - University of Southern Mississippiocean.otr.usm.edu/~w777157/S2010Lec13_Coexistence_online.pdf · Honey Bees Pollinators of agriculture (30%) - fruit trees,

Humans as an ecosystem

How did you get them?

Infants born without

Sources: air, mothers milk, food, environment

Benefits:

Digestion (e.g., plant material)

Clean-up of your waste (e.g., dead skin cells)

Cost:

Cause disease if not kept in checkWhere did they come from?

Invaders that stayed

Humans evolved defenses to control them

Microbes evolved to be less virulent

Page 17: Who are our friends? - University of Southern Mississippiocean.otr.usm.edu/~w777157/S2010Lec13_Coexistence_online.pdf · Honey Bees Pollinators of agriculture (30%) - fruit trees,

Provide

habitat for diversity of animals (100,000 species)

“Rain forests” of the ocean

tourism

medical products

food

shoreline protection

Coral reefs

http://batchisthenewshit.files.wordpress.com/2007/

06/coral_reef.jpg

Page 18: Who are our friends? - University of Southern Mississippiocean.otr.usm.edu/~w777157/S2010Lec13_Coexistence_online.pdf · Honey Bees Pollinators of agriculture (30%) - fruit trees,

Corals provide algae with nitrogen & CO2

Algae provide food for coral (photosynthesis)

Mutualism!

Algae may be 50% of the coral biomass

Coral and algae

Problems:

Coral bleaching

Loss of algae

Coral dies

Why?

Climate change

in warmer water corals expel algae

coral also are more prone to disease

Page 19: Who are our friends? - University of Southern Mississippiocean.otr.usm.edu/~w777157/S2010Lec13_Coexistence_online.pdf · Honey Bees Pollinators of agriculture (30%) - fruit trees,

Types of InteractionsType of relationship varies between species

Mutualism (+,+): mutually beneficial

Leaf cutter ant – fungus

Corals - algae

Parasitism (-, +): one hurt, one helped

broadly can define predator-prey

Cheetah (+), Gazelle (-)

Gazelle (+), Grass (-)

Commensalism (+, 0): one helped, one unaffected

Barnacles (+), Whale (0)

Relationships can vary with circumstances!

Page 20: Who are our friends? - University of Southern Mississippiocean.otr.usm.edu/~w777157/S2010Lec13_Coexistence_online.pdf · Honey Bees Pollinators of agriculture (30%) - fruit trees,

Summary:

Arthropods are the most successful phylum on Earth

Insects are the most dominant class of arthropods

Their diversity is explained by co-evolution with plants and their “tool kit” of appendages

Diversity of forms also stems from cooperation

among species

Humans are part of this system too!

Page 21: Who are our friends? - University of Southern Mississippiocean.otr.usm.edu/~w777157/S2010Lec13_Coexistence_online.pdf · Honey Bees Pollinators of agriculture (30%) - fruit trees,

Ends Organism section

next: Unique

Next time: Variation

Read: Ch. 10.1-10.4, 11.1-11.5