4. Competition Flashcards

1
Q

what are species interactions? 7

A
  1. complex interactions occur that determine abundance and distribution of species 2. competition - 2 species use same limited resource to the detriment of each other 3. predation - one animal eats another 4. herbivory - one animal eats a plant 5. parasitism - symbiotic relationship detrimental to one party and beneficial to the other - macropathogens 6. disease - association between micropathogenic organism and host to detriment of host 7. mutualism - symbiotic relationship that benefits both partners
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2
Q

What is exploitative/scramble competition? 3

A
  1. organisms use common resource in short supply 2. indirectly prevents growth of each other 3. detriment appears because resource is no longer available
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3
Q

What is interference/contest competition? 3

A
  1. organisms directly harm each other, even if resource is abundant 2. can be by aggression or dangerous chemicals 3. aggression can cause additional negative effects, esp, in carnivores
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4
Q

What is intraspecific competition? 2

A
  1. Usually more intense than interspecific competition 2. genomes more similar so want some resources in sam eway
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5
Q

What is the Lotka-Volterra Growth Model? 6

A
  1. 2 sets of equations, one for predator-prey interactions and one for competition
  2. based on logistic growth curve
  3. growth density dependant on the carrying capactiy
  4. shows one species
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6
Q

How do you calculate population growth rate?

A
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7
Q

How do you calculate competition using the lotka-volterra growth model?

A
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8
Q

How do you determine outcomes with Lotka-Volterra diagrams? 6

A
  1. the hyponteneuse is the carrying capacity
  2. this is called the zero isocline
  3. beneath the line, the population can increase
  4. above the line it decreases
  5. on the line, there is no change
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9
Q

What is competitive exclusion on a stable equilibrium? 6

A
  1. below both lines, both species can increase
  2. between lines, only outer species can increase
  3. above both lines, neither can increase
  4. outer line eventually dominates
  5. species with hightest k wins
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10
Q

What is competitive exclusion on an unstable equilibrium? 4

A
  1. Species can coexist at point where lines cross
  2. suggestive of self regulating populations rather than regulation by another species
  3. if system favours one species over the other, competitive exclusion occurs.
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11
Q

What is coexistence with a stable equilibrium? 4

A
  1. coexistence if intraspecific competition is stronger than interspecific competition
  2. both species are self redulating before impact by other species begins
  3. relationship between inter and intraspecific competition determines outcomes
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12
Q

What are the limitations of lokta-volterra diagrams? 2

A
  1. describes competition without mechanisms
  2. does not tell us if coexistence and exclusion actually happen in nature
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13
Q

Describe Birch’s beetle experiment of 1953. 4

A
  1. 2 beetle species - Rhizopertha and Calanra - grown in lab together
  2. Populations monitored
  3. in competition for wheat
  4. rhizopertha population declines and calandra dominates - competitive exclusion
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14
Q

Descrobe Gause’s yeast and microbe experiements of the 1930s. 3

A
  1. grew 2 microbe species together in one test tube - coexistance
  2. grew yeast in pure and mixed populations
  3. overall, volume less in mixed populations but coexistence possible in reasonable quantities
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15
Q

What were the limitations of Birch and Gause’s experiements? 2

A
  1. in 1945, Crombie found that coexistence of 2 similar beetles to Birch’s had different larval feeding habits but same adult feeding habits
  2. In 1934, Gause found that coexisting yeast fed at different levels in the substrate of tube
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16
Q

What is Gause’s hypothesis? 5

A
  1. Complete competitors cannot coexist
  2. many species appear to coexist in nature
  3. hypothesized that competition is relatively rare in nature
  4. meta-analysis suggests high mean effect of interspecific competition so it must occur
  5. also hypothesised that competition is very common and so species have adapted to miimise effects
17
Q

What are funamental and realised niches? 2

A
  1. Fundamental niche - a multidimensional space of resources needed by an organism in the absence of competition
  2. the realised niche is the area of fundamental niche that is actually realised
18
Q

What is the effect of competition in niche space? 2

A
  1. Competition with other species can reduce niche breadth, while optimal remains the same
  2. iif outcompeted at optimum, the species distribution shirts to peripheral parts of fundamental niche
19
Q

Give an example of spatial niche partitioning of microbes in soil. 10

A
20
Q

Describe competion for N in the soil. 5

A
  1. Animals and plants compete for n, but much is locked away in organic material
  2. microbes are best competitors, take up ammonia and nitrates faster
  3. organic N is more accessible to microbes
  4. trees provide microbes with carbon, so trees gain nitrogen from microbes, as carbon stimulates them, microbes eventually die and trees get nitrogen
  5. soil organic matter is inaccessible to plants
21
Q

What are the advantages of temporal and spatial niche paritions in soil? 4

A
  1. microbes win in shot term, esp. in low nitrogen environment
  2. net flux of nitrogen to plants in the long term
  3. ecological importance - prevents n leaching
  4. facilitates developments of mutualistic interactions
22
Q

Ecology. C. Krebs. 2014.

What is Tilman’s model? 2

A
  1. allows understanding of resources and consumption in competitive interactions
  2. essential components for understanding interactions
23
Q

Ecology. C. Krebs. 2014.

How does competition work in natural populations? 8

A
  1. Competitive exclusion would not occur:
  2. in unstable environments that don’t reach equilibrium and have colonizing species
  3. non-competitive environments
  4. Fluctuating environments where already below carrying capacity
  5. coexistence of animals may be due to slight differences eg. feeding from different parts of same plant
  6. doesn’t explain plants n- may not be in equilibrium at all
  7. Facilitation - some plants help each other
  8. Gause’s hypothesis should be rejected as the difference at even one gene locus allowed coexistence
24
Q

Fundamentals of ecology. Odum and Barrett. 2005.

Summarise competition and coexistence 2

A
  1. animals higher up tree of life more likely to use direct competition - more able
  2. coexistence more likely in nature where others can leave