Wildlife Population Restoration - Session 5 - Lecture Objectives Flashcards
Define ‘Community’
The co-occurrence of individuals of several species over time and space.
Define ‘Species Assemblage’
The group of species that are present and potentially interacting within a study area.
Define ‘Species Pool’
A species group occurring within a biogeographic region and extends over spatial scales much larger than those of a local species assemblage.
What are assemblage rules?
Broad patterns of species co-occurrence.
E.g., species with similar food habits would seldom co-occur
What are the three models of community assemblage?
- Deterministic
- Stochastic
- Alternative stable states
What are the four parameters you need to know to restore a community successfully?
- Components of community assemblages
- Patterns/relationships in community assemblages
- Rules that govern the expression of the property
- The mechanisms that caused the patterns
What are the three species pools to consider?
- Regional species pool
- Local species pool
- Community (assemblage) species pool
Contrast the ‘Community’ approach and the ‘Species Assemblage’ approach
- Community approach looks at individual species
- Species assemblage approach looks at groups of species
- Species assemblage could be part of a larger community
- We focus on identifying the filters and constraints that will modify the species present in a specific area throughout a successional pathway
Explain the concept of ecological filters and how they influence your approach to the restoration of communities
- Out of a species pool of potential colonists, only those adapted to the abiotic/biotic conditions will be able to establish successfully
- A continual evolution of ‘survival of the fittest’
- Those organisms not adapted to the habitat are ‘filtering out’ as possible colonists,
What are some basic abiotic filters to consider in designing your goals for restoring community assemblages (3)?
- Climate: rainfall and temperature gradients
- Substrate: fertility, soil water availability, toxicity
- Landscape structure: landscape position, previous land use, patch size, and isolation
What are some basic biotic filters to consider in designing your goals for restoring community assemblages (8)?
- Competition
- Predation-trophic interactions
- Propagule availability (dispersal)
- Mutualisms
- Disturbance
- Order of species arrival and successional model
- Current and past composition and structure (biological legacy)
Describe the deterministic model of community assemblage
- Community development is determined by abiotic and biotic factors
- Thus, the reassembly of a community after disturbance should be predictable
Describe the stochastic model of community assemblage
- Community composition/structure is a random process,
- Recovery depends on the availability of vacant niches and the order of arrival of organisms
- Thus, there is no reason to expect the exact reassembly of the community post-disturbance
Describe the alternative stable state model of community assemblage
- Intermediate between other two models
- There are constraints to how communities restructure
- The recovery of a degraded system can follow one of several trajectories, depending on:
- Historical events
- Availability
- Order of arrival of organisms
- An element of randomness inherent in all systems