Interactions among populations IV: Ecological networks - mutualists and antagonists Flashcards

1
Q

Species do not exist in isolation but in

A

complex networks of antagonistic (predation, herbivory and parasitism), or mutualistic interactions (e.g. pollination)

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2
Q

Food webs describe

A

antagonistic networks

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3
Q

List some antagonistic networks

A
  • food webs
  • predator-prey
  • parasitoid-host
  • herbivore-plant
  • pathogen-host
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4
Q

List some mutualistic networks

A
  • pollinators and flowers
  • seed dispersers and fruits
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5
Q

Describe linkage networks

A

showing which species interact with which other species

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6
Q

Describe energy flow networks

A

showing the quantity of energy flowing among the species

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7
Q

Describe functional / interaction strength networks

A
  • showing the most important interactions structuring the community
  • require expts
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8
Q

Describe the “small world” property

A

6 degrees of separation

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9
Q

Describe the small world properties of ecological networks

A
  • species from a variety of aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems are on average two links apart
  • > 95% within three links of each other
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10
Q

Why is the small world property of ecological networks important?

A
  • changes to abundance of one species will propagate rapidly
  • dynamics within ecosystems can be highly interconnected
  • biodiversity loss, over-harvesting and species invasions may affect more species than previously thought
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11
Q

What are the advantages of networks

A
  • summarise complexity of community interactions (more realistic than models of a few interacting species)
  • understand community structure (which species occur in a community; why some are rare and some are common)
  • understand community dynamics (what happens if we interfere with ecological communities)
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12
Q

List some network attributes

A
  • number of species in the web, S
  • number of links or connections, L
  • connectance, C: the fraction of possible links in the web that actually occur
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13
Q

Give the equation for connectance

A
  • Actual Links / Possible Links
  • L/[S(S-1)/2]
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14
Q

How can food webs be studied?

A
  • observation: what patterns can be seen in ‘real’ webs?
  • modelling: look at the properties of empirical or computer- generated webs
  • experiment: test food web theory in the laboratory or in the field
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15
Q

Describe observational studies

A

analyse patterns in published networks

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16
Q

Describe artefacts in observational studies

A

– Taxonomic bias
– Lumping
– Omnivory (feeding on more than one trophic level) and ‘rare’ links underestimated
* Newer analyses use ‘purpose built’ webs

17
Q

Give an example of a robust observation

A

most food chains are short (3-4 levels)

18
Q

Describe the energy attenuation hypothesis

A
  • energy is lost at each tropic level (heat, respiration, etc.) due to the 2nd law of thermodynamics
  • eventually there is not enough energy for a further trophic level
19
Q

What are the predictions of the energy attenuation hypothesis

A
  • communities with more efficient energy transfer should have longer food chains (e.g. endotherms v. ectotherms)
  • communities with higher productivity should have longer food chains (at very low productivity they do, but few communities have > 3 or 4 levels)
20
Q

Describe the trophodynamics explanation of short food chains

A
  • chance variations in population size are amplified up the food chain leading to unpredictable dynamics for the top predator
  • food chains are indeed shorter in unpredictable environments
21
Q

Removing species with few trophic connections generally has

A

little effect

22
Q

Robustness increases with

A

connectance

23
Q

complexity (more species and/or more
connections) appears to

A

decrease stability

24
Q

Manipulations can identify

A

‘keystone species’ and ‘indirect effects’

25
Q

Excluding the starfish Pisaster from rocky shores

A

shifted food web structure and reduced species diversity

26
Q

Community structuring

A

determine which species occur and their relative abundances

27
Q

List some factors that may structure communities

A
  • indirect interactions
  • keystone species