Community Structure
Community Structure
A community is a group of species inhabiting a given
area (with a defined boundary) and interacting,
directly or indirectly, with biotic and abiotic factors
around them
Species in a community have different types of
interactions:
Competition, predation, parasitism, mutualism
Specific attributes of a community include
species number and relative abundance
physical structure
usually defined by plant growth forms
interactions among species
Biological Structure of Community
Species composition defines the biological structure
of a community
Number of individuals of each species in a
community can be counted or estimated
Relative abundance - the proportion of each
species relative to the total number of individuals of
all species living in the community
pi = ni/N
pi = proportion of individuals of species i
ni = number of individuals of species i
N = total number of individuals of all species
Table 16.1
Biological Structure of Community
These two forest stands have a very different
composition
Stand 1 has 256 individuals belonging to 24 different
species
Two species comprise about 44 percent of the total individuals
in the community
Stand 2 has 274 individuals belonging to 10 different
species
Two species comprise 84 percent of the total individuals in the
community
Rank Abundance Plots
A rank abundance diagram provides information
species richness (S) the number of species in the
community
species evenness (E) how equally individuals are
distributed among the species
Interpreting rank abundance curves:
The longer the curve, the greater the species richness in the
community
The more gradual the slope, the greater the species evenness
in the community
A rank abundance diagram plots rank abundance (x-axis) against corresponding
relative abundance (y-axis)
1
Relative abundance
0.1
Stand 1
0.04
Stand 2
0.001
2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24
Rank abundance
Species Diversity
Simpsons diversity index (D) consider both
species number and relative abundance
Simpsons index (D) probability that two randomly selected
individuals from the community will belong to the same
species
D = 1 with no diversity
D approaches zero with higher diversity
Species Dominance
When a single or few species predominate within a
community, those species are called dominants
Simpson index, D, is used as a way to measure
dominance
When D = 1, there is only one species present,
that one species is completely dominant
there is no species diversity in the community
A community will have both a dominant tree species and a
dominant small mammal species
Relative abundance vs biomass Table 16.2
Abundance alone is not always a sufficient
measure of biomass
Different species in the community may
have very different relative abundance
compared to relative biomass
In a deciduous forest in Virginia
relative abundance 60% of the trees are
red maple and dogwood
relative biomass 60% of the biomass is in
white oaks, which account for 9% of the
relative abundance
Keystone species
A keystone species has a disproportionate impact on
the community relative to its abundance
Function in a unique and significant way within a community
The role of a keystone species may be to
create or modify habitats
influence interactions among other species
The removal of a keystone species can lead to
changes in community structure
loss of biodiversity
The coral Oculina arbuscula (lives off the coast of eastern North America) is a
keystone species
Only coral in the region with a structurally complex, branching shape
Creates habitat for 300 species of invertebrates that live among its branches
Many species complete much of their life cycle within the coral
Keystone herbivores can modify the community through their feeding activities
African elephants in savannas of southern Africa
feed mainly on woody plants
are destructive feeders, often uprooting, breaking an destroying the
shrubs they eat
This reduction of tree and shrub density favors
growth and reproduction of grasses
creates habitats for smaller vertebrates
2.7
Grass species Bird species
2.6
2.5
Species Diversity
2.4
2.3
2.2
2.1
2.0
1.9
Treatment Control Treatment Control
(Elephant (Elephant (Elephant (Elephant
present) absent) present) absent)
(a) (b)
Food Webs Describe Species Interactions
Organisms must acquire energy and nutrients to
survive
Food chain - a representation of feeding
relationships within a community
a descriptive diagram representing the flow of energy from the
prey (consumed) to the predator (consumer)
Arrows are used to represent these relationships
The direction of the arrow goes from the prey to the predator
grass grasshopper sparrow hawk
Actual feeding Marsh hawk
relationships in a
community are not Upland plover
Coyote
simple food chains
Involve many food Weasel
chains that mesh into a
food web, a diagram Garter snake
representing the Clay-colored
complex interactions of sparrow
predators and prey Meadow
frog
Badger
Spider
Pocket
gopher
Cutworm Prairie
Crow vole
Ground
squirrel
Grasshopper
Primary producers
(photosynthetic
organisms) form the
base of the food web
Grassland
Food Webs Describe Species Interactions
Links the arrows from consumed to consumer
Basal species are usually autotrophs (A) that do
not feed other species but are fed on by other
species
Intermediate species either herbivores (H) or
carnivores (C) that feed on other species and are the
prey of other species (may also be omnivores)
Top predators (P) feed on intermediate and
sometimes basal species (if omnivores) but are not
preyed upon themselves
Top predator P
Intermediate species C1 C2
Intermediate species H1 H2 H3
Basal species A1 A2
The number of possible species interactions (links) in a community increases with
species richness (S)
Food Webs Describe Species Interactions
Food webs can become very complex
simplified by grouping species into broader categories -
represent general feeding groups
autotrophs (primary producers) usually derive energy from
sunlight
heterotrophs (consumers) derive energy from consuming
plant and animal tissues
These feeding groups are called trophic levels
define groups of species that acquire their energy in a similar
way
Trophic levels can be subdivided into guilds -groups
of species that exploit a common resources in a
similar way
Trophic levels and guilds
Guilds are functionally similar species in a
community
Hummingbirds and other nectar-feeding birds form a guild that
exploits flowering plants in a similar way
Seed-eating birds and small mammals could represent
another guild within a community
Species within a guild draw on a shared resource
Creates the potential for strong interactions,
especially interspecific competition, and weaker
interactions with the rest of the community
Community Physical Structure
The physical structure of a community is influenced by
Abiotic factors
sunlight and temperature in terrestrial environments
water depth and flow in aquatic environments
Biotic factors
spatial arrangement of the organisms, their size, and density
Vegetation primarily defines the form and structure of terrestrial
communities
Plants can vary in their growth form
tall or short
evergreen or deciduous
needle-leaf versus broad-leaf evergreens
herbaceous or woody
trees versus shrubs versus herbs
Community Physical Structure
Terrestrial communities are often named and
classified based on the dominant plant growth form
and physical structure
forests, shrublands, or grassland communities
Every terrestrial community has vertical structure
Stratification of vertical layers that are often distinct
This vertical structure influences and is influenced by the
vertical gradient of light
Canopy
(upper layer) primary sites of energy acquisition through photosynthesis
If canopy is more open, more sunlight will reach the lower layers
The Understory
develop when ample
water and nutrients are
available
Ground cover
(herbs and ferns) below the
understory depends on soil
moisture, nutrients, slope
(exposure and position), canopy,
and understory density Forest floor
(dead organic matter decomposition occurs
and microbes feed on decaying organic material,
releasing nutrients for reuse by plants)
Savanna communities have two distinct layers of vegetation; the composition
depends on rainfall
woody plants trees and shrubs
herbaceous layer grasses
Tree layer
Grass layer
Soil surface
(dead organic matter)
Aquatic communities also have vertical structure
Stratification can also be classified by light penetration
Photic layer light available to support photosynthesis
Aphotic layer insufficient light for photosynthesis
Photic layer
Benthic layer is the
bottom layer of
Aphotic layer
sediments with higher
levels of
decomposition
Community Physical Structure
Each vertical layer has its own characteristic
organisms
Consumers and decomposers occupy all levels
Decomposers are more abundant on the forest floor or the
benthic layer
Species may move among vertical layers daily or
seasonally
Reflects variation in the physical environment (light,
temperature), shifts in resource abundance (food), change in
habitat required at different life cycle stages
Some crustaceans migrate daily to different depths
Zonation
Zonation - the change in physical and biological
structures of communities as seen when moving
across the landscape
From the base to the summit of the Siskiyou
Mountains at the California/Oregon border
Dominant tree species changes
There is a decline in species richness
From 17 to 9 species from lower to mid-elevation
Only 3 species at 19202140 m
The insects, birds, and small mammals also change
Changes in plants, plant height, density, spatial distribution
Dominant plants in the marsh are grasses/sedges
Species change from tidal areas to meadow
Dominant plants in the upland are shrubs/trees
Spartina patens
Juncus gerardi Salt meadow
Black grass cordgrass Ruppia maritima
Distichlis
Spike grass Widgeon grass
Myrica
cerifera
Iva frutescens Wax myrtle Spartina
Marsh elder Salicornia alterniflora
Glasswort Salt marsh
cordgrass
pennsylvanica
Bayberry or
Marsh elder
wax myrtle
Spartina
Spartina patens Tall
Myrica
Salt meadow Short Spartina Spartina
Tall
Blackgrass cordgrass alterniflora alterniflora
Tidal Normal
Shrub zone Salt meadow Pools and salt pans High tide
creek low tide
True marine life begins in the intertidal zone
Animals adapted to regular periods of submergence and exposure
Many are burrowers, protected from fluctuations
Species in the subtidal zone may migrate into and out of the intertidal as the tides change
Beach
Coquina Ghost crab amphipods
clam Mole crab
Blue
crab Ghost shrimp
High tide
Sea
cucumber
Killifish
Low tide
I
supratidal
Haustorius
II
intertidal
Hard-shelled Bristle
clam worm
Silversides
Tiger
III Lugworm beetle
subtidal
Flounder
Olive snail Sand dollar Heart clam
Restoration Ecology
Land-use changes by humans - resulted in declining
plant and animal populations and loss of biodiversity
Restoration ecology
goal of returning a community or ecosystem to a state approaching
its condition before disturbance through the application of ecological
principles
Involves many different approaches
reintroducing species
restoring habitats
eliminating invasive species
replanting native species
reintroducing natural disturbances
short-term periodic fires in grasslands
low-intensity ground fires in pine forests
Restoration Ecology
Lake restoration involves
reducing inputs of nutrients from adjacent land that leads to
algal blooms
restoring aquatic plants
reintroducing native fish
Wetlands restoration involves
reestablishing hydrological conditions to ensure flooding at the
right time of year
replanting aquatic plants
First efforts to restore tall-grass prairies
began in the 1930s in the Midwest
Reestablishment of native species on
degraded pastureland and abandoned
croplands
Restoration process involved
1. destroying the weeds and brush
present
2. reseeding and replanting native
prairie species
3. burning the site once every two or
three years to approximate the
natural fire regim
After 80 years, the plant community
now resembles the original native
prairie