ad eco1
ad eco1
ad eco1
(Biol 551)
1. Lectures
2. Individual Reference Readings and Classroom and
Independent Discussions***
Course Evaluation
3. Assignments
4. Final test
Selected References
2. Philosophy of Ecology
Human Wellbeing
Contd.
Introduction
General Overview
• The Ecosystem Resources Nature Reserve
• Food Webs • Species Diversity • The Community
• Island • Stochastic • Population Cycles
Biogeography Processes • Pattern
Theory • Competition • Life-history
• Succession • Density-dependent Strategies
• Ecological Regulation • Predator-prey
Adaptation • Natural Interactions
• Bioaccumulation in Disturbance • The
Food Chains • Niche Diversity/Stability
• Energy Flow • Limiting Factors Hypothesis
• Environmental • Habitat Restoration • Ecosystem Fragility
Heterogeneity • Materials Cycling • Plant-herbivore
• Coevolution • Carrying Capacity Interactions
• Conservation of • • Socioecology
Some Ecological Concepts underlying Important
2. Community ecology:
Therefore,
“What would be Advanced Ecology”?
Outline
1. Introduction
2. Ecological gradients
3. Species diversity
4. Ecosystem function
5. Ecosystem services
6. Vegetation processes
7. Alien invasive species
8. Restoration ecology
9. Field ecological methods
10. Biodiversity and global climate change
11. Ecological Modeling
Expectations of the Course:
Personal reflections:
• Altitude
• Rainfall
• Temp.(max/min)
etc
Equatorial Westerlies
1) Terminology of Gradients
• An ecological gradient
: is the gradual change in any ecological factor.
Ecological factors are often correlated with each other, and
act on the plants in combination.
Contd.
• Complex gradient
• Coenocline
• Ecocline
The coenocline (variation in vegetation) is mostly correlated
with, and partly caused by, the variation in an underlying
complex gradient.
• Ecotone
An ecotone is a relatively sharp change in one, two or three of
complex gradient, coenocline and ecocline.
Contd.
• Resource gradient
The environmental gradient is an essential resource for
plat growth, for which competition may occur.
e.g. Nutrients
Gradient
Species richness:
- a count of the number of plant species in a quadrat, area or
community;
- often equated with diversity;
Types of Diversity
i. Alpha diversity
• the mean number of species within a chosen area or
community such as one type of woodland or
grassland,
i.e. at the within-community level.
Contd.
• Why?
Measuring Biodiversity
• Measuring BD requires determining which elements of BD
are present in the area of interest.
H= -Σ pi log pi
species.
possible value of H.
Contd.
For instance,
• Consider the following scenario;
Vegetation “A” -
Vegetation “B” –
i. Alpha Diversity
ii. Beta Diversity, and
iii. Gamma Diversity
Contd.
Alpha Diversity:
• The diversity that exists within an ecosystem;
e.g., species richness in a forest,
Beta Diversity:
• Among habitat diversity;
e.g., species diversity between a forest and the adjacent
meadow,
Gamma Diversity:
• Geographic-scale diversity;
e.g., species diversity among differing habitats on one island and
another one a thousand km away,
Diversity indices
• Shanon-Wiener Index
• McIntosh Index
Various formulae to measure diversity:
cf
Issued books.
Equitability or evenness index: (Check!)
Equitability J = H’ / H’max = ∑ pi ln pi / ln s
(evenness)
where s = the umber of species
ln = log basen
Contd.
(Case 1):
Ecosystem A B C
Tid 40 120 80
Zigba 30
60 60
Woyra 20 20 60
Kerero 10 - -
Richness 4 3 3
Evenness:
• In the above Table – ecosystem C is more diverse than B.
Ecosystem A B C
Tid 40 120 80
Zigba 30
60 60
Woyra 20 20 60
Kerero 10 - -
Richness 4 3 3
(Case 2):
(Cf. losing a woman from the team that had 8 men and only 2
women)
Contd.
still abound.
Contd.
i. Conservation evaluation
ii. Diversity/stability
iii. Diversity/productivity
Contd.
i. Conservation evaluation
• Most ecologists consider high species richness to be
A point of distinction:
• Two types of diversity are recognized by Systematists:
- Taxonomic diversity, and
- Phylogenetic diversity
Contd.
• HOW?
Contd.
ii. Diversity/stability
• There was a long held view among some ecologists that high
species diversity leads to community stability.
iii. Diversity/productivity
i. Niche relations
Alpha diversity
achieve viability.
• These marginal species from between differing plant
adjacent areas around one communities or habitat types.
particular habitat or
community type can greatly
increase species diversity.
temperature,
water,
drainage ,and
soil nutrients;
For instance;
- woodland as opposed to scrublad or grassland.
Blue Nile
Contd.
• Floristic composition,
• Floristic structure, and
• Relative abundance
Contd.
i.e.,
• The community is not described by simply listing all the
species which compose it, …… because each are not of
equal importance.
cf.
• Flora refers to a list of species or to the plant taxa
occurring in that area.
– a floristic checklist to
Phytosociology
vegetation,
system.
Contd.
Basic Principles:
Structuring Processes
i.e. pattern and process in vegetation
1) Interspecific interactions
Several kinds of interspecific interactions occur between plants.
Plants with strong competitive ability have been termed Competitors.
- Characteristics of competitors:
2) Destabilizing factors
– allelochemical effects,
• Disturbance :
• Fluctuations :
- are used to denote more or less predictable variation in
environmental factors affecting density-independent mortality.
Contd.
3) Stress
• Stress is a commonly occurring environmental impact on
vegetation that adversely affects production, mortality or
establishment.
4) Chances
– Chance factors, that is random processes in vegetation,
have important contributions in determining vegetation
structure.