Ecosystem Dynamics
Ecosystem Dynamics
• Amensalism- one is always harmed but the other is unharmed or benefited (e.g.
cattle tramples grass)
Food Chain
• Apex predators- top of the food chain
• Keystone species
• R and K strategies
• The more complex species diversity, the more resilient the ecosystem
• The more species in the ecosystem, the more alternative pathways are available for
energy flow, and the better able the ecosystem is to withstand stress and thereby be
resilient.
• Net primary productivity (NPP): GPP – respiration (This is the amount of energy
available for heterotrophs)
• Productivity of ecosystems depends on light, nutrients, temperature, moisture,
etc.
• Most productive ecosystems per unit are Estuaries, swamps and marshes, and
tropical rainforests, (temperate rainforests).
• Marine protected areas relevance for reduction in estuary e.g. Musquash in the
Bay of Fundy
Biogeochemical
cycles cont’d
• classified according to their source-
gaseous (atmosphere), sedimentary
(lithosphere) and hydrologic (water)
• Often the dominant limiting factor in freshwater aquatic
systems and for terrestrial plant growth in soils
• Controls nitrogen and carbon cycles in the oceans
Eurasian Watermilfoil (Invasive Species Council of BC) Purple loosestrife Quebec & Manitoba
Grass Carp (Asian carp)
Largemouth bass (BC) killing prey fish and spreading diseases
Sea lamprey in the Great Lakes
reduce local biodiversity, and put added pressures on endangered or at-risk species;
spread diseases like Lyme disease to humans or botulism to fish and shorebirds through aquatic and land-based
food webs;
cost billions in management fees and lost economic value of crops, forests and fisheries.
• While the costs of living with invasive species are difficult to pin down, researchers studying the issue in 2004
found the economic impact of just 16 non-native species (including the Asian longhorn beetle, gypsy moth, ruff
and the horn fly) — on everything from crop yield to fisheries to tree death — was between $13.3 billion and $34.5
billion every year. These 16 species represent just 1.1 per cent of the estimated 1,442 invasive species currently
in Canada.
Gypsy moth and caterpillar
Human influences