47.1 Concept of the Community
Community = assemblage of populations
interacting with one another
Example: squirrel, moose, bear, fox, wolf, pine tree, termites, bacteria....etc
Composition: what organisms live there | Diversity: abundance of different species (biodiversity)
47.2 Structure of the Community
Habitat = particular place an organism
lives
Ecological Niche: the role it plays in the community (includes food sources,
reproduction, placement)
Fundamental Niche - all the conditions that an organism can survive
Realized niche - where it actually exists in nature

Interspecific Competition: competition
between different species
Competitive Exclusion Principle -
no two species can occupy the same niche
Resource Partitioning - species with niche overlap, share/partition resources
(see balanus)
P. caudatum dies out as a result of competition
Generalist - eat different things, live in a variety of spaces (raccoon) | Specialist - very specific needs (panda)
Predator-Prey Interactions

(You can see an obvious cycle, prey numbers go up followed by predator numbers going up, then prey drops, predators drop)
Prey
Defenses
Camouflage (cryptic coloration) - blending in
Mimicry - one species resembles another as a defense (milk snake)
Herding Behavior (zebra)
Startle Behavior (blowfish)
Anatomical defense (porcupine)
Chemical defense (skunk)
Which of these snakes is venoumous? (answer)
Symbiotic Relationships
Symbiosis - intimate relationship between two or mroe species
Parasitism - one individual is harmed, the other benefits (ticks & deer)
Mutualism - both benefit (flowers & honeybees)
Commensalims - one benefits, other is neither harmed or benefited (clown fish & sea anemone)
47.3 Community Development
Ecological Succession - involves a series of species replacements
Primary Succession - occurs where there is no soil formation (volcanic island)
Secondary Succession - occurs after an area is disturbed (prairie fire)Pioneer Species - first species to inhabit an area
Climax Community - when the species replacement slows and the ecosystem stabilizes
47.4 Community Biodiversity
Intermediate Disturbance Hypothesis - moderate disturbances in an ecosystem are necessary to maintain biodiversity
Keystone Species - needed to maintain biodiversity (often top predators)
Ex: Kelp, Sea otters, Sea urchins, Abalone - what happens when you remove the otters
Exotic Species - a species introduced into a habitat, often causes major disturbance and even extinction of native species
Ex: Kudzu, Snakehead catfish, Pirahna, Mussels