Group 1
Group 1
Group 1
Ecological
successions
and Population
control
CAMAY, JENNIFER
TAÑARA, JENERYN S.
JAKOSALEM, LEMUEL KENT A.
ABLONG, SIGFRED JASPER P.
ROSALES, KIMBERLY G.
FREJOLES, WILMEL
Hello,
Class!
“In looking at nature, never forget that
every single organic being around us may be
said to be striving to increase its numbers.”
-Charles Darwin, 1859
How do species
interact?
Five types of
interactions among
species
compe t i on
f ic t da
e
it i
c i
pr
e
on
ters p
in
Five types of
interactions among
species
i t i sm a l i sm nsa l i sm
a s tu e
comm
mu
par
Most Species Compete
with One Another
for Certain Resources
Interspecific
Competition
The most common interaction among
species is competition.
Competition: Occurs when members of one
or more species interact to use the same
limited resources such as food,water, light,
and space.
Competition within a species is called
intraspecific competition, but
interspecific competition, or
competition among different species,
plays a larger role in most ecosystems.
Interspecific
Competition
Interspecific competition
Intraspecific competition
Consumer Species Feed
on Other Species
Predation
Carnivores such
as the cheetah
catch prey by
running fast.
Predation
Others:
Can fly and have
keen eyesight.
Can use
camouflage to
hide.
Use chemical
warfare to attack
their prey.
Predation
Include Thick
protective bark
shells
Predation
Spines Thorns
Camouflage
Predation
PRIMARY SECONDARY
ECOLOGICAL ECOLOGICAL
SUCCESSION SUCCESSION
Primary ecological succession
Primary ecological succession involves the
gradual establishment of communities of
different species in lifeless areas where there is no
soil in a terrestrial ecosystem or no bottom
sediment in an aquatic ecosystem.
Examples include bare rock exposed by a retreating glacier,
newly cooled lava, an abandoned highway and parking lot
INERTIA
The ability of an ecosystem to survive moderate
OR
disturbances.
PERSISTENCE
01 Birth 03 Immigration
02 Death 04 Emigration
AGE STRUCTURE
Populations of
species can undergo exponential
growth represented by a J-shaped
curve (left) when resource sup-
plies are plentiful. As resource
supplies become limited, a popu-
lation undergoes logistic growth,
represented by an S-shaped curve
(right), when the size of the pop-
ulation approaches the carrying
capacity of its habitat.
• The sum of all such factors in any habitat is called
environmental resistance. These limiting factors
largely determine any area’s carrying capacity :the
maximum population of a given species that particular
habitat can sustain indefinitely.
Question
algae insect
bacteria
K-selected species
tend to reproduce later in life and have a small number
of offspring with fairly long life spans
the offspring of K-selected mammal species develop
inside their mothers (where they are safe), and are born
fairly large
tend to do well in competitive conditions when their
population size is near the carrying capacity (K) of their
environment.