BIOL 2060 Lecture Notes - Lecture 19: Sonoran Desert, Competitive Exclusion Principle, Log-Normal Distribution

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Seed eating animals in boreal forest, fruit eating birds in a tropical rain forest, filter feeding invertebrates in a stream. Patterns of species abundance: the lognormal distribution: curves are typically bell-shaped or normal on log scale, most species have intermediate abundance, communities are like the graph: few species rare, few. Scale on x axis doubles each time: log base 2 scale species common, majority of species in the middle: another example: similar distribution in desert plants. S = number of species in community: as evenness increases, it approaches 1. Rank-abundance curve: plot relative abundance of species against their rank in abundance, example in a two reed fish community, similar species richness but different evenness, example: undisturbed vs burnt forests in thunder bay, burning changes the rank-abundance curve. Rare species are lost: ~80 in burnt, ~115 in undisturbed. Large changes in abundance and diversity can happen if you are changing habitat where the species are living: decreasing complexity.

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