Ecology. Michael Begon

Ecology - Michael  Begon


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plant materials mean that they are potentially rich sources of energy. Other components of the diet (e.g. nitrogen) are more likely to be limiting. Yet most of that energy is only directly available to consumers if they have enzymes capable of mobilising cellulose and lignins. An increasing number of species, especially insects, have been shown to have these enzymes themselves (Watanabe & Tokuda, 2010), but the overwhelming majority of species in both the plant and animal kingdoms lack them, the latter relying instead on the cellulases produced by gut‐inhabiting, cellulolytic prokaryotes with which they form intimate, ‘mutualistic’ relationships, discussed further, for both vertebrate and invertebrate herbivores, in Chapter 13.

      Because most animals lack cellulases, the cell wall material of plants hinders the access of digestive enzymes to the contents of plant cells. The acts of chewing by the grazing mammal, cooking by humans and grinding in the gizzard of birds allow digestive enzymes to reach cell contents more easily. The carnivore, by contrast, can more safely gulp its food.

      Of course, one big difference between the resources of autotrophs and those of heterotrophs, at least those that consume living prey, is that the resources of the heterotrophs can fight back – on both ecological and evolutionary timescales. We pick up the story of prey defence in Chapter 9.

Graphs depict resource-dependent growth isoclines. Each of the growth isoclines represents the amounts of two resources (R1 and R2) that would have to exist in a habitat for a population to have a given growth rate. In the respective figures, resources are (a) essential, (b) perfectly substitutable, (c) complementary, (d) antagonistic and (e) inhibitory.

      Source: After Tilman (1982).

      zero net growth isoclines

      

      3.8.1 Categories of resources

      essential resources

      Two resources are said to be essential when neither can substitute for the other. This is denoted in Figure 3.30a by the isoclines running parallel to both axes. They do so because the amount available of one resource defines a maximum possible growth rate, irrespective of the amount of the other resource. This growth rate is achieved unless the amount available of the other resource defines an even lower growth rate. Generally, therefore, growth rate will be determined by the resource in most limited supply. This will be true for nitrogen and potassium as resources in the growth of green plants, and for two host species in the life of a parasite that must alternate between them (see Chapter 12).

      perfectly substitutable resources

      Two resources are said to be perfectly substitutable when either can wholly replace the other. This will be true for seeds of wheat or barley in the diet of a farmyard chicken, or for zebra and gazelle in the diet of a lion. Note that we do not imply that the two resources are as good as each other. This feature (perfectly substitutable but not necessarily as good as each other) is included in Figure 3.30b by the isoclines having slopes that do not cut both axes at the same distance from the origin. Thus, in Figure 3.30b, in the absence of resource 2, the organism needs relatively little of resource 1, but in the absence of resource 1 it needs a relatively large amount of resource 2.

      complementary resources

      Substitutable resources are defined as complementary if the isoclines bow inwards towards the origin (Figure 3.30c). This shape means that a species requires less of two resources when taken together than when consumed separately. A good example is human vegetarians combining beans and rice in their diet. The beans are rich in lysine, an essential amino acid poorly represented in rice, whilst rice is rich in sulphur‐containing amino acids that are present only in low abundance in beans.

      antagonistic resources

      inhibitory resources


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