Thursday, October 18, 2012

Week 7 Lecture Notes - 18 Oct.

Birds

Endemic – found in only one place -
Ashy-faced Owl (Tyto glaucops)
Hispaniolan Trogon (Priotelus roseigaster)

Migratory
1. Some nest in Haiti – 
Caribbean Martin (Progne dominicensis) Breeds in Haiti Feb. – Aug
Brown Noddy (Anous stolidus) Breeds in Haiti Apr. – Aug

2. Some nest in the US – 
Northern Parula (Setophaga americana)
Osprey (Pandion haliaetus)

Map of flyways

Thus important to protect birds in all countries and ecosystems.

Habitat = ecological or environmental area that is inhabited by a particular species of animal, plant, or other type of organism.

In tropics, birds have greater territories than in temperate regions.
Territory =
Ex., in Amazon 3 – 4 hectares (7.5 – 10 acres)
Temperate = 1 hectare (2.5 acres)

Tropical birds susceptible to fragmentation of their habitat.  Chapter 14 in the kindle version.
Fragmentation = when habitat is divided into smaller parts.
Forests – the disturbances we talked about – clearing forests etc.
Aquatic habitats – damming rivers, diverting streams, plowing wetlands, destroying mangrove.
Also – building roads through, planting fields.

Results of fragmentation
Reduced amount of habitat
Reduced quality of habitat
                                 Edge to surface area increases,
                                          thus more vulnerable to more destruction
                                          Intrusion by invasives, disease etc.
                                          More litter, more trees die at edge

RESULTS – reduced biodiversity!

How far apart habitats are is also important
Think of the migrating birds – need habitat all the way along their route.

Reduced birds =
Reduced seed dispersal

Fragmentation reduces insects as well, which in turn reduces their predators.

Reduced biodiversity in tropics will reduce birds that migrate between biomes, thus affect other biomes.

What can help?  Corridors = connections between fragments that allow animals to pass between the fragments.

John James Audubon and AUC Audubon Center - http://aucaudubon.blogspot.com/

INSECTS

Folivorous – leaf eating
Many folivorous insects in the tropics. 
Because there are more specialists in tropics?
Specialist = an organism that has a narrow niche – either food or habitat.
Or just because there are more trees?

Let’s look at the numbers.

A tree in a temperate forest in Monrovia Central Europe had 29 insect species per 100 m2 leaf tissue.
Comparable type of tree in tropics of New Guinea had 23.5.

BUT Monrovia central europe had 21 species of trees per hectare, while New Guinea had 152/ha.

Conclusion – more trees!  Not more specialists.

Specializing on specific plants –
Many plants in tropics produce defense compounds which are repellant to toxic.
Yet insects specialize on these plants. 

So either immune to the toxins, or minimize their exposure.

Example minimize =
– caterpillars of genus Melinaea feed on plants in Solanaceae family (tomato).
Caterpillars cut the veins so that the toxin doesn’t reach the leaf tissue they eat.

Example immune =
Heliconid butterflies 50 species
– caterpillars feed almost exclusively on Passiflora – passionflower – a vine of 500 species
-          Contains cyanogenic glycosides and cyanohydrins
-          Helioconids have enzymes to sequester these cyanogens

In turn, the butterflies are toxic.  Have obvious coloration to warn birds.

The coloration is said to be aposematic – warning.

Some plants have compounds that can help us in medicine – anti-cancer compounds.  Scientists have found that the aposematically colored insects tend to be on the plants that have these compounds.

Insects as pollinators
Beetles pollinate the Victoria water lily. 
The white flower  - strong ordor and warm -  11C warmer than ambient temperature.
Attracts Cyclocephala ssp. beetles that enter and become trapped.  During night become covered with pollen, and flower turns red and lost scent and warmness.  Beetle goes to another white flower.

Long-distance pollinators
Fig wasps travel 5 – 14 km (3 – 8.5 m).
Borneo – they fly above canopy where winds are strong.

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