rewm 3500 friday, august 28, 2009 organizing concepts in physiological plant ecology i. reductionism...

11
REWM 3500 Friday, August 28, 2009 Organizing concepts in physiological plant ecology I. Reductionism and holism in ecology II. Physiological ecology and the distribution of organisms III. Plant responses to “stress”

Upload: roger-doyle

Post on 17-Jan-2016

217 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: REWM 3500 Friday, August 28, 2009 Organizing concepts in physiological plant ecology I. Reductionism and holism in ecology II. Physiological ecology and

REWM 3500Friday, August 28, 2009

Organizing concepts in physiological plant ecology

I. Reductionism and holism in ecology

II. Physiological ecology and the distribution of organisms

III. Plant responses to “stress”

Page 2: REWM 3500 Friday, August 28, 2009 Organizing concepts in physiological plant ecology I. Reductionism and holism in ecology II. Physiological ecology and

I. Reductionism and holism in ecology

Page 3: REWM 3500 Friday, August 28, 2009 Organizing concepts in physiological plant ecology I. Reductionism and holism in ecology II. Physiological ecology and

II. Physiological ecology and the distribution of organisms

Page 4: REWM 3500 Friday, August 28, 2009 Organizing concepts in physiological plant ecology I. Reductionism and holism in ecology II. Physiological ecology and

Multiple limiting resources is the reality

Page 5: REWM 3500 Friday, August 28, 2009 Organizing concepts in physiological plant ecology I. Reductionism and holism in ecology II. Physiological ecology and

Figure 5.03 – Taiz and Zeiger 2006

Single limiting resourceMultiple limiting resources

Excess of resources (toxic)

Page 6: REWM 3500 Friday, August 28, 2009 Organizing concepts in physiological plant ecology I. Reductionism and holism in ecology II. Physiological ecology and

Tolerance to environmental extremes

Page 7: REWM 3500 Friday, August 28, 2009 Organizing concepts in physiological plant ecology I. Reductionism and holism in ecology II. Physiological ecology and

The biotic “filter”

Grown together

Grown alone

Page 8: REWM 3500 Friday, August 28, 2009 Organizing concepts in physiological plant ecology I. Reductionism and holism in ecology II. Physiological ecology and

Response to stress in plants

From Lambers, Chapin and Pons 1998

Page 9: REWM 3500 Friday, August 28, 2009 Organizing concepts in physiological plant ecology I. Reductionism and holism in ecology II. Physiological ecology and

Population adaptation to environmental temperature

From Lambers, Chapin and Pons 1998

Page 10: REWM 3500 Friday, August 28, 2009 Organizing concepts in physiological plant ecology I. Reductionism and holism in ecology II. Physiological ecology and

Ecotypes - locally adapted populations

From Lambers, Chapin and Pons 1998

Page 11: REWM 3500 Friday, August 28, 2009 Organizing concepts in physiological plant ecology I. Reductionism and holism in ecology II. Physiological ecology and

Terms to know:

Reductionism HolismOrganismal theory of community organizationIndividualistic theory of community organizationHistorical filter Physiological filter Biotic filterMicroenvironment Liebig’s law of the minimum Law of [multiple] limiting factorsLaw of toleranceOptimal vs realized distribution (physiological vs ecological amplitude)Homeostasis Stress Stress response Acclimation Phenotypic plasticity Adaptation Stress resistance Stress tolerance Stress avoidance