Of Wolves and Trees ■ 359
The idea of wolves protecting aspens initially
seems nonsensical. How would meat-eating
predators protect trees? They wouldn’t—at
least not directly. Ripple surmised that wolves
in Yellowstone might have had an indirect effect
on the community. As an ecologist, Ripple had
long studied ecological communities, asso-
ciations of species that live in the same area.
Communities vary in size and complexity, from
a small group of microorganisms in a tempo-
rary pool of water to the whole of Yellowstone
Park, home to an estimated 322 species of
birds, 67 species of mammals, 1,349 species of
plants, and an uncounted number of insects
(Figure 20.2).
Ripple knew that an ecological community is
characterized by the diversity of species that live
there, and that diversity is governed by two things:
the relative species abundance (how common
one species is when compared to another) and the
species richness (the total number of different
species that live in the community; Figure 20.3).
Ripple also knew that communities are subject
to constant change, and that something must
have changed in Yellowstone.
Ecological communities change naturally
as a result of interactions between and among
species, and as a result of interactions between
species and their physical environment. Ripple
knew that both the relative abundance and the
William Ripple is director of the Trophic Cascades
Program at Oregon State University. There, he
leads a research project investigating how gray
wolves affect other species in the Yellowstone
ecosystem.
WILLIAM RIPPLE
A community of protists
and small invertebrate
animals lives in a tree hole.
A community of plants, animals, and
microorganisms lives in an aspen woodland.
A community of
microorganisms lives
in the gut of an elk.
Bacterium
Parasite
Worm
Fly larva
Amoeba
Mosquito larva
Figure 20.2
Ecological communities come in all sizes
Smaller communities can be nested within a larger community. This aspen woodland community contains the smaller communities
of a temporary pool of water in a tree hole and an elk’s gut, among others.
Q1: List another species that is part of this community.
Q2: Of which community could this aspen woodland be a smaller part?
Q3: Which other small communities could be found within this larger community?