Ch. 5, Sec 2: Interactions in Communities
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Section 2: Interactions In Communities • How do predator-prey interactions influence both predators and prey? • How are plants protected from herbivores? • How does symbiosis work? • What are examples of all these relationship?
Ch. 5, Sec 2: Interactions in Communities
Vocabulary List • • • • • •
Predation (predator, prey) Herbivory Symbiosis Parasitism (parasite, host) Mutualism Commensalism
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Ch. 5, Sec 2: Interactions in Communities
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1) Predator-Prey Interactions • Predation is one organism killing another for food (prey dies). • The predator is usually bigger or more powerful than the prey • The prey population is larger than the predator population • The predator population usually follows the prey
Ch. 5, Sec 2: Interactions in Communities
Predator-Prey Interactions, cont. See Visual Concept 60350: PREDATION
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Ch. 5, Sec 2: Interactions in Communities
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2) Herbivory • Herbivores are animals that eat plants. • Unlike predators, herbivores do not often kill the plants. • Plants might defend themselves with thorns, tough leaves, or bad tasting or toxic chemicals. • See Visual Concept 60352: HERBIVORY
Ch. 5, Sec 2: Interactions in Communities
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3) Other Interactions: Symbiosis •
Not all interactions between organisms result in a winner and a loser.
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Symbiosis is a relationship in which two species live in close association with each other.
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One species benefits, and the other might or might not.
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Three types of symbiosis: • • •
Parasitism Mutualism Commensalism
Ch. 5, Sec 2: Interactions in Communities
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Parasitism • In parasitism, a parasite feeds on another organism called a host. • The host is almost always larger than the parasite, and is usually harmed but not intentionally killed. • Parasites often live on or in their host. Therefore, the parasite depends on its host not only for food but for a place to live as well. • Examples: fleas, tapeworms, mosquitoes, ticks, leeches
Ch. 5, Sec 2: Interactions in Communities
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Parasites, continued • Hosts try to keep parasites from infecting them. Hosts can defend themselves with their immune systems or behaviors such as scratching. • Are humans “furless” to avoid parasites? • In response, parasites may evolve ways to overcome the host’s defenses (immunity to drugs, for example) • See “Protists and Humans” (p.507-509) for more on parasites and disease.
Ch. 5, Sec 2: Interactions in Communities
QuickTimeª and a mpeg4 decompressor are needed to see this picture.
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Ch. 5, Sec 2: Interactions in Communities
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Mutualism • A relationship between two species in which both species benefit. – Cleaner fish & larger fish – Bees & flowers – Fungi + Algae = Lichen
Ch. 5, Sec 2: Interactions in Communities
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Commensalism • One species is helped, but the other is neutral. • Orchids, vines growing on forest trees to reach sunlight • Sea anenome & clown fish • Bacteria in animal intestines (?)
Ch. 5, Sec 2: Interactions in Communities
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Summary 1. Predators kill prey for food; populations are related 3. Herbivores eat plants, but plants can defend through thorns, bad taste, or toxins 5. Symbiosis is close connection between two species; at least one benefits
Relationship
Species A Species B
Parasitism Mutualism Commensalism
Helps Helps Helps
Hurts Helps Neutral
Ch. 5, Sec 2: Interactions in Communities
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Knowledge Check • • • •
Explain how an animal could be both predator and prey. How are herbivores different from carnivorous predators? How is parasitism different from predation? There are more bacteria cells in the human body than there are human cells! What type of relationship is this?