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Biodiversity, Species Interactions, and Population Control
Chapter 5
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5-1 How Do Species Interact?
Concept 5-1 Five types of species interactions – competition, predation, parasitism, mutualism, and commensalism – affect the resource use and population sizes of the species in an ecosystem.
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Species Interactions
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COMPETITION Organisms compete for shared or limited resources such as food, water, space, and habitats. Competitive exclusion principle – No two species can occupy the exact same niche for very long More in Section 5-2
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COMPETITION Interspecific competition is the competition between member of two different species. The result is that neither species can obtain as many resources as they could in the absence of the other species. Intraspecific competition is the competition between member of the same species. This also includes the competition for mates.
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PREDATION Species called predators feed on other species called prey.
Organisms use their senses to locate objects and their prey. Some predators are fast enough to catch their prey, some hide and lie in wait, and some inject chemicals to paralyze their prey.
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PREDATION Some prey may escape their predators by: Camouflage
Outer protection Chemical warfare Warning coloration Mimicry Deceptive looks Deceptive behavior
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Predator and Prey Species Can Drive Each Other’s Evolution
Intense natural selection pressures exist between predator and prey populations Coevolution – changes in the gene pool of one species can lead to changes in another species Evolution in the predator population – improved abilities to capture prey Evolutionary response – the prey improves its abilities to avoid capture The evolution of improved escape abilities should result in increased capture abilities. Evolutionary “arms race” The levels of defense and counter-defense will continue to escalate.
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Parasitism Parasitism occurs when one species feeds on part of another organism. Although parasites can harm their hosts, they can promote community biodiversity. Some parasites live inside the host (micororganisms, tapeworms). Some parasites live outside the host (fleas, ticks, mistletoe plants, sea lampreys). Some have little contact with host (cowbirds – lay eggs in another’s nest…let them take care of young.)
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Parasitism
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Mutualism In mutualism, two species interact in a way that benefits both of them. Most organisms benefit through mutualistic interactions by gaining nutrition or protection.
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Commensalism Commensalism is an interaction that benefits one species but has little, if any, effect on the other species. Epiphytes
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5-2 How Can Natural Selection Reduce Competition between Species?
Concept 5-2 Some species develop adaptations that allow them to reduce or avoid competition with other species for resources.
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5-2 How Can Natural Selection Reduce Competition between Species?
Niches (way of life) become separated to avoid competition for resources. Reduce niche overlap This is also the basis of natural selection – the pressure that drives the evolution of new species. Chapter 4
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5-2 How Can Natural Selection Reduce Competition between Species?
Some species evolve adaptations that allow them to reduce or avoid competition for resources with other species (resource partitioning). Each species minimizes competition with the others for food by spending at least half its feeding time in a distinct portion of the spruce tree and by consuming somewhat different insect species.
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5-2 How Can Natural Selection Reduce Competition between Species?
Genetic variation and specialized feeding niches can lead to evolutionary divergence. Use shared resources at different: Times Places Ways Each species has a beak specialized to take advantage of certain types of food resource.
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