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Community Interactions
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Community Interactions. Community interactions, such as competition, predation, and various forms of symbiosis, can powerfully affect an ecosystem.

Jan 13, 2016

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Annabel Potter
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Page 1: Community Interactions. Community interactions, such as competition, predation, and various forms of symbiosis, can powerfully affect an ecosystem.

Community Interactions Community Interactions

Page 2: Community Interactions. Community interactions, such as competition, predation, and various forms of symbiosis, can powerfully affect an ecosystem.

Community Interactions

• Community interactions, such as competition, predation, and various forms of symbiosis, can powerfully affect an ecosystem.

Page 3: Community Interactions. Community interactions, such as competition, predation, and various forms of symbiosis, can powerfully affect an ecosystem.

• Competition – when organisms attempt to use a resource at the same place and the same time.

• Predation – when one organism captures and feeds on another organism.

Page 4: Community Interactions. Community interactions, such as competition, predation, and various forms of symbiosis, can powerfully affect an ecosystem.

Symbiosis

• In a symbiotic relationship at least one of the organisms directly benefits from its close association with the other organism. There are three types of symbiosis.

Page 5: Community Interactions. Community interactions, such as competition, predation, and various forms of symbiosis, can powerfully affect an ecosystem.

Symbiotic Relationships

A symbiotic relationship where both organisms benefit

EX: Cowbirds eat the bugs off of a cow’s back

A symbiotic relationship where 1 organism benefits and the other is unaffected

Ex: When cows walk through a field it stirs up bugs and birds eat the bugs

A symbiotic relationship where 1 organism benefits and the other is harmed.

Ex: A tick feeds on the blood of a dog

Page 6: Community Interactions. Community interactions, such as competition, predation, and various forms of symbiosis, can powerfully affect an ecosystem.

Commensalism

• One species benefits and the other gets no real benefit or harm.

Page 7: Community Interactions. Community interactions, such as competition, predation, and various forms of symbiosis, can powerfully affect an ecosystem.

Commensalism

Bromiliad and tree – the higher the bromiliad on the branches, the more sun

Page 8: Community Interactions. Community interactions, such as competition, predation, and various forms of symbiosis, can powerfully affect an ecosystem.

Commensalism

Shark and Remora – remora eats food scraps from sharks meals.

Page 9: Community Interactions. Community interactions, such as competition, predation, and various forms of symbiosis, can powerfully affect an ecosystem.

Commensalism

Barnacles and Whale – Barnacles are moved to feeding grounds by riding on the whales.

Page 10: Community Interactions. Community interactions, such as competition, predation, and various forms of symbiosis, can powerfully affect an ecosystem.

Mutualism

• Both species benefit from the relationship

Page 11: Community Interactions. Community interactions, such as competition, predation, and various forms of symbiosis, can powerfully affect an ecosystem.

Mutualism

Clownfish gets – protection and home

Anemone gets – cleaned and brought food

Page 12: Community Interactions. Community interactions, such as competition, predation, and various forms of symbiosis, can powerfully affect an ecosystem.

Mutualism

Eel gets cleaned by removal of parasites

Shrimp gets food

Page 13: Community Interactions. Community interactions, such as competition, predation, and various forms of symbiosis, can powerfully affect an ecosystem.

Mutualism

Same as before

Page 14: Community Interactions. Community interactions, such as competition, predation, and various forms of symbiosis, can powerfully affect an ecosystem.

Parasitism

• One species (the parasite) benefits, but in doing so, harms the other (the host).

Page 15: Community Interactions. Community interactions, such as competition, predation, and various forms of symbiosis, can powerfully affect an ecosystem.

Parasitism

Mosquito – takes blood for food

Humans – loss of blood and possible infection

Page 16: Community Interactions. Community interactions, such as competition, predation, and various forms of symbiosis, can powerfully affect an ecosystem.

Parasitism

Tick – blood for food

Mammal – loss of blood and possible infection

Page 17: Community Interactions. Community interactions, such as competition, predation, and various forms of symbiosis, can powerfully affect an ecosystem.

Parasitism

Mistletoe – takes nutrients from the tree.

Tree – loss of nutrients and loss of leaves, possible disease.