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Interactions Among Living Things

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Title: Interactions Among Living Things


1
Interactions Among Living Things
2
Adapting to the Environment
  • Natural Selection a characteristic that makes
    an individual better suited to its environment
    may eventually become common in that species.
  • Natural selection results in adaptations or
    behaviors and physical characteristics that allow
    organisms to live successfully in their
    environments.
  • (you will hear more about this during Evolution)

3
Interactions Among Living Things
  • Organisms have adaptations that help them survive
    in their environment
  • All organisms have their own Niche.
  • Niche is the role of an organism in its
    environment or how it makes its living.
  • NICHE INCLUDES
  • type of food the organisms eats
  • how it obtains this food
  • which other organisms use this organism as food
  • when and how it reproduces
  • physical conditions it requires to survive

4
Three types of Interactions among Organisms
  • Competition
  • Predation
  • Symbiosis

5
COMPETITION
  • The simultaneous demand by two or more organisms
    for limited environmental resources, such as
    nutrients, living space, or light.

6
PREDATOR/PREY
  • Predator- organisms that obtain their nutritional
    energy by killing and eating other organisms.
  • Prey Any creature that is hunted and caught to
    be eaten for food.

7
Symbiosis
Organisms within a community interact with each
other in many ways. Some are predators, some are
prey. Some compete with one another, some
cooperate. Some species form symbiotic
relationships with other species
Mutualism benefits both
Commensalism benefits one, other unaffected
Parasitism benefits one, harms other
8
SYMBIOTIC RELATIONSHIPS
  • MUTUALISM-An association between organisms of two
    different species
  • in which each member benefits.
  • EXAMPLE

Example Rainforest ants and the Whistling Thorn
and Bullhorn Acacia trees. ants nest inside the
plant's thorns. ants protect acacias from attack
by herbivores (which they frequently eat,
introducing a resource component to this
service-service relationship)
9
  • Commensalism- the relation between two different
    kinds of organisms when one receives benefits
    from the other without affecting or damaging it.
  • Barnacles adhering to the skin of a whale or
    shell of a mollusk barnacle is a mollusks that
    benefits by finding a habitat where nutrients are
    available. (In the case of lodging on the living
    organism, the barnacle is transported to new
    sources of food.)
  • The presence of barnacle populations does not
    appear to hamper or enhance the survival of the
    animals carrying them.

10
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11
PARASITISM
  • symbiosis in which one organism lives as a
    parasite in or on another organism and usually
    does some harm to it.
  • Hosts is the
  • organism that the
  • parasite lives
  • on

Ticks on a bird
12
Competition
  • It is the struggle between organisms as they
    attempt to use the same limited resource
  • Occurs when two species occupy
  • the same niche
  • Why cant two species occupy the same niche?
  • If two species occupy the same niche, they will
    compete directly against each other and one
    species will eventually die off

13
  • In Australia Rabbits compete with herbivores
    like the western Quoll which became extinct
  • Rabbits were brought in they were an invasive
    species whose destruction of habitats is
    responsible for the extinction or major decline
    of many native animals such as the Western Quoll.

14
Predation
  • The interaction in which one organism kills
    another for food is called predation
  • The organism that does the killing is the
    predator
  • The organism that is killed is the prey

15
Adaptations
  • Predator adaptations
  • Help them catch and kill prey
  • Cheetah can run very fast for a short time
  • Jellyfishs tentacles contain a poisonous
    substance that paralyze tiny water animals
  • Prey adaptations
  • Help them avoid becoming prey
  • Alertness and speed of an antelope help protect
    it from its predators
  • Smelly spray of a skunk

16
Predation and Population Size
  • Predator and prey populations rise and fall in
    related cycles.

17
Predation
18
Defense Strategies
False Coloring
Mimicry
Protective Covering
Warning Coloring
Camouflage
19
Changes in Communities
20
Ecosystems are always changing
Primary Succession a series of changes that
occur in an area where no soil or organisms
exist. In a barren area, a new community is
established with pioneer species (first species
in the area), like mosses, that do well with
little or no soil. Mosses eventually give way to
coniferous trees.
21
Ecosystems are always changing
Secondary Succession a series of changes that
occur in an area where the ecosystem has been
disturbed. When a disturbance (fire, flood, or
tornados) damages a community but soil remains,
the community gets reestablished from seeds and
roots left behind. Grasses grow, then small
shrubs, and eventually trees.
22
Types of Succession
  • Secondary
  • After a blowout
  • Re-establish a community
  • Already had living organisms
  • Fire, flood, human disruption
  • Primary
  • 1st time plants
  • or animals are
  • established
  • New island
  • Volcanoes
  • Bare soil, rock

23
Pioneer species
  • Are the first plants to grow in an area
  • Lichens (algae fungi) break apart rock to make
    soil
  • Grasses
  • Annual flowers
  • Mosses

24
Succession communities
2. Intermediate species
3. Climax community
  • Pioneer
  • species

25
Intermediate Community
Is characterized by trees that grow fairly fast
like pine trees that needs lots of sun.
26
Plant community that no longer undergoes changes
in species composition due to succession.   Hard
woods likeoak maple trees
CLIMAX COMMUNITY
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