1 / 15

Understanding Populations

Understanding Populations. Ch8, Section 2: How Species Interact with Each Other Standards: SEV3e, SEV5a, b. What is a specie’s niche?. Niche- role a species has within an ecosystem. Includes: Species physical home Factors needed for survival Interactions with other organisms

chiko
Download Presentation

Understanding Populations

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Understanding Populations Ch8, Section 2: How Species Interact with Each Other Standards: SEV3e, SEV5a, b

  2. What is a specie’s niche? • Niche- role a species has within an ecosystem. • Includes: • Species physical home • Factors needed for survival • Interactions with other organisms • Ex: Bison are grazers & help control tree sapling populations as well as fertilize soil for grass • Ex: Fungi & bacteria are decomposers, recycling nutrients to soil.

  3. What is a specie’s habitat? • Place where a species lives • An organism performs its niche in its habitat.

  4. How do species interact with each other? • Competition • Predation • Parasitism • Mutualism • Commensalism

  5. 1. Competition • Relationship where individuals or populations share limited resources • Both species are harmed • -/- interaction • Intraspecific competition- within the same species. • Ex: caterpillars of the same species eating the same leaf. • Interspecific competition- between different species • When members of different species compete we say their niches have overlapped. • Ex: hyenas compete for kill with lions

  6. 1. Competition • Indirect competition- compete even though they do not come in contact with each other. • Ex: An insect that eats a leaf during the day competes indirectly with an insect that eats the same leaf at night. • Ex: Plants compete for pollinators; humans compete with insects for food crop.

  7. 1. Competition • Adaptations to competition- • When 2 species compete for a resource, usually only one will win. • The other species must move to find new resources. • This is called competitive exclusion.

  8. 1. Competition • Competitive exclusion can lead to niche restriction. • These species share the same niche & habitat but use a smaller portion of it. • Ex: Two barnacle species Chthamalus & Balanus • share the same intertidal zone of a rocky shore line • Chthamalus lives at higher tide line (realized niche) • When Balanus is removed, Chthamalus will move further down into the original Balanus habitat. (fundamental niche) Realized niche- where the species actually lives Fundamental niche- where the species could live if given a chance.

  9. 2. Predation • Predator feeds on prey • Predator benefits, prey is harmed • +/- interaction • Some predators are very specific about what they eat • Canadian lynx only eat snowshoe hares • Creates predator/prey oscillations • Most predators generally eat any prey they can capture • Not all predators are carnivores

  10. 2. Predation • Animals adapted to avoid predation: • Camouflage- hard to see; blend in • Ex: some caterpillars; lizards • Warning coloration- alert potential predator that they are dangerous • Ex: poison dart frogs • Mimicry- look like something more dangerous even if it isn’t • Ex: some flies have same coloration as bees • Protective coverings- too hard for predator to eat. • Ex: porcupine, turtle, cactus

  11. 3. Parasitism • Parasite lives and feeds on host organism. • Parasite benefits, host is harmed • +/- interaction • Parasites are different from predators because they do not usually kill their host (what else would they eat if they killed their host?) • Parasite can weaken host & make them more susceptible to disease. • Ex: ticks, leeches, mistletoe, fleas

  12. 4. Mutualism • Each species benefits from the relationship • +/+ interaction • Some species couldn’t live without each other • Ex: bacteria in your intestine; acacia tree & ants; insects & flowers

  13. 5. Commensalism • One species is benefited and the other is neither harmed nor helped. • +/0 interaction • Ex: orchids in trees; clownfish & anemones; remoras and sharks

  14. What is Symbiosis • Relationship where two species live in close association • Often one species benefits. • Which of the five species interactions are considered symbiosis?

  15. What is Coevolution? • When species have such close relationships they often coevolve. • These two species would be less likely to survive if one were missing. • Ex: bee orchids

More Related