Population Interactions Flashcards

1
Q

Intraspecific relationship

A

Relationship between the organisms of the same species is known as intraspecific relationship

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2
Q

Mutualism (symbiotic)

A

Mutualism is an interaction between two species in which both are benefited

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3
Q

Mutualism- examples

A
  1. Rhizobium (soil bacteria- nitrogen fixation) and root of leguminous plants (provide water, minerals and shelter)
  2. Lichens (epiphyte): Algae (photosynthetic partner) and fungi (substratum- anchor: H2O and minerals)
  3. Trichonymph (digest cellulose) in the gut of termites (shelter)
  4. Pollination: insects (pollinate flowers) and flowers (provide nectar)
  5. Mycorrhiza- Fungi seen entangled in roots of higher plants
    penetrates into roots (endo)
    cab be seen entangled (ecto)
    helps prevent soil erosionn
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4
Q

Commensalism

A

Positive interaction where one organism is benefitted and the other organism is neither benefitted nor harmed

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5
Q

Commensalism examples

A
  1. Clown fish and sea anemone (not benefitted): Clown fish hide in the sea anemone for protection
  2. Trees (not benefitted) and birds building nests
  3. Epiphytes on trees (not benefitted)
  4. Egrets on cattle (not benefitted)
  5. Shark and barnacles (when shark catches prey, barnacles eat the crumbs)
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6
Q

Predation

A

Negative interaction which is a kind of direct food relationship between two species of animals in which one, called predator, captires and feeds on the other, prey

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7
Q

Predator prey interaction examples

A

Venus fly trap - insect
Pitcher plant - insect

SEDENTARY PREDATORS

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8
Q

Parasitism

A

Negative interaction between two species in which one (known as parasite) obtains its food in ready-made form from the other living organism (host)

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9
Q

Types of parasitism

A
  1. Endoparasitism
  2. Ectoparasitism
  3. Brood parasitism
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10
Q

Endoparasitism

A

Parasite seen inside/within body of the host

E.g. Tapeworm, liver fluke, blood fluke, hookworm, Ascaris (roundworm)

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11
Q

Ectoparasitism

A

Parasite seen on the outside/surface of the body of the host

E.g. Tick, flea, leech, lice

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12
Q

Brood parasitism

A

E.g. cuckoo bird (parasite) lays eggs in crow (host) nest and lets the crow incubate them

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13
Q

Competition

A

competition is rivalry between two individuals which require a resource that is in short supply

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14
Q

Interspecific competition

A

Survival instinct in the community for food shelter
Two species utilizing the same limited resource

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15
Q

Intraspecific competition

A

Competition occuring between members of the same species
Competition for food, shelter, mating

Individual survival instinct

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16
Q

Population

A

A group of individuals of the same speicies is known as a population

17
Q

Biotic community

A

An association of a number of different interrelated populations belonging to different species in a common environment

18
Q

Gause’s competitive exclusion principle

A

No two species of organisms can occupy the same niche at the same time

19
Q

What can intense competition between two organisms occupying the same niche lead to

A
  1. One species becomes extinct
  2. One species is forced to migrate to a different area
  3. The two species may adjust to slightly different niches to avoid competition