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Types of Interactions

Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

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Page 1: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Types of Interactions

Page 2: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment.

Page 3: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Individual: Organism with unique DNA and cells.

Page 4: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

POPULATION: Groups individuals who tend to mate with each other in a limited geographic area.

Page 5: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Community: The relationships between groups of populations.

Page 6: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Biome: A regional ecosystem characterized by distinct types of vegetation and animals. Determined by temperature and rainfall.

Page 7: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Biosphere: The part of the earth and its atmosphere in which living organisms exist.

Page 8: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

The surface of the earth and all the ecosystems.

Page 9: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Lithosphere: Below the surface, in the crust and mantle.

Page 10: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Hydrosphere: All waters not in atmosphere and lithosphere.

Page 11: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Ecosystem: The relationships of populations with each other and their environment.

Page 12: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Habitat: The type of environment in which an organism lives.

Page 13: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Limiting Factors & Carrying Capacity

Population grow is controlled by limiting factors these are scarce resources

Ex: food, water, and living space Any resource can become a limiting

factor to a population (i.e. too many animals = too little food)

•Nature is varied- everything in the environment affects every other thing.

Page 14: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Limiting factors cause death in populations when they’ve get bigger than their carrying capacity -the largest number the environment can support.

Page 15: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

SunlightWaterTemperatureDiseaseParasitesPredatorsCompetition

Limiting Factors: A factor that causes a population to decrease in size.

Density Independent

Factors(Non-living /

Abiotic)Density

Dependent Factors (Other living

things)

Page 16: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Interactions Between Organisms

Populations are contained to one species while communities are interactions between multiple species.

All these species within a community are going to interact in some way. These are the main ways species and individuals can affect each other.COMPETITION PREDATOR and PREYS YMBIOTIC RELATIONSHIPS

Page 17: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Competition

When 2 or more individuals or populations try to use the same resources(EX: food, water, shelter, space, sunlight)

Resources are limited, so when one animal uses them, others can’t.

Competition can happen between animals within a population and between different populations.(EX: Elk compete for same plants to eat; different plant species in a forest all want the same sunlight)

Page 18: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Living things All living things (organisms) need food

(nourishment) to live. Living things in an ecosystem depend on

each other for food.

Page 19: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Producers

Plants are living organisms. They need nourishment to survive.

But… Plants do not eat other plants or

animals. Plants are called producers, because

they make their own food inside themselves.

Page 20: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Consumers

“Consume” means “eat”. Animals are consumers because they

“eat” (consume) food provided by plants or other animals.

Page 21: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Herbivores

Some animals do not eat other animals. They survive on plants and are known as

“herbivores”.

Page 22: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Carnivores

Some animals, like the kingfisher, eat only other animals. These animals are

called “carnivores”.

Page 23: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Omnivores

Some animals, like us, eat both plants and animals.

These animals are called “omnivores”.

Page 24: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Predators & Prey

Interaction where one organism eats another: prey is organism eaten; predator is the organism doing the eating

Predators adapt in order to catch prey(EX: cheetahs run fast; goldenrod spider blend in with flower)

Prey adapt in order to avoid predator– Defensive chemicals can make the prey unattractive

or even poison (deadly)– Will have warning colors that say “stay away”,

such as red, yellow, orange– Outrun the predator or travel in groups

(schools of fish, herds of buffaloes)– Blend in with background by either sitting still or

mimickingsomething non-living- this is known as camouflage

Page 25: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Predator

A predator eats other animals.

Cats eat fish. So do bears!

Page 26: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Predator

The cat is a predator, because it eats other animals.

The bear is a predator, because it eats other animals.

People are predators too!

Page 27: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Prey

Any animal which is hunted and killed by another animal for food is prey.

Predator

Prey

Page 28: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Symbiosis A long term relationship between two or more different species

Page 29: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Parasitism: One organism benefits while the other is harmed.

Page 30: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Mutualism: Both organisms benefit.

Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy

Page 31: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

Examples of mutualisms

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Commensalism: One organism benefits while the other doesn’t benefit, or suffer harm.

Page 33: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment

The remora just hitches a ride to grab some scraps after the kill.

Examples of Commensalism

Page 34: Types of Interactions Ecology: A study of the relationship between living things and the environment