Interdependence & Competition

Cards (16)

  • Interdependence:
    • One species may be dependent on another within a community
    • An obvious example is that a predator species is dependent on there being an adequate supply of its prey
    • An extension of dependence is the concept of interdependence
    • All organisms in an ecosystem depend upon one another
    • The success or failure of one species can affect the success or failure of the others
  • Interdependence:
    • The types of interaction between species can vary
    • In order to survive and reproduce (have offspring), organisms need certain resources from their surroundings (from the ecosystem they are living in)
    • This means that members of a species will often interact with members of its own species or other species
  • Interdependence:
    • Some examples of these interactions include:
    • Predators (carnivores) feeding on prey
    • Herbivores eating plants
    • Plant species being pollinated by bees
    • Seed dispersal via animals eating the fruit of certain trees and passing the seed in its faeces
  • Interdependence:
    • If one species is removed it can affect the whole community
    • This is called interdependence
    •  A stable community is one where all the species and environmental factors are in balance so that population sizes remain fairly constant
  • A food web shows the interdependence of organisms:
    • For example, in the food web above, if the population of earthworms decreased:
    • The population of grass plants would increase as there are now fewer species feeding off them
    • The populations of frogs and mice would decrease significantly as earthworms are their only food source
    • The population of sparrows would decrease slightly as they eat earthworms but also have another food source to rely on (caterpillars)
  • Parasitism:
    • Parasites live off a host organism
    • By taking what they need from the host and giving nothing in return
    • The host is harmed, although the parasite would wish to keep the host alive as a dead host is no longer as useful to it
    • An example is the tapeworm
    • Tapeworms attach themselves to the insides of the intestines of animals such as cows, pigs, and humans
    • They feed on the host's partly digested food, depriving the host of nutrients
  • Parasitism:
    • Mistletoe is a plant parasite, and gains its water and nutrients from a host tree by anchoring to the tree and tapping into its tissues
    • Some mistletoe varieties can photosynthesise to a small extent, but only until they have fully anchored to their host tree and are gaining all their food and nutrients from it
    • Parasitism is a win-lose scenario
  • Mutualism:
    • Unlike parasitism, two species can interact to mutually benefit
    • Flowering plants produce elaborate, coloured flowers containing sugar-rich nectar
    • Bees are attracted visually and with the scent of the flowers and nectar
    • Bees get a nutritious meal, and in return...
    • The flowers are able to be pollinated to ensure their survival
  • Mutualism:
    • Certain species of shark have a mutualistic relationship with a much smaller fish called a cleaner wrasse
    • The shark requires its teeth to be razor-sharp and free of debris from the last kill
    • The wrasse (which might otherwise be part of the shark's normal prey) are allowed into the shark's mouth to pick off the debris and clean the shark's teeth
    • The shark benefits by having its teeth cleaned and made ready for the next kill
    • The wrasse benefits as it feeds by removing debris 
  • Competition:
    Competition in plants & animals-
    • If a group of organisms all need the same resource in order to survive and reproduce (have offspring) but there is a limited amount of the resource available, they are said to compete for the resource
    • Competition can be between members of the same species (intraspecific competition) or between members of different species (interspecific competition)
    • Plants in a community or habitat may compete with each other for certain limited resources
  • Resources Competed for by Plants Table:
    • Animals in a community or habitat may compete with each other for certain limited resources
  • Resources Competed for by Animals Table:
  • Intraspecific competition between two grey squirrels (same species) for a limited resource:
  • Interspecific competition between a grey squirrel and a red squirrel (different species) for a limited resource: