Lesson 3 ECOLOGICAL RELATIONSHIPS Ecological Relationships There are

















- Slides: 17

Lesson 3 ECOLOGICAL RELATIONSHIPS

Ecological Relationships There are 3 main types of relationships between individual organisms within a community 1. Symbiotic (3 sub‐types) When one or more organisms live in close contact or live with one another. 2. Predator‐Prey (1 sub‐type) When one organism consumes a second organism. 3. Competitive (2 sub‐types) Where organisms compete for an important resource such as food, shelter or possibly mates.

Symbiotic Relationships (3 types) When one or more organisms live in close contact or live with one another.

Symbiotic Relationships (3 types) 1. Commensalism + / 0 relationship One partner benefits without significantly affecting the other Example – Clown fish and anemone


Symbiotic Relationships (3 types) 2. Mutualism + / + relationship Both organisms benefit Example – Bees and flowers, crocodiles and dikkop birds


Symbiotic Relationships (3 types) 3. Parasitism +/ ‐ relationship One organism, the parasite, harms the host Example – Lamprey


Predator – Prey Relationships When one organism consumes a second organism Example – Lions and Zebras


Competitive Relationships (2 types) Where organisms compete for an important resource such as food, shelter or possibly mates. May have negative effects on one another. Actual fighting or exploitative competition

Competitive Relationships (2 types) 1. Intraspecific Between members of the same species Individuals may compete over food, water, light, space, safe sites, or mates. Important factor limiting the population size of many species.


Competitive Relationships (2 types) 2. Interspecific Between 2 or more species As the population of one species increases, it may limit the density of the competing species


Complete the worksheet
THERE IS THERE ARE THERE WAS THERE WERE
There is There are There isthere are There
THERE IS THERE ARE There is and there
RELATIONSHIPS And Love LONG TERM RELATIONSHIPS Exchange relationships
There is There are There is a Vardr
There is and There are There is only
There is Is there Yes there is No
There is There are There is a book
Ecological Tipping Points An ecological threshold is the
Competing Environmental Discourses Ecological Activists vs the Ecological
Changes in Ecosystems Ecological Succession Ecological Succession Natural
ECOLOGICAL FOOTPRINT What Is the Ecological Footprint The
Ecological Perspectives ECOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES A Biocentric bios life
Ecological Succession 2013 2014 Ecological Succession The gradual
MIT and the Ecological approach Bronfenbrenners notable ecological
A PRIMER OF ECOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT Ecological Risk Assessment
Ecological validity and Milgrams study Ecological validity Population