14
Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions Objectives 4.2 Niches and Community Interactions -Define niche. -Describe the role competition plays in shaping communities. -Describe the role predation and herbivory play in shaping communities. -Identify the three types of symbiotic relationships in nature.

Lesson Overview Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions Objectives 4.2 Niches and Community Interactions - - Define niche. -Describe the role

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Lesson Overview Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions Objectives 4.2 Niches and Community Interactions - - Define niche. -Describe the role

Lesson Overview Niches and Community InteractionsObjectives 4.2

Niches and Community Interactions

-Define niche.

-Describe the role competition plays in shaping communities.

-Describe the role predation and herbivory play in shaping communities.

-Identify the three types of symbiotic relationships in nature.

Page 2: Lesson Overview Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions Objectives 4.2 Niches and Community Interactions - - Define niche. -Describe the role

Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions

Habitat or Niche???

Habitat ~ the place where an organism lives.

Niche ~ describes not only where it lives, but how it interacts with biotic and abiotic factors in the environment.

Page 3: Lesson Overview Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions Objectives 4.2 Niches and Community Interactions - - Define niche. -Describe the role

Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions

Resources

A resource is anything necessary for life, such as water, nutrients, light, food, mates or space.

Page 4: Lesson Overview Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions Objectives 4.2 Niches and Community Interactions - - Define niche. -Describe the role

Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions

Competition

Competition occurs when two or more organisms attempt to use the same limited resource in the same place at the same time.

Page 5: Lesson Overview Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions Objectives 4.2 Niches and Community Interactions - - Define niche. -Describe the role

Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions

The Competitive Exclusion Principle

The competitive exclusion principle states that no two species can occupy exactly the same niche in exactly the same habitat at exactly the same time.

Page 6: Lesson Overview Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions Objectives 4.2 Niches and Community Interactions - - Define niche. -Describe the role

Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions

Dividing Resources

Instead of competing for similar resources, species usually divide them.

Page 7: Lesson Overview Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions Objectives 4.2 Niches and Community Interactions - - Define niche. -Describe the role

Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions

Predator-Prey Relationships An interaction in which one animal (the predator) captures and feeds on another animal (the prey) is called predation.

Predators can in affect the size of prey populations a community and determine the places prey can live and feed.

Page 8: Lesson Overview Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions Objectives 4.2 Niches and Community Interactions - - Define niche. -Describe the role

Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions

Keystone Species???

Sometimes changes in the population of a single species, often called a keystone species, can cause dramatic changes in the structure of a community.

Page 9: Lesson Overview Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions Objectives 4.2 Niches and Community Interactions - - Define niche. -Describe the role

Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions

Symbioses

Any relationship in which two species live closely together is called symbiosis, which means “living together.”

The three main classes of symbiotic relationships in nature are mutualism, parasitism, and commensalism.

Page 10: Lesson Overview Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions Objectives 4.2 Niches and Community Interactions - - Define niche. -Describe the role

Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions

Mutualism

When both species involved benefit from the relationship, it is called mutualism.

Page 11: Lesson Overview Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions Objectives 4.2 Niches and Community Interactions - - Define niche. -Describe the role

Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions

Parasitism

When one species benefits and the other one is harmed, the relationship is called parasitism.

Page 12: Lesson Overview Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions Objectives 4.2 Niches and Community Interactions - - Define niche. -Describe the role

Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions

Commensalism

When one organism benefits and the other one is neither helped nor harmed, the relationship is called commensalism.

Page 13: Lesson Overview Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions Objectives 4.2 Niches and Community Interactions - - Define niche. -Describe the role

Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions

True or False

1. An organism’s niche includes the way the organism gets what it needs to survive and reproduce. _________________________

2. Two kinds of birds eat the same food and nest in the same area. These two species of birds are in symbiosis. _________________________

3. If too many herbivores live in a community, the predator population will decrease rapidly. _________________________

4. A symbiotic relationship between organisms in which one species benefits and the other is neither helped nor harmed is mutualism. ______________________________

Page 14: Lesson Overview Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions Objectives 4.2 Niches and Community Interactions - - Define niche. -Describe the role

Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions

Answers

1. An organism’s niche includes the way the organism gets what it needs to survive and reproduce. True

2. Two kinds of birds eat the same food and nest in the same area. These two species of birds are in symbiosis. False, competition

3. If too many herbivores live in a community, the predator population will decrease rapidly. False, producer

4. A symbiotic relationship between organisms in which one species benefits and the other is neither helped nor harmed is mutualism. False, commensalism