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© Boardworks Ltd 20041 of 24
KS4 Biology
Competition
© Boardworks Ltd 20042 of 24
Contents
Competition
What is competition?
Competition between animals
Predator–prey relationships
Multiple-choice quiz
Competition in plants
© Boardworks Ltd 20043 of 24
A population is the number of individuals of the same species living in a certain habitat.
A community includes all the different species living in a certain area.
The size of the population within a community can change over time. What factors will affect population size?
What is a population?
What is the difference between a population and a community?
competition
disease
predators
migration
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Competition occurs between different species…
What is competition?
Competition is one of the factors that affects population sizes. What type of organisms compete for resources?
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Why do living things need to compete and what do they compete for?
What is competition?
Members of the same species also compete for resources.
© Boardworks Ltd 20046 of 24
Contents
Competition
What is competition?
Competition between animals
Predator–prey relationships
Multiple-choice quiz
Competition in plants
© Boardworks Ltd 20047 of 24
What do animals compete for?
What four things do animals in the same species or animals of different species have to compete for?
food
water
space
mates
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What happens if animals have overlapping niches?
Animals with overlapping niches compete.
The more the niches overlap, the greater the amount of competition between the species.
What will happen if species compete for all aspects of their niches?
Niche competition
A niche is the position that a living thing occupies in a community.
It is a specialized type lifestyle.
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What three things might happen to the less competitive species?
Competition losers
If species compete for all aspects of their niches, eventually, one species will better the other.
Competition results in winners and losers.
become extinct in that area.
move to another area adopt new survival strategies
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Contents
Competition
What is competition?
Competition between animals
Predator–prey relationships
Multiple-choice quiz
Competition in plants
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What do plants compete for?
Plants also have to compete for resources. What four things do plants in the same species or plants of different species compete for?
light
minerals
water
space
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Competition in the meadow – activity
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Contents
Competition
What is competition?
Competition between animals
Predator–prey relationships
Multiple-choice quiz
Competition in plants
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Animals that eat other animals
What are animals that eat other animals called?
Populations of animals are often limited by the amount of food.
What are the animals that predators eat called?
predators
prey
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Predators are adapted to catching and consuming their prey.
Predator and prey adaptations
Prey have adaptations to detect and flee from predators.
How are predators and prey adapted to survive?
predators
prey
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Prey adaptations – the snowshoe hare
The snowshoe hare lives in northern parts of North America. How is it adapted to the cold and to avoid being eaten by predators, such as lynxes?
Large back feet spread out to act as snow shoes.Fur on the soles alsoprotects from the cold.
Large ears help to detect predators.
Coat changes colour with the seasons from greyish-brown in summer to white in midwinter.
Strong teeth are able to chew bark and twigs.
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Predator adaptations – the lynx
Lynxes are adapted to life in a cold climate. How are these predators adapted for catching the snowshoe hares that are their main prey?
Extra large paws act as snow shoes on soft,
Very strong hind leg muscles are capable of a pounce 6.5 metres long!
Excellent eyesight and hearing for detecting prey.
Thick furry coat protects from the cold.
Very sharp teeth – prey watch out!
deep snow.
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Predator–prey graph
This population data comes from fur trapping records. How are the populations linked?
0
50
esti
mat
ed p
op
ula
tio
n s
ize
(th
ou
san
ds)
1800 1820 1840 1860 1880 1900
100
150
year
lynx
snowshoe hare
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Predator–prey graph
How does the lynx population depend on the number of snowshoe hares?
0
50
esti
mat
ed p
op
ula
tio
n s
ize
(th
ou
san
ds)
1800 1820 1840 1860 1880 1900
100
150
lynx
snowshoe hare
time (year)
Take a closer look at this part
of the graph.
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Predator–prey graph section
Why does the peak for the lynx population always come after the peak for the number of snowshoe hares?
0
50
esti
mat
ed p
op
ula
tio
n s
ize
(th
ou
san
ds)
1850 1855 1860 1865
100
150
lynx
snowshoe hare
time (year)
For the populations to survive, there
will always be more hares than lynxes.
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Predator and prey population sizes follow a cycle.What happens if the prey population increases?
normal prey populationprey population
increasesprey population
increases
predator population increases
as more food
predator population decreases
as less foodprey population decreasesbecause of more predators
Predator–prey cycle
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Predator and prey population sizes follow a cycle.What happens if the prey population decreases?
normal prey population
Predator–prey cycle
prey population increasesbecause of less predators
prey population increases
predator population increases
as more food
predator population decreases
as less food
prey populationdecreases
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Contents
Competition
What is competition?
Competition between animals
Predator–prey relationships
Multiple-choice quiz
Competition in plants
© Boardworks Ltd 200424 of 24
Multiple-choice quiz