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Interactions in the Environment
Created @November 30, 2022 2:27 PM
Reviewed
Status Not started
Types of Interactions:
Predation
Predation Adaptations
Adaptation of Well-adapted prey
Predation in the wild
Predator-prey Graph
Interpreting the Predator-prey-graph
Competition
Intraspecific Competition
Interspecific Competition
Specialization
The Niche Concept
Competitive Exclusion
Resource Partitioning
Symbiotic Relationships
Parasitism
Mutualism
Flowers and Bees (Pollination)
Anemones and Clownfish
Oxpeckers and Herbivores
Remora Fish and Sharks
Commensalism
Orchid Flowers and Trees
Barnacles and Whales
Large Animals and egrets
Social Organisation
Herding
Packs as a hunting strategy
Dominance and Breeding Hierchies
Organized societies and Division of Labor/tasks
Interactions in the Environment 1
, Types of Interactions:
Predation
Predation occurs when a member of one species, the predator, hunts, kills and
eats another organism.
beneficial for the predator, but harmful for the prey.
Predation Adaptations
Speed
Agility
Heightened sense of sight, smell, and hearing
Sharp teeth and claws to capture and grasp prey
Camouflage (The ability to resemble/blend with its environment).
Adaptation of Well-adapted prey
Mechanical defence, e.g. quills on a porcupine
Warning signals to deter predators, e.g. the smelly spray of a skunk, the venom
of a snake
Behavioural defence, e.g. hiding, herding, or pretending (appearing injured or
dead)
Camouflage
Warning colours showing other animals of poisonous or dangerous
characteristic.
Mimicry. Some harmless species may mimic the warning colours of
dangerous animals as a means of defence.
Predation in the wild
More likely animals that live in the wild
Predator-prey Graph
Predation helps regulate population size.
Interactions in the Environment 2
Interactions in the Environment
Created @November 30, 2022 2:27 PM
Reviewed
Status Not started
Types of Interactions:
Predation
Predation Adaptations
Adaptation of Well-adapted prey
Predation in the wild
Predator-prey Graph
Interpreting the Predator-prey-graph
Competition
Intraspecific Competition
Interspecific Competition
Specialization
The Niche Concept
Competitive Exclusion
Resource Partitioning
Symbiotic Relationships
Parasitism
Mutualism
Flowers and Bees (Pollination)
Anemones and Clownfish
Oxpeckers and Herbivores
Remora Fish and Sharks
Commensalism
Orchid Flowers and Trees
Barnacles and Whales
Large Animals and egrets
Social Organisation
Herding
Packs as a hunting strategy
Dominance and Breeding Hierchies
Organized societies and Division of Labor/tasks
Interactions in the Environment 1
, Types of Interactions:
Predation
Predation occurs when a member of one species, the predator, hunts, kills and
eats another organism.
beneficial for the predator, but harmful for the prey.
Predation Adaptations
Speed
Agility
Heightened sense of sight, smell, and hearing
Sharp teeth and claws to capture and grasp prey
Camouflage (The ability to resemble/blend with its environment).
Adaptation of Well-adapted prey
Mechanical defence, e.g. quills on a porcupine
Warning signals to deter predators, e.g. the smelly spray of a skunk, the venom
of a snake
Behavioural defence, e.g. hiding, herding, or pretending (appearing injured or
dead)
Camouflage
Warning colours showing other animals of poisonous or dangerous
characteristic.
Mimicry. Some harmless species may mimic the warning colours of
dangerous animals as a means of defence.
Predation in the wild
More likely animals that live in the wild
Predator-prey Graph
Predation helps regulate population size.
Interactions in the Environment 2