IAH 204 Lecture Notes - Lecture 49: Commensalism, Parasitism, Algae

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A group of organisms of the same species who live in the same area at the same time. A group of populations living and interacting with each other in an area. (e. g. pond community and rainforest community). A community (living) and its abiotic (non-living) environment. Combining the ideas of the struggle to survive, and the great variation in organisms, we can see that different organisms are all fighting to occupy a certain niche (a place in the ecosystem). To survive, organisms compete for food, habitat, mates and niche. When one organism feeds on or eats another live organism. This is when both species benefit (e. g. alga and fungus). This is when one species benefits and the other species is unharmed (e. g. barnacles on whales). This is when the prey is harmed or eaten by an organism smaller than itself (e. g. ticks, fleas, worms, mistletoe). Successful parasites do not harm their host too much.

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