Environmental biology - animal relationship

pnkramesh 1,544 views 23 slides Apr 22, 2020
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About This Presentation

Different types of relations found among organisms.
Relationships ensures food and space among organism.
These relationship is known as interaction.
On the basis of benefits and harmful effects – two types of interaction.
Positive interaction & Negative interaction.


Slide Content

“INTERSPECIES ANIMAL
RELATIONSHIPS”
Dr.K.RAMESHKUMAR
Assistant Professor of Zoology
Vivekananda College
Tiruvedakam West
Vivekananda College
Tiruvedakam-West

INTERSPECIES ANIMAL
RELATIONSHIPS

Introduction
•Different types of relations found among
organisms.
•Relationships ensures food and space among
organism.
•These relationship is known as interaction.
•On the basis of benefits and harmful effects –
two types of interaction.
•Positive interaction & Negative interaction.

Positive Interaction
•Beneficial for one interacting partner
•Other partner is not harmed or both of
them benefited
•Includes Mutualismand Commensalism

Mutualism
•Interaction between two living organisms of different
species
•Both partners are benefited
•Examples
Crocodiles and plover bird
Ants and Aphids
Flower and Butterfly
Honey Bee and Flower

ANTS & APHIDS
•These relationships are
mainlymutualistic.
•An example of this type of
relationship is betweenaphidsand
severalantspecies.
•Aphidsprovide honeydew to
theants
•Antswill take theaphidsinto their
nests at night to protect them from
predators and escort them back to a
plant the next morning.

CROCODILE & PLOVER BIRD
•The symbioticrelationshipbetween
thecrocodileand theplover birdis
exemplary of two organisms
working together.
•Crocodile : gets mouth cleaned from
food residues
•Plover Bird : gets food residues from
teeth

Commensalism
•One of the partner is benefited
•Other partner neither benefited nor harmed
•Examples
Shark and Sucker Fish
Vanda and Mango tree
Anemone fishes or clown fishes & Sea anemone

CLOWN FISH & SEA ANEMONE
•Clown fish : live amid the
tentacles of the anemones
which protects them from
predators.
•Sea anemone : neither
benefited nor harmed

SHARK & SUCKER FISH
•Sucker fish : gets free
food and transport
•Shark : neither
benefited nor harmed

Negative Interaction
•One interacting partner is harmed
•Sometimes both partners are harmed
•Includes
Predation
Parasitism
Competition

Predation
•Direct food relationship between two partners
•One partner captures and feed on other partner.
•Partner that captures and feed : Predator
•Partner that is eaten : Prey
•Examples
•Tiger & Deer
•Whale & small fishes
•Humans & other organisms

TIGER & DEER
•Tiger : eats deer
and gets food
•Deer : killed by
tiger

WHALE & SMALL FISHES
•Whale : feed on
small fishes & gets
food
•Small fishes : killed
by Whale

Parasitism
•One partner is benefited and other is harmed.
•Partner those gets benefits : Parasites
•Partners those gets harmed : Host
•Parasites get food & shelter from the host
•Examples
•Tape worm and humans
•Leech and pig
•Mosquito and humans

TAPE WORM &HUMANS
•Tape worm : lives on
intestine of humans & feed
on them
•Humans : Diarrhea,
Abdominal pain, Hunger or
loss of appetite, Fatigue,
Weight loss, Vitamin and
mineral deficiencies

MOSQUITO & HUMANS
•Mosquito : feeds on
blood of humans
•Humans : gets various
diseases transmitted
by mosquito such as
Dengue

Competition
•Here organisms competes for resources like water,
nutrients, light and space
•occurs when resources are not sufficient for all
individuals
•Individuals harm one another in trying to obtain it.
•Examples
•Fishes inside an aquarium competing for food and
space.
•Hyena and Lion competing for territory
•An Eagle and a Hawk competing for a prey.

•Fishes inside an aquarium competing for
food and space.

•Hyena and Lion competing for territory

•An Eagle and a Hawk competing for a prey.

Conclusion
•Animal interactions play a vital role in the ecological
balance
•Animal interactions are part of food chain and food
web
•The energy flow in an ecosystem occurs through
animal relationships
•Thus different types of animal interactions play their
magnificent role in an ecosystem

References
•ENVIRONMENTAL BIOLOGY & ECOLOGY -
Vijayakumaran Nair, Academica Publications
(2008)
•Science textbook, Std : VIII, SCERT
•www.en.encyclopedia.com
•www.wiki.pedia.com
•www.googleimages.com
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