Inter Specific Interaction
Inter Specific Interaction
Interspecific Interactions
CONTENTS
Interspecific Interaction & Their Types
Symbiosis
Neutralism
Competition & Types of Competition
Commensalism With Examples
Mutualism With Examples
Mutualistic Symbiosis
Predators
Parasites
Seasonal & geographical variation in Interspecific interaction
Concepts of positive interspecific interactions
INTERSPECIFIC INTERACTIONS
An interspecific interaction is a type of community interaction in which two
different species living together interact.
Both species may experience positive, neutral, or negative benefits
Types of Interspecific interactions
There are mostly four types of interactions :
1- Predation: harmful to one and beneficial to another
2- Competition: harmful to both
3- Commensalism: beneficial to one and neutral to the other
4- Mutualism: beneficial to both
Types of Interspecific Interactions
SYMBIOSIS
Any relationship that involves two (or more) species living together and
interacting among themselves.
NEUTRALISM
COMPETITION
TYPES OF COMPETITION
Ants Fighting for a Single Food Source Beetles battle for Survival &
(Exploitation ) Reproduction(Interference)
COMMENSALISM
AMENSALISM
§ Amensalism is when one species suffers and the other interacting species
experiences no effect.
MUTUALISM
Examples of Mutualism
MUTUALISTIC SYMBIOSIS
Example:
The mass of fungal hyphae provides a protected habitat for the algae, and
takes up water and nutrients for the algae. In return, the algae (and
cyanobacteria) provide carbohydrates as a source of energy for the fungus.
PREDATORS
Predators are the organisms those tend to be larger than their prey, and
consume many prey during their lifetimes for growth & development.
Examples - Preying mantid, Dragon fly, Ground Beetles, Tiger Beetle, Giant
water bug etc.
§ The density of the prey population, in turn, affects the birth and death rates
of the predator population.
PARASITE
Not only are species unevenly distributed, but their interactions also vary
spatially and temporally.
For Example: The structure of ant communities and of interactions between
ants and plants has been studied in different habitats, and it is clear that
neither the spatial nor the temporal dimension can be ignored, because
along with habitats the interspecific interaction also differ.
Theory and experiments show that positive interactions are more likely to
occur under stressful physical or biological contexts.
Positive species interactions are not static but vary in their outcome
depending on the context under which they occur.