Populations and Communities

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1 CHAPTER 21 Populations and Communities LESSON 3 Communities What do you think? Read the two statements below and decide whether you agree or disagree with them. Place an A in the Before column if you agree with the statement or a D if you disagree. After you ve read this lesson, reread the statements to see if you have changed your mind. Key Concepts What defines a community? How do the populations in a community interact? Before Statement After 5. No more than two species can live in the same habitat. 6. A cow is a producer because it produces food for other organisms. Communities, Habitats, and Niches You learned that a community is made up of all the species that live in the same ecosystem at the same time. The place within an ecosystem where an organism lives is its habitat. A habitat provides all the resources an organism needs, including food and shelter. A habitat also has the right temperature, water, and other conditions the organism needs to survive. Many species can live in the same habitat at the same time. This is possible because each species uses the habitat in a different way. A niche (NICH) is what a species does in its habitat to survive. For example, butterflies and ants can live in the same forest. The butterflies feed on flower nectar. The ants eat insects or plants. These species have different niches in the same environment. Energy in Communities All organisms need energy to live. Consider a slowmoving sloth that sleeps 15 to 20 hours a day. Then consider a fast-moving squirrel monkey swinging through treetops. Sloths might seem not to use energy. However, sloths, squirrel monkeys, and all other organisms need energy to live. All living things use energy and carry out life processes such as growth and reproduction. Build Vocabulary Read all the headings in this lesson and circle any word you cannot define. As you read the lesson, underline the part of the text that helps you define each circled word. Key Concept Check 1. Define What is a community? Reading Essentials Populations and Communities 359

2 Reading Check 2. Classify Which of the following is an example of a producer? (Circle the correct answer.) a. a plant b. a bird c. a deep-sea vent Visual Check 3. Apply Identify a producer, an herbivore, a carnivore, and an omnivore. Key Concept Check 4. Identify a food chain in a community near your home. List the producers and consumers in your food chain. Energy Roles How an organism gets energy is an important part of its niche. Almost all the energy available to living things comes from the Sun. There are exceptions, such as organisms that live near deep-sea vents. They obtain energy from chemicals such as hydrogen sulfide. Producers are organisms that get energy from the environment, such as sunlight, and make their own food. For example, most plants are producers. They get their energy from sunlight. They use the process of photosynthesis (foh toh SIHN thuh sus) and make sugar molecules to use as food. Some producers live near deep-sea vents. They use hydrogen sulfide and carbon dioxide and make sugar molecules. Consumers are organisms that get energy by eating other organisms. Consumers are classified by the type of organisms they eat. Types of consumers are shown in the table. Type of Consumer What They Eat Examples Herbivores producers such as plants sloths, cows, and sheep Carnivores other consumers harpy eagles, ants, lions, and wolves Omnivores producers and consumers humans Detritivores dead organisms some bacteria and some fungi Energy Flow A food chain is a way of showing how energy moves through a community. Think about a rain forest community. Energy flows from the Sun to a rain forest tree. The tree is a producer. It uses the light energy and grows, producing leaves and other plant parts. When a consumer eats leaves and other plant parts, energy moves to consumers. For example, a sloth eats the leaves of the tree and energy flows to the sloth. When the eagle eats the sloth, energy flows to the eagle. When the eagle dies, detritivores (dee TRI tuh vorz), such as bacteria, feed on its body. That food chain can be written like this: Sun leaves sloth eagle bacteria A food chain shows only part of the energy flow in a community. A food web, like the one on the next page, shows many food chains within a community. Notice that some of the food chains overlap. 360 Populations and Communities Reading Essentials

3 Food Web Sun Harpy eagle Sloth Squirrel monkey Scarlet macaw Leaves Fruit Flowers Butterfly Beetle Ants In the rain forest community above, the flowers provide food for a butterfly, a beetle, and a scarlet macaw. The flowers, then, are part of more than one food chain. Here are some food chains in which the flowers provide food: Sun flowers butterfly ants Sun flowers beetle squirrel monkey Fungus harpy eagle Sun flowers macaw eagle Relationships in Communities The populations that make up a community interact with each other in many ways. Some species have feeding relationships. They either eat or are eaten by another species. Some species interact with another species to get the food or shelter they need. Dead fruit Visual Check 5. Sequence List the members of two different food chains shown in the figure. Reading Essentials Populations and Communities 361

4 Make a three-tab book to organize information about the types of relationships that can exist among organisms within a community. Predator Prey Relationships Cooperative Relationships Symbiotic Relationships Reading Check 6. Explain Why are predators important to a prey population? 7. Define Cooperative relationships occur between. (Circle the correct answer.) a. members of different species b. members of the same species c. members of any species that live together Predator-Prey Relationships Hungry squirrel monkeys fight over a piece of fruit. They do not notice the harpy eagle flying above them. Suddenly, the harpy eagle swoops down and grabs one of the monkeys. The eagles and the monkeys have a predator-prey relationship. The eagle, like other predators, hunts other animals for food. The hunted animals, such as the monkey, are called prey. Predators help keep prey populations from growing too large. As you already learned, predators are one way that a prey population is kept from reaching the carrying capacity of the ecosystem. Predators often catch weak or injured members of a prey population. When the weak members are removed, more resources become available for the remaining members. This keeps the prey population healthy. Cooperative Relationships The members of some populations work together in cooperative relationships for their survival. For example, leaf-cutter ants cooperate with each other and grow food. They work together to cut apart leaves and carry them to their underground nest. The ants do not eat the leaves. Instead, they eat the fungus that grows on the leaves. Meerkats cooperate with each other as they raise young and watch for danger. Squirrel monkeys live in groups. They cooperate with each other as they hunt for food and watch for danger. Symbiotic Relationships Some species have such close relationships that they are almost always found living together. A close, long-term relationship between two species that usually involves an exchange of food or energy is called symbiosis (sihm bee OH sus). There are three types of symbiosis. They are mutualism, commensalism, and parasitism. Mutualism A symbiotic relationship in which both partners benefit is called mutualism. Boxer crabs and sea anemones have a mutualistic partnership. Boxer crabs and sea anemones live in tropical coral reef communities. The crabs carry sea anemones in their claws. The sea anemones have stinging cells that help the crabs fight off predators. The sea anemones eat leftovers from the crabs meals. Both partners benefit from the relationship. 362 Populations and Communities Reading Essentials

5 Commensalism A symbiotic relationship that benefits one species but does not harm or benefit the other is commensalism. Plants called epiphytes (EH puh fites) grow on the trunks of trees and other objects. The roots of an epiphyte anchor it to the object. The plant absorbs nutrients from the air. The epiphytes benefit by getting living space and sunlight. The plants do not help or harm the tree. The trees are neither helped nor harmed by the plants. The epiphytes and trees have a commensal relationship. Parasitism A symbiotic relationship that benefits one species and harms the other is parasitism. The species that benefits is the parasite. The species that is harmed is the host. Types of parasites and hosts are shown in the table below. Parasitism Parasite Host Result heartworm dog causes a dog s heart to work harder and eventually fail ringworm, toenail fungus human fungi feed on a protein in skin and nails strangler fig tree sends roots through a tree and absorbs all of its nutrients, eventually killing the tree Heartworms, tapeworms, fleas, and lice are parasites. They feed on a host organism, such as a human or a dog. The parasite benefits by getting food. The host is harmed by losing blood. The host is usually not killed, but it can be weakened. For example, heartworms in a dog can cause the dog s heart to work harder. The heart can fail after time, killing the host. The fungi that cause ringworm and toenail fungus are other common parasites. The fungi feed on a protein in skin and nails. Plants can be parasites too. The seeds of the strangler fig sprout on the branches of a host tree. The young fig sends roots into the tree and down into the ground below. The host tree provides nutrients to the fig and a trunk for support. The strangler fig grows quickly and can kill the host tree. Visual Check 8. Identify Name two parasites that can affect humans. Key Concept Check 9. Describe List five ways that species in a community interact. Reading Essentials Populations and Communities 363

6 Mini Glossary commensalism: a symbiotic relationship that benefits one species but does not harm or benefit the other consumer: an organism that gets energy by eating other organisms habitat: the place within an ecosystem where an organism lives mutualism: a symbiotic relationship in which both partners benefit niche (NICH): what a species does in its habitat to survive parasitism: a symbiotic relationship that benefits one species and harms the other producer: an organism that gets energy from the environment, such as sunlight, and makes its own food symbiosis (sihm bee OH sus): a close, long-term relationship between two species that usually involves an exchange of food or energy 1. Review the terms and their definitions in the Mini Glossary. Use at least one term from the Mini Glossary in a sentence to explain why many species can live in the same habitat. 2. Identify each type of relationship described in the table. Write the name of the relationship next to its description. Symbiosis Partner A Partner B Type of Relationship Benefits is harmed a. Benefits benefits b. Benefits What do you think does not benefit and is not harmed 3. Describe some differences between producers and consumers. Reread the statements at the beginning of the lesson. Fill in the After column with an A if you agree with the statement or a D if you disagree. Did you change your mind? c. ConnectED Log on to ConnectED.mcgraw-hill.com and access your textbook to find this lesson s resources. END OF LESSON 364 Populations and Communities Reading Essentials

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