Transcript Slide 1
Symbiosis is a close, long- term association between two to or
more species. The thousands of symbiotic relationships that
occur in nature are often classified into three groups :
mutualism, commensalism, and parasitism.
By: Sarah, Alyce, and Isaiah
Some goby fish species live in symbiosis
with a shrimp. The shrimp digs and cleans
a burrow, which it shares with the fish,
whose movements alert it to predators.
3 Types of Symbiotic Associations
Mutualism
A symbiotic
relationship in
which both
organisms
benefit.
Commensalism
An association
where one
organism benefits
and the other is
unaffected.
Parasitism
A symbiotic
association in
which one
organism
benefits while
the other is
harmed
Mutualism
An example of mutualism is yourself and a
species of bacteria that lives in your
intestines benefit each other! The bacteria
gets a plentiful food supply from you, and
in return you get vitamins that the bacteria
produce.
Commensalism
One example of commensalism is the
relationship between sharks and remoras.
The remoras “ hitch a ride” on the sharks
and feed on scraps of food left by sharks.
The remoras benefit from this relationship
while the sharks are unaffected.
Parasitism
The organism that benefits is called the
parasite. The organism that is harmed is called
the host. A bright green caterpillar called a
tomato hornworm. A female wasp laid tiny eggs
on the caterpillar. When the eggs hatch, each
young wasp will burrow into the caterpillar’s
body. The young wasp will actually eat the
caterpillar alive! In the short time, the caterpillar
will be almost consumed and will die. When that
occurs, the mature wasp will fly away.
Work Cited
• Picture of fish, slide 1- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symbiosis
Oct, 8
• Picture of bee getting pollen from the flower, slide 2http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communism Oct, 9
• Picture of bacteria, slide 3- Microsoft Clip Art Oct, 4
• Picture of whale shark and the remoras, slide 4http://www.oceanlight.com/spotlight.php?img=1504 Oct, 8
• Picture of tomato hornworm, slide 5http://www.oznet.ksu.edu/dp_hfrr/extensn/problems/hornw
orm.htm Oct, 8