Symbiosis - ThinkScience!
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Symbiosis
Sym- together
Bio- life/living
Osis- Condition of
What is Symbiosis?
When
at least two organisms live together
in a way that benefits at least one of the
organisms
Can occur in all of the kingdoms
Can occur with organisms from different
kingdoms
There are three types of symbiosis:
mutualism, commensalism, parasitism
Why?
Can
provide benefits to both organisms
Allows organisms to survive in the same
environmental niche
Helps an organism to avoid competition
Can prevent an organism from becoming
“prey”
Commensalism
One
organism is helped and the
other organism is neither helped
nor harmed
Certain species of
crab carry venomous
sea urchins on their
backs
Gives the crab
protection from
predators
Man of War fish live
among the poisonous
tentacles of the
Portuguese Man-ofWar jellyfish
Gives the fish
protection from
predators
Here, the Anemone
crab, a filter feeder,
lives among the
tentacles of a giant
sea anemone.
Tucked safely among
the tentacles, it can
filter its food from the
water.
Zebra crabs cling to a
”fire urchin.”
The venomous spines
protect the crabs from
predators.
The remora attaches
itself to a shark with a
suction cup and eats
scraps from the
shark’s meals
The shark is not
harmed, but also does
not benefit. Only the
remora benefits.
Mutualism
When
both organisms receive
some benefit from the relationship
The African
honeyguide bird and
the honey badger
(ratel)
The bird finds honey
bee nests and makes
a special call to attract
the badger, who
breaks open the hive
so both can eat
Tick bird and
rhinoceros; Ox-pecker
and ox
The birds get food
(ticks) and protection
and the rhino and ox
get parasites removed
The crocodile opens its
mouth to let the
Egyptian plover (a bird)
pick leeches off of its
gums
The crocodile is rid of a
parasite and the plover
gets a meal
Cleaner wrasses
remove parasites
from larger fish
They have been
known to set up
“cleaning stations”
where fish can come
to get cleaned
Wrasses get food and
other fish get parasites
removed
Bees travel from
flower to flower to
collect nectar
The flowers get
pollinated and the
bees get nectar to
make honey
There is a protozoan
in the gut of a termite
that helps it to digest
the cellulose in the
wood
The protozoan gets its
food delivered and has
a place to live and the
termite has help in
digestion
Tube worms deep at
the bottom of the
ocean have bacteria
that live inside them
The tube worms bring
in the nutrients and
chemicals and the
bacteria convert them
into food for the tube
worm
Parasitism
One
organism is helped and the
other organism is harmed and
possibly killed
A parasite can live on or in its
“host” organism
A tapeworm attaches
to the intestinal wall of
its host and absorbs
nutrients
This harms the host
because its nutrients
are being diverted to
the parasite
Fleas bite and suck
the blood of animals
Ticks can bite and
hang on while they
suck the blood of
animals
Both can transmit
disease
Leeches attach to
their victims and inject
an anti-coagulant to
keep the blood from
clotting
Leeches get a meal,
and the organism
loses blood and can
get open wounds
which can become
infected.
Mimicry
Some people consider mimicry a form of
symbiosis
However, mimicry only involves one organism
The organism may imitate another living thing (or a
non-living thing such as a rock or a stick), but it does
not derive an actual benefit from what it is mimicking