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Other Interspecific Interactions Chapter 7 Interspecific Interactions  Symbiosis intimate association between individuals of different species, in which one lives on or in the other Interspecific Interactions   Commensals “guests” - neither harmful nor beneficial to the host Use surface of the host as a place to live Interspecific Interactions Epiphytes - bromeliads, Spanish moss Interspecific Interactions Interspecific Interactions   Mutualism relationship of benefit to both organisms Enhanced growth, survival, reproduction in presence of each other (mirror-image of competition?) Interspecific Interactions    Obligate for each (required) Facultative for each (helpful, but not required) Mixture Culture of crops/livestock   Humans and domesticated plants/animals Ants and fungus Pollination   Insects, birds, bats as pollinators Reproduction for plant, food reward for pollinator Gut Inhabitants   Cattle rumen with bacteria Termite gut with protozoans, bacteria Mycorrhizae    Fungus and root tissue Fungus increases water, nutrient uptake Plant root supplies organic carbon Algae & Animals   Hydra with Chlorella Coral with dinoflagellates (side effect of photosynthesis is precipitation of calcium carbonate) Lichens    Fungus and algae Fungus absorbs water, nutrients Algae photosynthesizes, provides organic carbon (algae often in obligate relationship) Interspecific Interactions     Parasitism - obtains nutrients from one or few hosts Normally causes harm, but not death Often includes pathogens (diseasecausing), viruses Superabundant - > half of species on earth Microparasites   Bacteria, viruses, protozoa, fungi Multiply directly within host (usually within cells) Microparasites   Transmitted directly from host to host (VD, influenza) Transmitted by vector (some other animal) (malaria, sleeping sickness) Macroparasites   Flatworms, roundworms, insects Grow in/on host, produce infective stage that leaves, live within body cavities or intercellularly Macroparasites   Transmitted directly (intestinal nematodes, lice, plant fungi) Transmitted indirectly (tapeworms, flukes) Transmission   Transmission rate depends on host density Rate increases with density (susceptible hosts only - genetics) Distribution    Distribution is clumped (site-specific) Few hosts have large numbers, most have none High intensity of infection, low prevalence Response of hosts    Die in whole or in part Biotrophic parasites require living hosts Necrotrophic parasites prefer dead hosts (pioneering decomposers) Plant hosts   Infected cells die immediately - hypersensitivity Surrounding cells produce phytoalexins to prevent spread of parasites Invertebrate hosts  Phagocytic cells engulf foreign particles Vertebrate hosts     Immune responses - several types of killer cells with “memory” Inhibits future infection by same things Response most effective for bacteria, viruses Response least strong for macroparasites, protozoans Bottom Line   Reduced survival, growth, fecundity, competitive ability of host Some evidence that parasites may be chief factors controlling populations of some organisms (e.g., humans)