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Getting to Know: Relationships Among Organisms If you are looking for examples of organisms from many different scientific kingdoms, just visit your local grocery store! Fish, chicken, and beef are from the Animal kingdom. Apples, bananas, and carrots are from the Plant kingdom. Mushrooms are not animals or plants. They are from the kingdom Fungi. People can meet their needs for energy by eating the variety of foods from a grocery store. How do organisms meet their needs in ecosystems? In ecosystems, organisms meet all their needs through interactions with other organisms and the environment. Plants and many protists such as algae and diatoms are producer organisms. Producer organisms produce their own food through photosynthesis. What is the relationship between producer and consumer organisms? The plant obtains energy by producing its own food through photosynthesis. The caterpillar obtains energy by feeding on the plant. During photosynthesis, light energy is used to combine carbon dioxide and water. The products of photosynthesis are glucose and oxygen. Glucose is a food molecule that contains stored chemical energy. Consumer organisms must feed on other living organisms to obtain this energy. All consumer organisms are either directly or indirectly dependent on producer organisms for food and energy. Animals that feed on plants are called herbivores. For example, a caterpillar is an herbivore that feeds on plant leaves. The mountain lion is an example of a carnivore. Animals that feed on other animals are called carnivores. A mountain lion that feeds on a deer is a carnivore. Animals that feed on both plant and animal matter are called omnivores. Bears and raccoons are good examples of omnivores. Humans are also omnivores. How do predator–prey relationships affect populations of organisms? Predator–prey relationships are an important part of ecosystems. Predator–prey relationships do not happen randomly or arbitrarily. They are developed over many generations between species. When a prey population changes, the predator population also changes. Likewise, when a predator population changes, the prey population also changes. For example, if the mountain lion population is removed from an area, the deer population may increase significantly because an important predator is no longer present. Concept: Relationships Among Organisms Getting to Know www.discoveryeducation.com 1 © Discovery Education. All rights reserved. Discovery Education is a subsidiary of Discovery Communications, LLC. Misconception 1: Food chains often show large predators at the end, or top, of the diagram. Do food chains actually end with large predators? Food chains do not have an actual end point or top organism. Bacteria decompose even a large predator like a mountain lion when it dies. In fact, decomposers can break down each organism in a food chain. What are some other relationships between organisms? In a parasite–host relationship, one organism benefits at the expense of the other organism. Typically, the host organism is not killed by the parasite. A tick attaching itself to a deer is an example of a parasite–host relationship. The tick feeds on blood from the deer, but the deer is typically not killed by the interaction. In symbiotic mutualism, both organisms benefit each other. A good example is the relationship between ants and acacia trees. Acacia trees have large thorns that the ants can hollow out and live inside. The trees also excrete sweet nectar that feeds the resident ants. In return, the ants benefit the acacia tree by attacking any insects that attempt to eat the tree. Fungi such as these mushrooms are important decomposer organisms. Decomposers recycle nutrients in an ecosystem. Commensalism refers to a relationship in which one organism benefits and the other organism is not significantly affected. The relationship between cattle and birds called cattle egrets is a good example of commensalism. As cattle graze in grasslands, they disturb many insects that hide among the grasses. Egrets follow the cattle and eat the insects that are disturbed by the grazing cattle. The egrets benefit, but the cattle are not significantly affected by this behavior. In this lesson, you will learn more about the relationships among organisms in ecosystems. Misconception 2: Don’t all species compete for the same resources in an ecosystem? That is not always true. Some species actually work together in ways that benefit both species. Organisms can have mutualistic or commensal relationships, which help them maximize their use of limited resources. Concept: Relationships Among Organisms Getting to Know www.discoveryeducation.com 2 © Discovery Education. All rights reserved. Discovery Education is a subsidiary of Discovery Communications, LLC.