QUESTION IMAGE
Question
symbiotic relationships
use the chart above to identify the ecological relationship between the organisms in the scenarios.
| scenarios | relationship |
|---|---|
| 2. a pearl fish spends the day inside the intestines of a sea cucumber. the fish leaves at night to feed on small crustaceans. the pearl fish gets a safe place to live. the sea cucumber does not benefit from this relationship, nor is it harmed. | |
| 3. black wasps plant eggs in aphids. the larvae eat the aphids from the inside. | |
| 4. a lucky alligator spots a deer drinking water, attacks the deer, kills it and eats it for food. | |
| 5. an alpheid shrimp digs a deep burrow to protect itself from predators. the goby fish sits at the entrance, keeping watch for predators, and signals the shrimp with a flick of its tail when it is safe to come out. the two animals are completely dependent on each other. | |
| 6. a lion on the savanna eats a deer. while he is eating, a sneaky hyena will try to steal the deer from the lion. |
Response
To solve for the ecological relationships in each scenario, we analyze the interactions between organisms:
Scenario 1: Otters and Kelp, Sea Urchins
- Otters benefit from kelp (shelter) and eat sea urchins, which eat kelp. Kelp benefits from otters controlling sea urchins.
- Relationship: Mutualism (both otters and kelp benefit indirectly, as otters protect kelp from overgrazing by sea urchins).
Scenario 2: Pearl Fish and Sea Cucumber
- Pearl fish gets a safe home (benefit), but the sea cucumber is neither helped nor harmed.
- Relationship: Commensalism (one benefits, the other is unaffected).
Scenario 3: Black Wasps and Aphids
- Black wasp larvae eat aphids (harm aphids) to develop.
- Relationship: Parasitism (or Predation; larvae rely on aphids for food, harming them).
Scenario 4: Alligator and Deer
- Alligator kills and eats deer (deer is harmed, alligator benefits).
- Relationship: Predation (one organism kills and eats another).
Scenario 5: Alpheid Shrimp and Goby Fish
- Shrimp digs a burrow (both use it for safety), goby signals danger (helps shrimp). Both benefit.
- Relationship: Mutualism (both organisms benefit from the interaction).
Scenario 6: Lion, Deer, and Hyena
- Lion eats deer (predation: lion benefits, deer is harmed). Hyena steals from lion (competition or Kleptoparasitism: hyena benefits at lion’s expense).
- Relationship: Predation (lion-deer) and Competition/Kleptoparasitism (hyena-lion).
Final Answers (by Scenario):
- Mutualism
- Commensalism
- Parasitism (or Predation)
- Predation
- Mutualism
- Predation (and Competition)
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To solve for the ecological relationships in each scenario, we analyze the interactions between organisms:
Scenario 1: Otters and Kelp, Sea Urchins
- Otters benefit from kelp (shelter) and eat sea urchins, which eat kelp. Kelp benefits from otters controlling sea urchins.
- Relationship: Mutualism (both otters and kelp benefit indirectly, as otters protect kelp from overgrazing by sea urchins).
Scenario 2: Pearl Fish and Sea Cucumber
- Pearl fish gets a safe home (benefit), but the sea cucumber is neither helped nor harmed.
- Relationship: Commensalism (one benefits, the other is unaffected).
Scenario 3: Black Wasps and Aphids
- Black wasp larvae eat aphids (harm aphids) to develop.
- Relationship: Parasitism (or Predation; larvae rely on aphids for food, harming them).
Scenario 4: Alligator and Deer
- Alligator kills and eats deer (deer is harmed, alligator benefits).
- Relationship: Predation (one organism kills and eats another).
Scenario 5: Alpheid Shrimp and Goby Fish
- Shrimp digs a burrow (both use it for safety), goby signals danger (helps shrimp). Both benefit.
- Relationship: Mutualism (both organisms benefit from the interaction).
Scenario 6: Lion, Deer, and Hyena
- Lion eats deer (predation: lion benefits, deer is harmed). Hyena steals from lion (competition or Kleptoparasitism: hyena benefits at lion’s expense).
- Relationship: Predation (lion-deer) and Competition/Kleptoparasitism (hyena-lion).
Final Answers (by Scenario):
- Mutualism
- Commensalism
- Parasitism (or Predation)
- Predation
- Mutualism
- Predation (and Competition)