BIOL-Q 201 Lecture Notes - Lecture 22: Sea Anemone, Amphiprioninae, Biocoenosis

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26 Aug 2016
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Interactions between organisms can be: beneficial, detrimental, beneficial to one and harmful to the other, neither beneficial nor harmful. Interactions between organisms can be beneficial, harmful, or neutral: mutualism: positive to both, parasitism, grazing, predation: positive to one, negative to other, commensalism: positive to one, nothing to other, competition: negative to both. Interactions mutualism: both organisms benefit from the interaction, usually share food and or protect each other. Clownfish: benefits by being protected and housed by the sea anemone. Sea anemone: benefits from the scraps of food the clownfish brings in, and from the larger fish the clownfish lures into the anemone. Interactions commensalism: one organism benefits from the interaction, one is neutral, one usually gets protection or better access to food. Interactions predation, grazing & parasitism: one organism benefits from the interaction, one is harmed, the one benefiting is usually getting food. Producers: capture light or chemical energy and make food. Primary (1o) consumers: eat producers (i. e. herbivores)

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