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BL 1051 - Biodiversity I Lecture 7 - Symbioses |
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The main types of symbiosis are Parasitism, Commensalism and Mutualism. |
These are points on a continuum from +/- (Parasite benefits at the expense of the host, with the extreme case of the host being killed), to +/+ (both mutualists benefit) with +/o commensalism (one partner benefits whilst the other neither suffers or gains) somewhere in between. |
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A second continuum deals with the degree of intimacy, e.g. predation is also a +/- relationship but does not have the intimacy of parasitism. Therefore, predation is not seen as a type of symbiosis. |
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The partners in any symbiosis are individuals of different species. |
A third continuum runs from obligate to facultative with the extremes that neither partner can complete its lifecycle in the absence of the other to both partners can live without each other. |
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ParasitismGood examples of parasitism can be found in human viruses. E.g. the common cold where the virus multiplies at the expense of the human host but the host doesn't suffer greatly and the HIV virus which causes the development of AIDS. |
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CommensalismExamples include: the cattle egret (Bubulcus ibis) in the Caribbean or an epiphyte growing on a tree. |
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MutualismExamples of mutualism include: Lichens: Fungal-Algal Symbiosis and Mycorrhizas: Fungal-Plant Symbiosis as well as the cattle egret and cattle in Africa. |
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Phoresy Hitch-hiking, called phoresy is by far the commonest means of dispersal employed by mites, with a wide range of other animals being used by the mites to find new homes, in some cases the mite will feed from its transport during the journey but in most cases the 'phoretic host' suffers no harm. Flower mites travel between flowers in the nostrils of hummingbirds, e.g. Tropicoseius heliconiae. Some invertebrates can carry an awful lot of mites, Hyatt (1959) recorded 488 Mites on a single Dor Beetle (Geotrupes stercorarius), these were:-
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| Links on this page | ||
| Symbiosis Information on the cattle egret, University of Michigan - Museum of Zoology Symbiotic relationships in the rainforests Symbiosis: mycorrhizae and lichens - A page from the University of Hawaii Mycorrhiza information exchange INVAM - the international collection of (vesicular) arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi The lichen information system The hummingbird society Hummingbird hitchhikers Phoretic relationships between lice and Hippoboscid flies |
Cattle egret Lichens: Fungal-Algal Symbiosis Mycorrhizas: Fungal-Plant Symbiosis Tropicoseius heliconiae. |
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| Books to check | Questions | |
| Ahmadjian,
V. and Paracer, S. (1986) Symbiosis: An introduction to biological associations.
University Press of New England. Smith, S.E. and Read, D.J. (1997) Mycorrhizal Symbiosis. Academic Press |
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Send mail to lchinnery@uwichill.edu.bb
with questions or comments about this web page. Barbados lichen photo © 2003,
text and design copyright © 1998-2003, L.E. Chinnery. Fish and hummingbird images from Corel Photo House which are protected by the
copyright laws of the U.S., Canada and elsewhere. Used under license. Bracket
fungi and rhino egret photos © 2000 Global Star Software Ltd. and its
licensors. Other clip art © 1998 The Learning Company, Inc. and its licensors.
Last modified: August 26, 2007