Organism Interactions

"By their natural adaptations you will know them." - J. Kevin Bowler
 
Neutral Symbiosis Competition Predation
Soft Corals and Bubble AlgaeEndler's Livebearer, two males courting a female
Interspecific CompetitionIntraspecific Competition
"The interaction that occurs between two or more organisms, populations, or species that share some environmental resource when this is in short supply. Competition is an important force in evolution: plants, for example, become tall to compete for light, and animals evolve various foraging methods to compete for food. There may be a direct confrontation between competitors, as occurs between barnacles competing for space on a rock, or the numbers or fecundity of the competitors are indirectly reduced through joint dependence on limited resources. Competition occurs both between members of a species (intraspecific competition) and between different species (interspecific competition). Interspecific competition often results in the dominance of one species over another. Since competition ultimately results in the displacement by one competitor of the others, it is to the advantage of the competitors to avoid one another wherever possible. Thus in time the competitors become separated from each other geographically or ecologically, which promotes evolutionary change. Competition for mates may lead to sexual selection." - Dictionary of Biology, Oxford Univ. Press
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Last updated February 2, 2007 by Timothy C. Steelman
All Images Copyright 2002 by Timothy C. Steelman
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