competeing for resources
natural selection
A process in which individuals that have certain inherited traits tend to survive and reproduce at higher rates than other individuals because of those traits.
Mutualism
A relationship between two species in which both species benefit ex bees and flowers
ecological niche
A specific role of a species within an ecosystem, including how it meets its need for food, water and shelter and how it reproduces. includes the use of all abiotic and biotic factors of its environment
Adaptation
A trait that helps an organism survive and reproduce
Predation
An interaction in which one organism kills another for food. ex. coyote killing ad eating a rabbit
competitve exclusion principle
If two species occupy the same niche, they will compete with one another until one species eliminates the other.
Paratism
One organism benefits and the other is harmed ex. mosquitos and humans
extintion
When organisms in an ecosystem cannot adapt and ALL die off as a result of environmental pressures.
evolutuion
a change in allele frequency over time
consequences of interspecific competition
adaptation or extinction
Evoluntionary Fitness
an organism's ability to pass on genes to the next generation, the more offsprings, the "fitter" the organism
intraspecific competition
competition between individuals of the same species
interspecific competition
competition between members of different species
Commensalism
one organism benefits and the other is unaffected ex. cattle and egrets
consequences of intraspecific competition
specialization
generalist species
species that can eat many different types of food. favorable in changing environments
specalist species
species that only eats a specific type of food. favorable in stable environments
competition
the struggle between organisms to survive in a habitat with limited resources ex. cheetah and lion hunting for the same prey