community ecology Antagonism

Interspecific interactions and the organization of communities » Antagonism

Although mutualisms are common in all biological communities, they occur side by side with a wide array of antagonistic interactions. As life has evolved, natural selection has favoured organisms that are able to efficiently extract energy and nutrients from their environment. Because organisms are concentrated packages of energy and nutrients in themselves, they can become the objects of antagonistic interactions. Moreover, because resources often are limited, natural selection also has favoured the ability of organisms to compete against one another for them. The result has been the evolution of a great diversity of lifestyles. This diversity can be categorized in any number of ways, but the edges of all the categories blend with one another. Evolution continues to mix all the different kinds of interspecific interactions into novel ways of life.

One way of understanding the diversity of antagonistic interactions is through the kinds of hosts or prey that species attack. Carnivores attack animals, herbivores attack plants, and fungivores attack fungi. Other species are omnivorous, attacking a wide range of plants, animals, and fungi. Regardless of the kinds of foods they eat, however, there are some general patterns in which species interact. Parasitism, grazing, and predation are the three major ways in which species feed on one another. The parasite lives on and feeds off its host, usually decreasing the host’s ability to survive but not killing it outright. Grazing species are not as closely tied to their food source as parasites and often vary their diet between two or more species without directly killing them. Predators, however, capture and kill members of other species for food.

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