1a. What is the difference between a habitat and a niche?

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Transcript 1a. What is the difference between a habitat and a niche?

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p. 104 1a, 2ab, 4abc
1a. What is the difference between a habitat and a niche?
1a. The difference between a habitat and a niche is that a habitat is the
general place where an organism lives while a niche describes where the
organism lives and how it interacts with its environment.
2a. What is competition? Why can’t two organisms compete if they live in
different habitats?
2a. Competition is an interaction between organisms in which both
organisms attempt to use the same limited ecological resource in the
same place at the same time. Two organisms that live in different
habitats can’t compete because they do not live in the same place.
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2b. Look at Figure 4-7 and describe how the three species of warblers have
divided their resources. Does each warbler have its own niche?
2b. All three warbler species live in the same trees and feed on insects but
each species has its own niche because it uses resources in a different
part of the tree.
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4a. What is symbiosis? What are the three major types of symbiosis?
4a. Symbiosis is any relationship in which two species live closely together.
The three major types of symbiosis are mutualism, parasitism, and
commensalism.
4b. Bacteria living in a cow’s stomach help the cow break down the
cellulose in grass, gaining nutrients in the process. Is this an example of
commensalism or mutualism? Explain your answer.
4b. Bacteria living in a cow’s stomach is an example of mutualism because
the cow and the bacteria both benefit from the relationship.
4c. What is the difference between a predator and a parasite? Explain your
answer.
4c. The difference between a predator and a parasite is that a predator
usually kills its prey while a parasite generally only weakens its host.