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[[File:Titan Triggerfish.jpg|thumb|A [[titan triggerfish]] (''Balistoides viridescens'') creates feeding opportunities for smaller fish by moving large rocks too big for them to shift themselves.]]
[[File:Titan Triggerfish.jpg|thumb|A [[titan triggerfish]] (''Balistoides viridescens'') creates feeding opportunities for smaller fish by moving large rocks too big for them to shift themselves.]] This means Class of relationships
In [[ecology]], '''commensalism''' is a class of relationship between two organisms where one organism benefits but the other is neutral (there is no harm or benefit). There are two other types of association: [[mutualism (biology)|mutualism]] (where both organisms benefit) and [[parasitism]] (one organism benefits and the other one is harmed).
In [[ecology]], '''commensalism''' is a class of relationship between two organisms where one organism benefits but the other is neutral (there is no harm or benefit). There are two other types of association: [[mutualism (biology)|mutualism]] (where both organisms benefit) and [[parasitism]] (one organism benefits and the other one is harmed).



Revision as of 21:10, 29 February 2012

A titan triggerfish (Balistoides viridescens) creates feeding opportunities for smaller fish by moving large rocks too big for them to shift themselves.

This means Class of relationships

In ecology, commensalism is a class of relationship between two organisms where one organism benefits but the other is neutral (there is no harm or benefit). There are two other types of association: mutualism (where both organisms benefit) and parasitism (one organism benefits and the other one is harmed).

Commensalism derives from the English word commensal, meaning "sharing of food" in human social interaction, which in turn derives from the Latin cum mensa, meaning "sharing a table". Originally, the term was used to describe the use of waste food by second animals, like the carcass eaters that follow hunting animals, but wait until they have finished their meal.

Examples of commensal relationships

Commensalism is harder to demonstrate than parasitism and mutualism, for it is easier to show a single instance whereby the host is affected, than it is to prove or disprove that possibility. Often, a detailed investigation will show that the host indeed has become affected by the relationship.

Cattle egrets and livestock

An example of commensalism: cattle egrets foraging in fields among cattle or other livestock. As cattle, horses and other livestock graze on the field, they cause movements that stir up various insects. As the insects are stirred up, the cattle egrets following the livestock catch and feed upon them. The egrets benefit from this relationship because the livestock have helped them find their meals, while the livestock are typically unaffected by it.

Tigers and golden jackals

In India, lone golden jackals expelled from their pack have been known to form commensal relationships with tigers.

Other examples

Another example of commensalism: birds following army ant raids on a forest floor. As the army ant colony travels on the forest floor, they stir up various flying insect species. As the insects flee from the army ants, the birds following the ants catch the fleeing insects. In this way, the army ants and the birds are in a commensal relationship because the birds benefit while the army ants are unaffected.

Orchids and mosses are plants that can have a commensal relationship with trees. The plants grow on the trunks or branches of trees. They get the light they need as well as nutrients that run down along the tree. As long as these plants do not grow too heavy, the tree is not affected.

Barnacles

Barnacles, a type of arthropod in the subphylum Crustacea

Barnacles are highly sedentary crustaceans that must attach themselves permanently to a hard substrate, such as rocks, shells, whales or anything else on which they can gain a foothold. When they attach to the shell of a scallop, for instance, barnacles benefit by having a place to stay, leaving the scallop presumably unaffected.

Arguments

Whether the relationship between humans and some types of our gut flora is commensal or mutualistic is still unanswered.

Some biologists argue that any close interaction between two organisms is unlikely to be completely neutral for either party, and that relationships identified as commensal are likely mutualistic or parasitic in a subtle way that has not been detected. For example, epiphytes are "nutritional pirates" that may intercept substantial amounts of nutrients that would otherwise go to the host plant.[1] Large numbers of epiphytes can also cause tree limbs to break or shade the host plant and reduce its rate of photosynthesis. Similarly, phoretic mites may hinder their host by making flight more difficult, which may affect its aerial hunting ability or cause it to expend extra energy while carrying these passengers.

Types

Phoretic mites on a fly (Pseudolynchia canariensis)

Like all ecological interactions, commensalisms vary in strength and duration from intimate, long-lived symbioses to brief, weak interactions through intermediaries.

Phoresy
One animal attaching to another for transportation only. This concerns mainly arthropods, examples of which are mites on insects (such as beetles, flies or bees), pseudoscorpions on mammals[2] or beetles, and millipedes on birds.[3] Phoresy can be either obligate or facultative (induced by environmental conditions).
Inquilinism
Using a second organism for housing. Examples are epiphytic plants (such as many orchids) that grow on trees,[4] or birds that live in holes in trees.
Metabiosis
A more indirect dependency, in which one organism creates or prepares a suitable environment for a second. Examples include maggots, which feast and develop on corpses, and hermit crabs, which use gastropod shells to protect their bodies.

See also

  • Symbiosis - long-term interactions between different biological species, which can be mutualistic, commensal or parasitic
  • Mutualism - where both organisms experience mutual benefit in the relationship
  • Parasitism - where one organism benefits at the expense of another
  • Remora - phoretic fishes that may also eat the scraps off their hosts, though they may also be mutualistic cleaners

References

  1. ^ Benzing, D.H. (1980) Biology of the Bromeliads. Eureka, California: Mad River Press.
  2. ^ Durden, Lance A. (2001) "Pseudoscorpions Associated With Mammals in Papua New Guinea". Biotropica, Vol. 23, No. 2, pp. 204–206.
  3. ^ Tajovy, Karel, et al. (2001) "Millipedes (Diplopoda) in Dogs' nests". European Journal of Soil Biology, vol. 37, pp. 321–323.
  4. ^ C. Michael Hogan. 2011. Commensalism. Topic Ed. M.Mcginley. Ed-in-chief C.J.Cleveland. Encyclopedia of Earth. National Council for Science and the Environment. Washington DC