Adaptations, Interdependence and Competition (B7.1)
Communities and ecosystems
- Population: all organisms of the same species in an area.
- Community: all populations of different species in an area.
- Ecosystem: a community plus its non-living (abiotic) environment.
Interdependence
Species within a community are interdependent — they rely on each other. If one species changes in number, others are affected through food chains, competition and mutualism.
Stable community: species populations are roughly constant over time because of balanced predator-prey, competition and abiotic factors.
Abiotic and biotic factors
Abiotic (non-living):
- Temperature, light intensity, moisture/water availability, CO₂ concentration, wind, pH of soil, salinity
Biotic (living):
- Food availability, predation, disease, competition (inter- and intra-specific)
Adaptations
An adaptation is a feature that increases an organism's chance of survival and reproduction in its environment. Adaptations are inherited — they arose by natural selection.
Types:
- Structural: body shape, colour, size (e.g. polar bear thick fur, cactus thick stem)
- Behavioural: actions (e.g. migration, nocturnal activity, hibernation)
- Physiological: internal processes (e.g. camel — concentrated urine, reduced sweating; Arctic animals — antifreeze proteins in blood)
Desert adaptations (camels, cacti)
Camels:
- Fat stored in hump (not insulation) — provides water and energy when metabolised
- Oval red blood cells — flow even when dehydrated; can drink 100 L rapidly without haemolysing
- Concentrated urine, dry faeces — reduce water loss
- Wide feet — spread load on sand
Cacti:
- Thick waxy cuticle — reduces water loss
- Spines instead of leaves — reduce SA; deter herbivores
- Wide, shallow root system — absorbs rain quickly over large area
- CAM photosynthesis — stomata open at night
Arctic adaptations (polar bears, Arctic foxes)
- Thick layer of fat (blubber) — insulation
- White fur — camouflage; hollow hair — traps air for insulation
- Small ears — reduce SA for heat loss
- Large hairy feet — distribute weight on ice; grip
Competition
Intraspecific: between same species (for food, mates, territory).
Interspecific: between different species (often for food or space).
Common exam errors
- Confusing abiotic and biotic factors — abiotic = non-living.
- Saying "adaptations are developed during life" — they are inherited genetic features, produced by natural selection over generations.
- Confusing population (one species) with community (all species).
AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-deep-combined-science