Predator-Prey Relationships
A predator is an organism that eats another organism. The
prey is the organism which the predator eats. Some examples of predator and
prey are lion and zebra, bear and fish, and fox and rabbit. The words
"predator" and "prey" are almost always used to mean only
animals that eat animals, but the same concept also applies to plants: Bear and
berry, rabbit and lettuce, grasshopper and leaf.
Predator
and prey evolve together. The prey is part of the predator's environment, and
the predator dies if it does not get food, so it evolves whatever is necessary
in order to eat the prey: speed, stealth, camouflage (to hide while approaching
the prey), a good sense of smell, sight, or hearing (to find the prey),
immunity to the prey's poison, poison (to kill the prey) the right kind of
mouth parts or digestive system, etc. Likewise, the predator is part of the
prey's environment, and the prey dies if it is eaten by the predator, so it evolves
whatever is necessary to avoid being eaten: speed, camouflage (to hide from the
predator), a good sense of smell, sight, or hearing (to detect the predator),
thorns, poison (to spray when approached or bitten), etc.
In this snowy environment, the polar bear is white to avoid being noticed as it approaches the seal, and the seal pup is white to avoid being noticed by the bear. |
The
fastest lions are able to catch food and eat, so they survive and reproduce,
and gradually, faster lions make up more and more of the population. The
fastest zebras are able to escape the lions, so they survive and reproduce, and
gradually, faster zebras make up more and more of the population. An important
thing to realize is that as both organisms become faster to adapt to their
environments, their relationship remains the same: because they are both
getting faster, neither gets faster in relation to the other. This is true in
all predator-prey relationships.
Another example of predator-prey evolution is that of the
Galapagos tortoise. Galapagos tortoises eat the branches of the cactus plants
that grow on the Galapagos islands. On
one of the islands, where long-necked tortoises live, the branches are higher
off the ground. On another island, where short-necked tortoises live, the
branches are lower down. The cactuses, the prey, may have evolved high branches
so that the tortoises, the predators, can't reach them.
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