Question:

Relate Column I with Column II with regard to predatory behaviour:
 Column I Column II
1.Calotropisp.Invertebrates
2.Pisasterq.Distasteful
3.Monarch butterflyr.Cryptically colored
4.Frogss.Cardioglycoside

Updated On: Apr 17, 2024
  • 1-(s) 2-(p) 3-(r) 4-(q)
  • 1-(s) 2-(p) 3-(q) 4-(r)
  • 1-(q) 2-(s) 3-(p) 4-(r)
  • 1-(r) 2-(p) 3-(q) 4-(s)
Hide Solution
collegedunia
Verified By Collegedunia

The Correct Option is B

Solution and Explanation

  • Calotropis: It is a weed that grows in abandoned fields. Calotropis produces poisonous cardiac glycoside so that no cattle or animal hinders them
  • Pisaster: Pisaster ochraceus feeds on invertebrates like mussels and snails. Pisasters have tube feet and a mouth beneath their central disk. Pisasters use their tube feet to pry on the prey and extend their stomach out of their mouth and into the shell of the prey to digest it.
  • Monarch Butterfly: These butterflies are increasingly distasteful to their predators because of the chemicals present in their bodies. The butterfly feeds on a poisonous weed to acquire this chemical during the caterpillar stage.
  • Frogs: Species of frogs use different defence mechanisms to lessen the impact of predation. Frogs are cryptically coloured or camouflaged so that they do not get easily detected by predators.

So, the correct option is (B): 1-(s) 2-(p) 3-(q) 4-(r)

Was this answer helpful?
1
1

Concepts Used:

Population Interactions

Population interaction is generally between two different species populations.“Population interaction is the interaction between different populations. It refers to the effects that the organisms in a community have on one another.”

An ecosystem is a geographic area wherein plants, animals, and many other organisms, alongwith weather and landscape, work together to form a bubble of life.

Types of Population Interactions:

Interactions can be beneficial or neutral or detrimental. Accordingly, there are six types of population interaction.

The different ways populations interact with each other can be summarized under the following headings.

  • Competition
  • Predation
  • Herbivory
  • Mutualism
  • Commensalism
  • Parasitism
  • Competition