Association for Biology Laboratory Education

The Good and the Bad: Symbiotic Organisms from Selected Hosts
 



Tested Studies in Laboratory Teaching, 2001, Volume 22

Abstract

Symbiosis is defined as one organism living on, in, or with another organism. Three primary categories are mutualism (both organisms benefit), commensalism (commensal benefits and host not affected), and parasitism (parasite benefits and host harmed). Hands-on dissection of host animals provides examples of live symbiotes in all three types of symbiosis: mutualism: termite flagellates and rumen ciliates; commensalism: Leptomonas flagellates in Drosophila; parasitism: fish hosts (monogeneans on gills, larval digeneans and acanthocephalans in liver) and frogs (trematodes in lungs and bladder; ciliates, flagellates and opalinids in large intestine/cloaca). Possible changes in a relationship from commensalism to parasitism are discussed relative to a demonstration of tapeworm life cycle stages in rat and beetle hosts.

Keywords:  Drosophila, fish, commensals, frogs, mutuals, parasites, pigeons, termites, symbiosis, mutualism

Clemson University (2000)