Predator

views updated May 23 2018

Predator

A predator is an organism that hunts and eats its prey . All predators are heterotrophs, meaning they must consume the tissues of other organisms to fuel their own growth and reproduction. The most common use of the term is to describe the many types of carnivorous animals that catch, kill, and eat other animals. There is a great diversity of such predatory animals, ranging in size from small arthropods such as tiny soil mites that eat other mites and springtails , to large mammalian carnivores such as lions and orcas, living in cohesive social groups and collectively hunting, killing, and feeding on prey that can weigh more than a ton.

Most animal predators kill their prey and then eat it. However, so-called micropredators only consume part of large prey animals, and they do not necessarily kill their quarry. Female mosquitoes , for example, are micropredators that seek out large prey animals for the purpose of obtaining a blood meal, in the process aggravating, but not killing their prey. If this sort of feeding relationship is an obligate one for the micropredator, it is referred to as parasitism.

Herbivory is another type of predation, in which animals seek out and consume a prey of plant tissues, sometimes killing the plant in the process. In some cases, only specific plant tissues or organs are consumed by the herbivore , and ecologists sometimes refer to such feeding

relationships as, for example, seed predation or leaf predation.

Most predators are animals, but a few others are plants and fungi . For example, carnivorous plants such as pitcher plants and sundews are morphologically adapted to attracting and trapping small arthropods. The prey is then digested by enzymes secreted for the purpose, and some of the nutrients are assimilated by the predatory plant. Carnivorous plants usually grow in nutrient-poor habitats, and this is the basis in natural selection for the evolution of this unusual type of predation. A few types of fungi are also predatory, trapping small nematodes using various anatomical devices, such as sticky knobs or branches, and tiny constrictive rings that close when nematodes try to move through. Once a nematode is caught, fungal hyphae surround and penetrate their victim, and absorb its nutrients.

See also Carnivore; Heterotroph; Parasites.

Predator

views updated Jun 11 2018

Predator

A predator is an organism that hunts and eats its prey. All predators are heterotrophs, meaning they must consume other organisms to fuel their own growth and reproduction. The most common use of the term is to describe the many types of carnivorous animals that catch, kill, and eat other animals. There is a great diversity of such predatory animals, ranging in size from small arthropods like the tiny soilmites that eat other mites and springtails, to large mammalian

carnivores such as lions and orcas, living in cohesive social groups and collectively hunting, killing, and feeding on prey that can weigh more than a ton.

Most animal predators kill their prey and then eat it. However, the distinctions between types of predators can become hazy as with the case of parasites, micropredators and herbivores. Micropredators only consume part of large prey animals, and they do not necessarily kill their quarry. Female mosquitoes, for example, are micropredators that seek out large prey animals for the purpose of obtaining a blood meal, in the process aggravating, but not killing their prey. If this sort of feeding relationship is an obligate one for the micropredator, it is referred to as parasitism.

Herbivory is similar to predation, in that animals seek out and consume another organism, although that organism is a plant rather than an animal. In most cases, only specific plant tissues or organs are consumed by the herbivore, and the entire organism is not killed. Ecologists sometimes refer to such feeding relationships as, for example, seed predation or leaf predation.

Most predators are animals, but a few others are plants and fungi. For example, carnivorous plants such as pitcher plants and sundews are morphologically adapted to attracting and trapping small arthropods. The prey is then digested by enzymes secreted for the purpose, and some of the nutrients are assimilated by the predatory plant. Carnivorous plants usually grow in nutrient-poor habitats. A few types of fungi are also predatory, trapping small nematodes using various anatomical devices, such as sticky knobs or branches, and tiny constrictive rings that close when nematodes try to move through. Once a nematode is caught, fungal hyphae surround and penetrate their victim, and absorb its nutrients.

See also Carnivore; Heterotroph; Parasites.

Predator

views updated May 11 2018

Predator ★★½ 1987 (R)

Schwarzenegger leads a team of CIA hired mercenaries into the Central American jungles to rescue hostages. They encounter an alien force that begins to attack them one by one. Soon it's just Arnold and the Beast in this attentiongrabbing, but sometimes silly, suspense film. 107m/C VHS, DVD, UMD . Arnold Schwarzenegger, Jesse Ventura, Sonny Landham, Bill Duke, Elpidia Carrillo, Carl Weathers, R.G. Armstrong, Richard Chaves, Shane Black, Kevin Peter Hall; D: John McTiernan; W: Jim Thomas, John Thomas; C: Donald McAlpine; M: Alan Silvestri.

predator

views updated May 14 2018

pred·a·tor / ˈpredətər/ • n. an animal that naturally preys on others: wolves are major predators of rodents ∎ fig. a rapacious, exploitative person or group: her wealth made her vulnerable to predators. ∎  fig. a company that tries to take over another.

predator

views updated May 21 2018

predator An animal that obtains its food by predation. All predators are carnivores, although not all carnivores are predators.

predator

views updated Jun 11 2018

predator See predation.

predator

views updated Jun 08 2018

predator See PREDATION.

predator

views updated May 29 2018

predator See PREDATION.