Commensalism

In AP Environmental Science, commensalism is a symbiotic relationship between two species in which one organism benefits (gaining shelter, food, or transport) while the other is neither helped nor harmed.

Verified for the 2027 AP Environmental Science examLast updated June 2026

What is Commensalism?

Commensalism is one of the three classic types of symbiosis (close, long-term species interactions). The simplest way to keep them straight is by who wins and who loses: in commensalism, one species gains something and the other walks away unaffected. Think of barnacles riding on a whale's skin. The barnacles get free transport to nutrient-rich water, and the whale doesn't really notice.

The key word is unaffected. That zero impact on the second organism is what separates commensalism from its cousins. In mutualism both species benefit, and in parasitism one benefits while the other is harmed. Commensalism sits right in the middle, a +/0 relationship. These interactions shape which species can survive together in an ecosystem, which feeds directly into how energy and matter move through a community.

Why Commensalism matters in AP Environmental Science

Commensalism lives in Unit 1: The Living World: Ecosystems, mapped to topic 1.9 Trophic Levels. It supports learning objective AP Enviro 1.9.A, which asks you to explain how energy flows and matter cycles through trophic levels. Species interactions like commensalism determine who eats whom, who shelters whom, and ultimately how energy from the sun (EK ENG-1.B.3) gets passed upward through a community. Understanding symbiosis helps you reason about ecosystem stability, biodiversity, and the relationships that hold a food web together.

How Commensalism connects across the course

Mutualism (Unit 1)

Mutualism is commensalism's overachieving twin. Both are symbiotic relationships, but in mutualism BOTH species benefit (+/+), while in commensalism only one gains and the other feels nothing (+/0). Same setup, different scoreboard.

Parasitism (Unit 1)

Parasitism flips the second species from neutral to harmed (+/-). A flea on a dog benefits while the dog loses blood. Compare that to a bird nesting in a tree, where the bird gains shelter and the tree is unaffected, and the difference between parasitism and commensalism becomes obvious.

Symbiosis (Unit 1)

Symbiosis is the umbrella term for all close, long-term species relationships. Commensalism, mutualism, and parasitism are its three branches, sorted by who benefits and who gets hurt.

Competition (Unit 1)

Competition is the opposite vibe: two species fight over the same limited resource, so both can lose out. Commensalism involves no fighting, since one species simply hitches along without costing the other anything.

Is Commensalism on the AP Environmental Science exam?

Expect commensalism in multiple-choice questions that ask you to identify or contrast types of species interactions. A common stem gives you an example (a bird's nest in a tree, barnacles on a whale) and asks which symbiotic relationship it shows, or it flips and asks for an example of a commensalistic relationship. You'll also see questions pairing it against mutualism ("how many organisms benefit?") and against competition ("how do species sharing resources avoid depleting populations?"). The skill is sorting the +/+, +/0, and +/- patterns fast. No released FRQ has used the term verbatim, but it supports broader free-response reasoning about ecosystem structure and biodiversity.

Commensalism vs Mutualism

Both are symbiotic relationships, so the wrong answer choice on a test is almost always the other one. The difference is the second organism. In commensalism it's unaffected (+/0); in mutualism it benefits too (+/+). If you can prove BOTH species gain something, it's mutualism, not commensalism.

Key things to remember about Commensalism

  • Commensalism is a symbiotic relationship where one species benefits and the other is neither helped nor harmed (+/0).

  • The classic textbook example is barnacles hitching a ride on a whale, gaining transport while the whale is unaffected.

  • Commensalism, mutualism, and parasitism are all forms of symbiosis, separated by who benefits and who is harmed.

  • Don't confuse it with mutualism, where both species benefit, or parasitism, where one species is harmed.

  • It connects to topic 1.9 because species interactions shape how energy and matter flow through trophic levels (AP Enviro 1.9.A).

Frequently asked questions about Commensalism

What is commensalism in AP Environmental Science?

Commensalism is a symbiotic relationship between two species where one organism benefits (gaining shelter, food, or transport) while the other is neither helped nor harmed. It's a +/0 relationship and one of the three types of symbiosis you need for Unit 1.

Does the second organism get hurt in commensalism?

No. That's the whole point of commensalism, the second organism is completely unaffected. If it were harmed, the relationship would be parasitism instead.

How is commensalism different from mutualism?

In commensalism only one species benefits and the other feels nothing (+/0). In mutualism BOTH species benefit (+/+). If you can show both organisms gain something, it's mutualism, not commensalism.

What is an example of a commensalistic relationship?

Barnacles attaching to a whale is the go-to example: the barnacles get free transport to food-rich water, and the whale isn't affected. A bird building a nest in a tree works too.

Is commensalism on the AP Environmental Science exam?

Yes, it shows up in Unit 1 under topic 1.9 Trophic Levels. Multiple-choice questions often give you an example and ask which type of symbiosis it represents, so be ready to sort commensalism, mutualism, and parasitism quickly.