parasite
It is a symbotic relationship in which one organism lives in or on another organism(the host) and consequently harms the squirrell while it benefits from it.
This type of relationship is known as parasitism. The organism benefiting is the parasite, which derives nutrients or resources from the host organism, ultimately harming it. Examples include ticks on mammals or mistletoe on trees.
Parasitism is a symbiotic relationship where one organism (parasite) benefits at the expense of another organism (host). The parasite derives nutrients or resources from the host, often causing harm or disease in the process. Examples include tapeworms in animals and mistletoe in trees.
A parasitic organism, such as a tick or tapeworm, depends entirely on another living organism for its existence by feeding off of it and causing harm to the host organism in the process. Parasites can weaken or even kill their host, ultimately reducing the host's chances of survival.
aniamals,plants,and fungi
A parasite is an organism that lives on or in a host organism and benefits by deriving nutrients at the host's expense. Parasites can cause harm to the host organism by disrupting its normal functions.
It depends on what type of relationship they have. Parasitism is when one organism lives in or on another organism and harms it. Mutualism is when two organisms benefit from their relationship. Commensalism is when one organism benefits from the relationship and the other is not helped, nor is it harmed.
A parasite.= )
This is an example of a parisitic relationship because the organism harms the host.
An organism that lives on or in a host and harms it is usually called a parasite. When the relationship mutually beneficial instead of harmful, it is called a symbiote.
one organsim lives off of,feeds upon,and harms another organism. ex. dog is harmed and flea is fed.
A parasitic relationship is a symbiotic relationship in which one organism (parasite) benefits at the expense of another organism (host). The parasite harms the host while deriving nutrients or resources for its own survival and reproduction. Examples include tapeworms in the intestines of mammals and ticks on the skin of animals.