The ground!! da
Bacteria in mutualistic relationships with plants can provide essential nutrients, such as nitrogen, by fixing atmospheric nitrogen into a usable form for the plants. This helps the plants with their growth and development, especially in nutrient-poor soils.
Plants and their pollinators form a mutualistic relationship, a relationship in which each benefits from the other.
Humans do have a mutualistic and pathogenic relationship with the same organism. This is the planet earth. We are constantly fighting to stay on the mutualistic side of the relationship vs the pathogenic.
Both are a relationship between two organisms, called a symbiotic relationship. A parasitic relationship is when one organism gains at the other organism's expense. An example of a parasitic relationship is a tick. A mutualistic relationship is when both organisms gain from each other. An example of this would be honeybees and flowering plants.
the answer is they have a mutualistic relationship
A tree
no
Mutualistic
yes, because they both benefit .the Bee get the nectar from the plant and other plants get pollinated
The relationship between the clownfish and the sea anemone is mutualistic.
mutualistic
yes, because they both benefit .the Bee get the nectar from the plant and other plants get pollinated