the biolegy is flouing
Answer A lamprey has a symbiotic relationship with many types of sharks. You probably mean the remora, which is a fish with a sucker attached to the top of its head. It uses this to attach itself to sharks and rides along with the predator, to share in its scraps.
As a matter of fact, Yes they do. Pilot Fish, shark sucker fish or Remora have a symbiotic relationship. The smaller fish get food and the shark gets cleaned.
Then the Sucker fish would probably find another ocean creature to cling to.
Tiger shark!
Since the shark & cleaner fish are benefited because the shark's teeth is being cleaned and the cleaner fish itself has food, the relationship between the two is called mutualism. improve
We dont know I hoped u would,
they all run & swimm fast
We dont know I hoped u would,
competition for food
Mutalistic Relationship, both are benefiting. The shark is getting cleaned and groomed while the remora is getting fed and transported. Remoras have suction pads that can stick onto the shark. The Remora gets transported by the shark without the shark attacking.
The symbiotic relationship between pilot fish and a shark may be what is is called commensalism. In this type of symbioses, the pilot fish benefit, and there is no known effect on the shark. But this is not certain. The pilot fish does eat bacteria and dead skin off the shark, and this may actually be enough benefit to justify the relationship. The pilot fish do not, however, lead a shark (or ray, or turtle) to food. The pilot fish consume small scraps, parasites, crabs, etc. that are associated with shark prey.
If you wish to go back millions of years everything was related at some stage in the slime of prehistory. But if you mean is there a traceable relationship between a shark and a dog then the answer is "No there is no relationship whatsoever".