It was once thought that the relationship between the oxpecker and hippopotamus was mutualistic. However, new evidence points to a semi-parasitic relationship. The oxpecker cleans the hippopotamus, but also opens up wounds so that the will become infected with flies, creating more food for the oxpecker.
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a grassland.
a mutalistic relationship is when 2 organisms benefit from each other. for example, a flower and a bee, the bee gets pollen from the flower to use and the bee then helps pollinate other flowers so they can reproduce. think about it this way: Mutualism- :) :) Parasitism- :) :( Commensalism- :) :l
Do you mean: symbiotic relationships? If so, a symbiotic relationship is between two living creatures who help each other by helping themselves. For example, a rhinoceros and an oxpecker help each other. The oxpecker gains nutrients from picking the bugs off of the rhino and the rhino is cleaned.
The Giraffe of the Serengeti plains grew a long neck and tongue to fill a niche in grazing on the thorny acacia trees. The oxpecker or tickbird has filled a niche by alleviating herbivores of pest as the graze the plains.
The rhinoceros lives in a symbiotic relationship with an oxpecker. Their symbiotic relationship is mutualism, meaning thy both benefit from this relationship. the oxpecker cleans off bugs and ticks from the rhinoceros, that gives the oxpecker nutrients and the rhinoceros gets clean
Mutualistic
The Bison
In the past it was believed to be Mutualism but the current standing on this issue is that they are a semi-parasitic relationship. This is because the oxpecker gets food and the hippo gets cleaned, but the oxpecker also picks at the cut to keep it open and get more food. This makes it more prone to infection and it also continues to hurt the other animal.
Commensalism is where one animal benefits from the relationship but the other doesn't. Oxpeckers feed by picking ticks and parasites from the rhinos hide, and the rhino benefits by having annoying parasites removed, so the relationship is symbiotic - they both benefit.
A Mutualistic relationship between organisms is a relationship by which both organisms benefit from the other. An example of this would be the hippopotamus and the Oxpecker (bird). The birds sit on the hippo's back, getting free food by eating parasites that bother the hippo, while the birds are protected by the hippopotamus. - Dabigb such relationship is called symbiosis. Symbiotic Symbiosis/mutualism. mutualism
The rhinoceros lives in a symbiotic relationship with an oxpecker. Their symbiotic relationship is mutualism, meaning thy both benefit from this relationship. the oxpecker cleans off bugs and ticks from the rhinoceros, that gives the oxpecker nutrients and the rhinoceros gets clean
An Oxpecker rests on a African Buffalo picking off the parasites from it's body while the Buffalo allows the Oxpecker to rest on him.
it's a symbiosis. the rhino carries the oxpecker around. when it stops at small bushes to eat leaves, the oxpecker drops of and eats insects. it's a symbiosis. the rhino carries the oxpecker around. when it stops at small bushes to eat leaves, the oxpecker drops of and eats insects.
The oxpecker eats small insects like tics which infest the rhinos hide. The oxpecker gets a free meal, the rhino gets rid of his parasites
The animal that has a symbiotic relationship with a cuckoo is the warbler. The warbler first lays its egg in the nest that it builds, and the cuckoo lays one of its eggs in the same nest when the adult goes off to feed.
The question is describing a 'symbiotic' relationship. The condition in which the two species find themselves is called 'symbiosis'. Ex. a hippopotomus has folds in its skin and bugs get into them. The oxpecker bird gets the bugs out of the folds of skin, this way, the oxpecker bird eats and the hippo stays healthy and bug-free so both sides benefit.