Kingfishers do not have a symbiotic relationship with any insects. A symbiotic relationship between organisms is one in which both species benefit. Kingfishers and insects don't have much to do with each other, except for insects that have a parasitic (a relationship in which only one party benefits) relationship with kingfishers.
Kingfishers mainly eat aquatic insects.
Some kingfishers eat fishes, amphibians, crustaceans and water insects, which they catch by diving into the water head-first. Most eastern hemisphere kingfishers don't fish, and the forest or wood kingfishers may live far from water.
their main food is small fish. but they also eat frogs, crayfish, and insects.
Fungi engage in symbiosis with plants, plant roots, and insects, to name a few.
Yes. Kingfishers are found in Queensland.
tadpoles, grasshoppers, lizards, and insects. frogs skinks, lizards grasshoppers, beetles, termites, scorpions, centipedes rats, mice, voles, snakes up to 65cm long and nestling birds.
Belted Kingfishers move by flapping their wings.
Symbiosis is when two organisms combine to the advantage of both. One example is the cattle egret which eats insects that have been disturbed by cattle foraging. Parasitism is when only one organism benefits. One example is a flea living on a dog.
it is best friends relationship
Belted Kingfishers are very big kingfishers and their predators include mammals, such as raccoons, foxes, snakes, and raptors such as owls and hawks.
Kingfishers eat small pond insects such as dragonflies.
Kingfishers like all birds do not have teeth.