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predation because the wild tamarind tree eats the bromeliad.
The relationship is only benefiting the sloth because it hangs and sleeps on a branch from the tree. And the sloth eats the leaves from the tree. I don't really know if the tree really benefits.
It is Commensalism because the squirrel benefits by having a home, and the tree is not harmed and doesn't get any benefit.
They like it because they can eat it or get a part of it
It's a kind of darkling beetle in the family Tenebrionidae. They have spikey dorsal abdomens and can act like they're dead when threatened. There are a good number of them in the beetle pet trade, too.
The Elm Bark Beetles Get habitat from the elm tree, and in return The elm tree is protected by the beetles. Their symbiotic relationship is Mutualism. Both the Elm tree and the beetle benefits from this relationship
the moss is food for the beetle, the beetle is food for the red eyed tree frog, the red eyed tree frog is food for the iguana
Apparently, the dung beetle pollinates this plant (skunk cabbage).
It is a symbiotic relationship because the dung beetle cannot exist without it. The beetle eats manure, and helps to compost the material so that plants can grow.
they jingle around the Christmas tree :D
they eat fruits and tree sap
The pine bark beetle is a parasite. The pine beetle lays its eggs in the pine trees, and then when the babies are born, they eat the layers of the tree which stops the tree from growing.
Goliath Beetle. In relationship to size.
"Beetle Bailey" , by Mort Walker , is about an inept and lazy soldier and his relationship with a Sergeant Snorkel . See related link below .
they where cut their
spider
tree+life