Arctic Foxes follow larger predators like Polar Bears so that they can scavenge the remains of the larger predator's kill. Arctic Foxes follow larger predators like Polar Bears so that they can scavenge the remains of the larger predator's kill.
A symbiotic relationship is between a bee and a flower.
An example of commensalism would be the Red-Winged Blackbird and a Torrey pine
An example of mutualism would be lichen
There are a number of different symbiotic relationships in the temperate forest. Most of the insects in the forest have this relationship.
you can use one that works pretty much every where... the bees pollinate the flowers and so on.
riendeer and moss
stuff goes down
an example of the boreal forest is animals and insects in the boreal forest climate.. :)
Commensalism is where one organism benefits but the other is unaffected. For example, barnacles attach themselves to whales which gives them a place to live, and the whale couldn't care less about this.
commensalism is important to any what kind
commensalism
It is called Commensalism- a relationship in which one organism benefits from another organism but does not harm it
what are the example of commensalism
commensalism
nothing
Plants
An example of commensalism is the relationship between barnacles and Humpback whales. The barnacles cling on too the whale and are carried to rich feeding grounds (So the barnacles benefit)and the whales are not affected by the barnacles.
Humans getting milk from cows would be an example of commensalism. Commensalism describes a relationship that exists between two organisms in which one organism benefits without harming the other organism.
Mutualism, Commensalism, and Parasitism.
A bird living on the top of a hippo, or a bird living in a cactus is an example of commensalism...:D
an example of commensalism in the grasslands is.. a Giraffe and a tree the giraffe is benefiting because he is getting a meal but the tree is harmed or benefiting.
ferns or orchids
no, because leech is an example of an ectoparasite
lichen growing on tree bark