A unicorn eats a skittle and the unicorn poops out a rainbow. That is how rainbows are made.
Mutualistic relationship
A condition in which two different organisms live together is called symbiosis. This relationship can be mutualistic, where both organisms benefit, commensalistic, where one benefits and the other is unaffected, or parasitic, where one benefits at the expense of the other.
In the natural world, mutualistic relationships are a type of symbiotic relationship where both species involved benefit from the interaction. Symbiotic relationships, on the other hand, refer to any close and long-term interaction between two different species, which can be mutualistic, parasitic, or commensalistic.
Symbiosis is a long term interaction between two organisms of different species that live in close physical association. This relationship can be mutualistic, where both species benefit, commensalistic, where one benefits and the other is unaffected, or parasitic, where one benefits at the expense of the other. Examples include lichens (fungus and algae), clownfish and sea anemones, and tapeworms in their host's intestines.
The most accurate evidence of an evolutionary relationship between two organisms is the presence of shared genetic similarities, specifically in their DNA sequences. This indicates a common ancestry and evolutionary history between the two organisms.
Both are a relationship between two organisms, called a symbiotic relationship. A parasitic relationship is when one organism gains at the other organism's expense. An example of a parasitic relationship is a tick. A mutualistic relationship is when both organisms gain from each other. An example of this would be honeybees and flowering plants.
mutualistic refers to a symbiotic relationship between two organisms in which both are benefited. For example the bird called the ox pecker and the zebra, the bird eats bugs off the zebra ridding the zebra of pests while giving the bird food
It is a symbiotic relationship called commensalism
Mutualistic relationship
symbiosis in which two organisms of different species stay near each other having both advantages.
A relationship between two kinds of organisms that benefits both is called a symbiotic relationship.
Symbiosis. There are three different kinds: parasitism (one organism is harmed, one is helped), commensalism (one organism is helped, one doesn't care), and mutualism (both organisms are helped). :)
Symbiosis is an ecological relationship between organisms of two different species that live together in direct contact. This relationship can be mutualistic, where both species benefit; commensalistic, where one species benefits and the other is unaffected; or parasitic, where one species benefits at the expense of the other.
aids.
plant and fungi
A condition in which two different organisms live together is called symbiosis. This relationship can be mutualistic, where both organisms benefit, commensalistic, where one benefits and the other is unaffected, or parasitic, where one benefits at the expense of the other.
Mutualism.