no
Yes, some species of mushrooms are known to have a mutualistic relationship with ants, where the ants help spread the spores of the mushrooms. The mushrooms provide the ants with nutrients in return. However, it is not that the mushrooms actively "eat" the ants.
Some examples of fungi include mushrooms, yeasts, molds, and truffles. Fungi play important roles in various ecosystems, such as decomposing organic matter, forming mutualistic relationships with plants, and serving as a food source for other organisms.
Humans do have a mutualistic and pathogenic relationship with the same organism. This is the planet earth. We are constantly fighting to stay on the mutualistic side of the relationship vs the pathogenic.
the answer is they have a mutualistic relationship
A tree
Mutualistic
The relationship between the clownfish and the sea anemone is mutualistic.
The ground!! da
mutualistic
The relationship between monarch caterpillars and milkweed is mutualistic. The monarch caterpillar eats the milkweed.
Because it decomposes
between an owl and a cactus