free living
Organisms can be grouped as free-living or parasitic. A parasite is an organism which lives in or on another organism, from which it obtains its food. Since humans do not do this they are not parasitic, and so must be free-living.
On the face of it, the relationship does seem to be parasitic, but you must remember that:Parasitism is a type of symbiotic relationship between organisms of different species where one organism, the parasite, benefits at the expense of the host.(from Wikipedia)The mother benefits in the long term, because it is propagating the species.
Occurs when a new organism is formed from the same organism
Bacteria are unicellular. The cells of the organism they infect are, quite often, part of a multicellular organism.
Orange is the fruit, and yes it is also an organism.
A parasitic relationship occurs when one organism lives on or inside another organism and benefits by feeding off of it, often harming the host in the process.
Organisms can be grouped as free-living or parasitic. A parasite is an organism which lives in or on another organism, from which it obtains its food. Since humans do not do this they are not parasitic, and so must be free-living.
the parasites which complete their life cycles in one host
predator
It would be the parasite
A zooparasite is any organism which is parasitic to an animal.
One example of hyperparasitism is when a parasitic wasp lays its eggs inside a host that is already infected with parasitic larvae. Another example is when a fungus infects a parasitic organism that is already living on a host organism.
It's called a parasitic relationship.
It would be the parasite
parasitic worms
Parasitic describes one organism that feeds on the other from within.
A parasitic worm is a worm that feeds on another organism, its 'host'. For example a tape worm. It latches onto the intestine of humans.