The mutual relationship that lady bugs have with plants is that they eat bugs, such as aphids that are known for eating plants. This means lady bugs save these plants, and also get lots of food at the same time.
Plants and their pollinators form a mutualistic relationship, a relationship in which each benefits from the other.
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yes, because they both benefit .the Bee get the nectar from the plant and other plants get pollinated
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.
yes, because they both benefit .the Bee get the nectar from the plant and other plants get pollinated
Bacteria in mutualistic relationships with plants can provide essential nutrients, such as nitrogen, by fixing atmospheric nitrogen into a usable form for the plants. This helps the plants with their growth and development, especially in nutrient-poor soils.
The relationship between plants and animals is called symbiosis. This relationship can take various forms, such as mutualistic, commensal, or parasitic, where both parties can benefit, one benefits while the other is unaffected, or one benefits at the expense of the other, respectively.
Plant mutualism in nature includes examples such as the relationship between plants and mycorrhizal fungi, where the fungi help plants absorb nutrients from the soil in exchange for sugars produced by the plants. Another example is the mutualistic relationship between plants and pollinators, where plants provide nectar and pollen for pollinators in exchange for the pollinators transferring pollen between plants for reproduction.
Mutualistic. That answer can be correct but it really depends on what you are talking about. For example some kinds of ants some of the time have a mutualistic relationship with scale insects that feed on plants in the family Proteaceae and may kill them. Some other kinds of ants do nothing for the plant, but do eat its nectar, which is a parasitic relationship. Such ants do not have a mutualistic relationship with the plant. Also, the relationship between the ants and the Proteaceae may be mutualistic in more ways than one. A common mutualistic relationship is one we call myrmecochory, in which the ants carry the seeds and thereby help the new plants to grow. What the ants get out of it is food. The plants grow nutritious tissues on the surface of the seeds, commonly at one end of the seed. We call such a lump of ant-feeding tissue an elaiosome.When the ants have eaten the elaiosome they either ignore the seed, or dispose of it on their garbage dumps. This usually is not where birds and other seed eating creatures will find the seeds, and it also might be a place that is very suitable for the seed to grow. For example the garbage might be good fertiliser, or it might poison fungi that might have rotted the seeds, or scare off other insects that might otherwise have eaten the seeds.
The relationship between decomposers and plants are that decomposers give plants nutrients and minerals.
No, ladybugs will not survive indoors.
Lichen is not a plant, but a mutualistic relationship between a fungus and photosynthetic partner, often algae or cyanobacteria. The fungus provides structure and protection, while the photosynthetic partner provides nutrients.