When the bear sits there and is waiting to catch the fish and eat it. The gulls are waiting and looking to find if there are leftovers from the bear eating the fish. Then when the bear is done eating, the gulls go down to the ground and can smell the leftovers. Then when the gulls find the leftovers they eat it and go look for more leftovers. Then the gulls find more then they eat that and leave. In symbiotic this means that this is mutualism.
There is none, really. If it exists, it is an indirect relationship, not a direct one.
as me it dose not need it.
Bees and bears do share a symbiotic relations ship. Bees produce honey because of the pollen they collect. Bear apparently enjoy eating the honey, inducing the bees to make more honey for the hive.
One symbiotic relationship between seals and their habitat is the relationship between seals and kelp forests. Seals rely on kelp forests for protection and as a place to find food, while their presence can help maintain the health of the kelp forest ecosystem by controlling certain fish populations that may otherwise overgraze on the kelp.
According to both fossil and DNA evidence, the polar bear split from the grouping of the brown bear, Ursus arctos, roughly 200,000 years ago. This is thought to have happened due to their isolation during a period of glaciation in the Pleistocene period.
no i do not think that the panda bear has any friends........ :)
The brown bear and squrriel can have competition over nuts and berries and the such, but also the bear can be the predator and the squirrel be the prey.
They're the same, just the latter name is more specific. Brown bear can mean either Alaskan or Siberian Brown Bears.
The polar bear, grizzly bear, and black bear. Though some may think that a brown bear and a polar bear can have babies together that has only happen between a Grizzly bear and a polar bear. Note: Grizzly's and Brown bears are different species of bear.
The polar bear has a mutualistic symbiotic relationship with arctic foxes. These foxes sometimes feed on the leftovers of polar bearsâ?? meals.
There are several races of brown bears..The grizzly is only one of them. Size is key here however, a grizzly is the biggest brown bear subspecies.
Brown bears and grizzly bears are not the same kind of bear. Brown bears are found along the coasts in cold places, such as Alaska, and are larger than grizzly bears.