The species that benefits other species are the common carnivores who eat meat
Mutualism: Both species benefit from the relationship. Commensalism: One species benefits while the other is unaffected. Parasitism: One species benefits at the expense of the other. Competition: Both species are negatively impacted due to competition for resources. Predation: One species benefits by consuming the other.
mutualism- both species benefit from the relationship.parasitism- one specie benefits while harming the othercommensalism- where one benefits and the other is not harmed nor benefited.
There are three types of symbiotic relationships; mutualism, commensalism, and parasitism. In mutualism, both organisms benefit from the relationship, in commensalism, one organism benefits and the other is unaffected, and in parasitism, the relationship benefits one organism and harms the other.
There are three main types of symbiosis: mutualism, where both species benefit from the interaction; commensalism, where one species benefits while the other is unaffected; and parasitism, where one species benefits at the expense of the other.
Mutualism: Both species benefit from the relationship. Commensalism: One species benefits while the other is neither helped nor harmed. Parasitism: One species benefits while the other is harmed. Competition: Both species are harmed as they compete for resources. Amensalism: One species is harmed while the other is unaffected. Neutralism: Both species are unaffected by each other.
Mutualism: Both species benefit from the relationship. Commensalism: One species benefits while the other is unaffected. Parasitism: One species benefits at the expense of the other. Competition: Both species are negatively impacted due to competition for resources. Predation: One species benefits by consuming the other.
mutualism- both species benefit from the relationship.parasitism- one specie benefits while harming the othercommensalism- where one benefits and the other is not harmed nor benefited.
There are three types of symbiotic relationships; mutualism, commensalism, and parasitism. In mutualism, both organisms benefit from the relationship, in commensalism, one organism benefits and the other is unaffected, and in parasitism, the relationship benefits one organism and harms the other.
That would be a form of parasitism.
commensalism
Parasitism :)
One species benefits and other is harmed
It's called a parasitic relationship when one species benefits and one species is harmed. A simbiotic relationship is when both species benefit.
If one species goes extinct there won't be as many species effected by the extinction because there are o many other species to feed on. BIODIVERSITY;)
This type of relationship is known as commensalism. In commensalism, one species benefits while the other is neither positively nor negatively affected. It is a form of symbiosis where one organism benefits without causing harm or receiving any benefits.
No, that's parasitism. Symbiosis benefits both organisms.
A one-way relationship where one species benefits at the expense of another is known as parasitism. In this relationship, the species that benefits is called the parasite, while the species that is harmed is known as the host.