It's like having plants in your house. You plant it, put it in your window, water it avidly at first, but then you let it go and let your busy life get in the way. Before you know it, the soil is tan and dry, and the leaves are saggy and discolored. You have to keep watering to keep it alive.
You're relationship takes constant "watering" too. Think about it: when you first met, sparks flew, and you wanted nothing more than to spend every waking moment with one another. But then it got busy at work, your friends gave you crap about not hanging out any more, you had your nieces birthday party you HAD to go to, and your apartment is a mess. Poor little significant other got left on the window sill to wilt. To keep your relationship fresh and exciting, you have to keep giving it time and energy.
And, you have to mix things up. Do something besides the same, old, boring routine. Going out to dinner and a movie ever weekend is like watering your plant once every two weeks. It's barely enough to keep it alive. You have to pepper in mid-week, spontaneous ventures to keep each other guessing so he/she doesn't get bored.
BUT beware, you can over-water your plant. Sure, you're trying, but it's drowning. It's important to give you're significant other time to do the things they need to do, AND to give yourself time to get things done. Otherwise, when you do things together, conversation will drift to all the things you should be doing, which will make your boy/girlfriend feel like a burden. And who wants to be a burden?
The simplest feeding relationship in an ecosystem is a two-tiered relationship where a producer (such as a plant) is consumed by a consumer (such as an herbivore). This forms a basic food chain where energy is transferred from one organism to another.
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An organism killing other organisms for food. For example: a fox killing a rabbit.
Second-order heterotrophs have a common feeding relationship in that they feed on first-order heterotrophs, which are primary consumers. This means that they obtain their energy by consuming other organisms that primarily feed on producers.
ant or bugs or any other organisms that are small or the bacteria that are hard to see...
What feeding relationships does the crabeater seal have
Breast feed??
Both food webs and food chains are models of feeding relationships.
This is an example of a parasitic relationship. In this relationship, the tick benefits from feeding on the dog's blood while the dog is harmed by the tick's presence.
plants
It is a relationship that is all about money,especially from one of the opposite sex feeding another by spoiling him or her.
the feeding relationships of the mice different from feeding relationships of the other organisms in this food web because mice is a herbivore and eats plants and grass which is the same thing as a grasshopper and the rest is a carnivore and eats meat
The simplest feeding relationship in an ecosystem is a two-tiered relationship where a producer (such as a plant) is consumed by a consumer (such as an herbivore). This forms a basic food chain where energy is transferred from one organism to another.
Trophic essentially means to do with nutrition, but when applied (as it often is) to ecology, it refers to feeding habits, and the feeding relationship between different organisms. For example, trophic level means the nutrition or food level, and the position of an organism in the food chain.
Parasitism
A food web
A host parasite relationship is when the parasite lives off of the host, feeding on him and relying on him to survive. This negatively effects the host, sometimes causing it to die.