When one organism benefits and the other is harmed.
They are commemsalism, parasitism and mutualism.
An ecosystem consists of interconnected relationships among various organisms and their physical environment. These relationships can include predator-prey interactions, mutualistic relationships where both species benefit, and competitive relationships where species vie for resources. Ultimately, these interconnected relationships help maintain the balance and stability of the ecosystem.
Insects get food from flowers and help the flowers reproduce - apex
The three special relationships among organisms in a community are mutualism, where both species benefit from the interaction, commensalism, where one species benefits and the other is neither helped nor harmed, and parasitism, where one species benefits at the expense of 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
There are only 3 types of symbiotic relationships. Commemsalism, Parasitism and Mutualism
Mutualism, Commensalism, and parasitic. Hope that helps
Predation,parasitism,mutualism,commensalism, and competition.
They are commemsalism, parasitism and mutualism.
the 2 types of beneficial relationships are: mutualism ++ and commensalism +0
Mutualism and commensalism are both types of symbiotic relationships. Mutualism is where both organisms benefit, while commensalism is where one organism benefits while the other organism is not affected.
What both mutualism and commensalism have in common is that they each have at least one organism that benefits from the symbiotic relationship. In mutualism, both organisms benefit, while in commensalism, only one organism benefits.
In mutualism, both species benefit from the relationship, while in commensalism, one species benefits and the other is not affected.
insects get food from flowers and help the flowers reproduce
symbiotic relationships where two different species interact with each other. Mutualism is a type of symbiosis in which both species benefit, while commensalism involves one species benefiting while the other is unaffected.
Mutualism-Both organisms benefit Commensalism-One organism benefits, and the other does not benefit or get harmed Parasitism-One organism benefits, and the other is harmed.