A relationship in which one organism lives on or inside another organism and harms it is called parasitism. This is a form of a symbiotic relationship.
This is called a symbiotic relationship. An example of which would be a flea or tick on a dog (living on the host) or a roundworm living in the intestine of the dog (living inside the host).
An Organism which lives in or on a host and harms it is a Parasite
This relationship is parasitism benefited one is parasite and another one is host.
is called parasite.
A parasite or pathogen.
parasite.
It is called Commensalism- a relationship in which one organism benefits from another organism but does not harm it
A symbiotic relationship that benefits one organism and harms another is called parasitism.
*parasitism is where one animal is helped while other is harmed* commensalism is where one is helped and other is not really affected mutualism is where both animals are helped
Mutually beneficial relationship means that each separate organism benefits from the relationship in one way or another. In general, this concerns no negative side effects in which case it would be a parasitic relationship or whatever else there is. This can be applied to organisms such as trees, insects, animals, fungi, and of course humans. One major mutually beneficial relationship could be a [good] marriage -- I'll let you discover the different forms of benefits associated with that. To talk about organisms other than humans, there are birds who live off the backs of tortoises who pull old detritus from their skin. This benefits the birds because it feeds them, and it benefits the tortoises because they're better off from it. There are also plenty of bacteria within the human digestive tract. These bacteria exist, obviously, to serve their own lifeforce through the food we eat. However, they help us to digest otherwise unusable portions of our food, and hence, we benefit too.
They attach on to another organism and live and feed off it. They benefit but their host (the organism that they live on) doesn't. Actually, parasites result in harm to the host.
It is called Commensalism- a relationship in which one organism benefits from another organism but does not harm it
It is called Commensalism- a relationship in which one organism benefits from another organism but does not harm it
A natural relationship in which one organism lives in or on another organism and benefits from the relationship while the other organism may be harmed is a parasitic relationship.
It depends on what type of relationship they have. Parasitism is when one organism lives in or on another organism and harms it. Mutualism is when two organisms benefit from their relationship. Commensalism is when one organism benefits from the relationship and the other is not helped, nor is it harmed.
A symbiotic relationship that benefits one organism and harms another is called parasitism.
Mutualism
This is called a predator-prey relationship.
This is called parasitism.
parasitism
parasitism or commensalism parasitism - when one organism benefits off the other and the other is harmed commensalism - when one benefits off the other, but neither organisms are harmed
*parasitism is where one animal is helped while other is harmed* commensalism is where one is helped and other is not really affected mutualism is where both animals are helped
parasite or predator