Ah I can vouch for the predator and prey part. I am a hunter. Scrutinize if you will, but I am essentially a form of predator. However referring to animals, it is in their nature. They have to eat to survive, therefore the must prey on other life forms to survive. As a hunter however, we humans are different. Although we used to hunt out of necessity for food, now it is less for food and more for conservation. We are different than animals in this way.
Mutualism, Commensalism, and parasitic. Hope that helps
the three types of symbiotic relationships is mutualistic, commensalistic, an parasitic relationship.
Parasitism-relationship between two species of plants or animals in which one benefits at the expense of the other, sometimes without killing it.Commensalism-a relation between individuals of two species in which one species obtains food or other benefits from the other without either harming or benefiting the latterMutualism- association between organisms of two different species in which each is benefitedCompetition- utilization of the same resources by organisms of the same or of different species living together in a community, when the resources are not sufficient to fill the needs of all the organismsPredation-describes a biological interaction where a predator (an organism that is hunting) feeds on its prey, the organism that is attacked
There are three possibilities to this question. There is parasitic where one organism benefits and the other is harmed. There is commensalism where one organism benefits and the other is left neutral or not harmed nor benefited. Lastly there is mutualism where both organisms benefit from one another.
Mutualism: Both organisms benefit from the relationship. Commensalism: One organism benefits while the other is unaffected. Parasitism: One organism benefits at the expense of the other, which is harmed.
MUTUALISM: both living together with mutual benefit or both organisms benefited.PREDATION: The species was eating another organisms( their prey)PARASITISM: where in one organism is harmed and the other is benefited, the one that is harmed may die and the one benefited is a parasite.COMMENSALISM: where in only one of the organisms is benefited and the other is unaffected.COMPETITION: In which the organisms compete for each other to live.
Some examples of ecological relationships include predation (predator-prey interactions), competition (organisms competing for resources), mutualism (both species benefit from the relationship), and parasitism (one organism benefits at the expense of another).
Commensalism - One species prospers while the other is neither harmed nor helped. Mutualism - Both species prosper. Parasitism - One species prospers while the other suffers. Examples: Commensalism - A hermit crab uses a shell left behind by a different creature. Mutualism - Cleaner shrimp eat the gunk in the teeth of toothed fish, feeding the shrimp and keeping the fish from getting diseases of the mouth. Parasitism - A leech on a human drinks the human's blood for sustenance while the human loses blood and may be affected by disease.
There is benefit. Mutual relationships both benefits, parasitic only one does.
parasitic
There are many examples of symbiotic relationships in nature. First, you must define what kind of symbiosis. There are three: mutualism, commensalism, and parasitism. In mutualism, both organisms benefit, in commensalism one benefits while the other is unaffected, and in parasitism one benefits while the other is harmed. Many mutualist symbiotic relationships occur in the natural world. For example, some species of ants "farm" aphids by caring for their eggs, carrying them to food sources, and protecting them from predators. In return, the ants benefit from consuming the "honeydew" the aphids excrete. Commensalism can be seen in the interaction between mites and large mammalian hosts. Many mammals (including humans) excrete sebum, or oil, from their pores. Certain mite species subsist from these excretions. The mites benefit, but neither hurt nor help their hosts. Parasitic examples are more obvious, and include tape worms that live in their hosts intestines, depriving them of nutrients.
If you mean biology-wise, then the answer is: Mutual relationship: Where both parties, in this case animals, benefit from each other. Parasitic relationship: Where one benefits on the others' behalf. Such as a tapeworm in a human. Commenalism: Where one organism benefits but the other isn't harmed or effected in any way.