commensalisman association of members of two or more
species (not truly
parasites) that live in, on, or with each other, and usually partake of the same food
Source: Noland, George B. 1983. General
Biology, 11th Edition. St. Louis, MO. C. V. Mosby ...
Full article >>>In
ecology,
commensalism is an inter
action between two living
organisms, where one
organism benefits and the other is neither harmed nor helped.
Full article >>>Commensalism means "at table together". It is used for symbiotic relationships in which one
organism consumes the unused food of another. Some examples: ...
Full article >>>commensalism: a relationship in which one
population receives a benefit from an association while the other is neither benefited nor harmed.
community: a situation in which
populations of
organisms each contain a
habitat and a
niche.
Full article >>>commensalism A symbiotic relationship in which one
species benefits and the other is not affected.
community All
species or
populations living in the same area.
Full article >>>commensalism(kuh-men-sul-iz-um) [L. com, together + mensa, table]
A symbiotic relationship in which the symbiont benefits but the
host is neither helped nor harmed. See
Symbiosis.
Full article >>>commensalism A relationship in which one individual lives close to or on another and benefits, and the
host is unaffected; often symbiotic.
Full article >>>Commensalism. The close association of two or more dissimilar
organisms where the association is advantageous to one and doesn't affect the other(s). See
Parasitism,
Symbiosis. Competency.
Full article >>>However,
mutualism,
parasitism, and
commensalism are often not discrete categories of interactions and should rather be perceived as a continuum of inter
action ranging from
parasitism to
mutualism.
Full article >>>A relationship between two
organisms that live in intimate contact with each other; includes
mutualism (both
organisms benefit, they rely on each other for
survival),
parasitism (one
organism benefits at its
host's expense) and
commensalism (one ...
Full article >>>'"/>