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Question
- tapeworms live inside the human intestine and absorb nutrients from the hosts food, depriving them of nutrition. this is an example of
a) commensalism
b) competition
c) mutualism
d) parasitism
- the niche of an organism is
a) the area a species can occupy in the face of competition
b) the habitat of a species within a community resulting from clumping
c) the habitat that exists in nature as opposed to the ideal
d) the role of that organism in the ecosystem
- a barnacle grows on a whale, doing it no harm. this is an example of
a) vitalism
b) mutualism
c) parasitism
d) commensalism
- removal of a ______ from a community affects community structure significantly.
a) keystone species
b) niche
c) competitor
d) predator
10)a cockroach can thrive in a wide variety of environmental conditions and eat a variety. this is an example of a _____.
a) predator
b) generalist
c) specialist
d) competitor
11)a red panda is an animal with a very narrow range of tolerance and needs a very specific habitat and food to live. this is an example of a _____.
a) predator
b) generalist
c) specialist
d) competitor
)oxpeckers eat ticks and parasites off the skin of animals like zebras and control while gaining a food source. this is an example of _______.
a) commensalism
b) competition
c) mutualism
d) parasitism
- Tapeworms harm humans by taking nutrients, which is parasitism.
- The niche is the role of an organism in the ecosystem.
- Barnacles benefit from the whale without harming it, which is commensalism.
- Removal of a keystone species has a big impact on community structure.
- A cockroach that can live in many conditions and eat various foods is a generalist.
- A red - panda with specific habitat and food needs is a specialist.
- Oxpeckers and the animals they clean both benefit, which is mutualism.
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- d) Parasitism
- d) the role of that organism in the ecosystem
- d) commensalism
- a) keystone species
- b) Generalist
- c) Specialist
- c) Mutualism