Environmental Sciences, asked by wanisahil913, 6 months ago

positive interaction

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Answered by KeshavKhattar
1

Answer:

Positive interactions are cooperative relationships between species that result in better growth, reproduction, and survival for at least one species involved in the interaction, without negatively affecting the other species (Morin, 1999; Stiling, 1999). Hope it helps

Answered by smita75
1

Answer:

Positive interactions are cooperative relationships between species that result in better growth, reproduction, and survival for at least one species involved in the interaction, without negatively affecting the other species (Morin, 1999; Stiling, 1999).

Well-known examples of mutualisms include the positive effects generated between fungi and algae that produce lichens found on rocks or trees, corals and microscopic algae that form the ocean's tropical reef systems, flowering plants and their insect pollinators, and fungi or bacteria and the roots of most plants on.

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