Respuesta :
Answer;
False; Organisms involved in a mutualism cannot survive without their partner.
Explanation;
- Mutualisms are a form of symbiosis in which both symbiotic partners benefit from the interaction, often resulting in a significant fitness gain for either one or both parties.
- An obligate mutualist cannot survive without its partner while a facultative mutualist can survive on its own.
- In mutualism the action of natural selection on one species may cause selection to operate in new ways on the other. Mutualistic interactions, such that evolutionary changes in each species benefit the other species
Answer:
The correct answer is "Organisms involved in a mutualism cannot survive without their partner".
Explanation:
It is false that organisms involved in a mutualism cannot survive without their partner. A mutualism is defined as a relationship in biology and sociology where both individuals are benefited from it. Most mutualism relationships are facultative, which means that the organisms do not depend its survival from the relationship. For instance, the mutualism relationship between corals and symbiotic algae help both organisms to obtain nutrients, however corals and symbiotic algae can survive for themselves.