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Items tagged with: mutualism


4/
Seagrass beds often grow in nutrient-poor, sandy waters. The droppings from pipefish, seahorses, and other residents provide a direct, localized source of vital nutrients like nitrogen and phosphorus.

The pipefish eats tiny, free-swimming crustaceans (amphipods and copepods).

It digests them and releases waste right among the blades of grass.

The seagrass absorbs these nutrients directly through its leaves and root systems, fueling its growth.

#mutualism
#seagrass
#pipefish


3/
While standard textbooks classify the interaction between pipefish and seagrass as strictly commensal (where the fish benefits and the grass is unaffected), real-world ecology is rarely that black-and-white. In many cases, it actually crosses over into mutualism.

#biology
#commensal
#mutualism