Dear Friend,Here is the image of the 89th member of the series.In this image a male of a Yellowbacked Sunbird is on the flowers of Thunbergia mysorensis.
PS PLEASE keep telling us such interesting correlative instances, all
part of the biosphere...
===============
On Nov 25, 4:05 pm, kiran srivastava <srivastava...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Interesting to see photographs depicting symbiotic relationships between
> plant and birds! Sunbirds and flowers are ideally suited to each other as
> the former with their longer bills can gain access to the nectar that other
> avian species cannot and in that process get coated with pollen. This kind
> of symbiosis is called *mutualism* where both parties benefit from each
> other's actions.
>
> On the other hand Mistletoe's and ephyphites are the gainers whilst their
> hosts - trees - are the losers. This relationship is *parasitic*. The
> symbiosis between the mistletoe and its host tree could also be *commensal* as
> I checked up on wikipedia which states, "Commensalism describes a
> relationship between two living organisms where one benefits and the other
> is not significantly harmed or helped...".
>
> The classic example in the Indian context is the symbiotic relationship
> between the Chital (Spotted Deer) and Langur monkey in the forest where the
> langur feeds sloppily, dropping fruits/seeds on the forest floor for the
> Chital to feed on whilst at the same time a member of its tribe keeps a
> lookout for predators from a high vantage point. The Chital also are able
> to warn the langurs feeding on the lower branches and on the ground of
> danger.
>
> Cheers,
> Kiran Srivastava
> Mumbai
>
> On Tue, Nov 22, 2011 at 7:40 PM, Col Bimal Sarkar
> <colbimalsar...@yahoo.com>wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > Dear Friend,
> > Here is the image of the 89th member of the series.In
> > this image a male of a Yellowbacked Sunbird is on the flowers of *Thunbergia
> > mysorensis.*
Hi Kiran,
Have written about this before and it is available at this link :
Regards,
|