"Light pests and Xenorhabdus bacteria colonize infectious soil habitats of insectivorous nematodes, Heterorhabditis and Steinernema, respectively, which nymphs infect susceptible larvae and release bacteria to the insect's blood After breeding, after several breeding, the nematode is re-colonized by the bacteria and enters the soil from the insect's corpse and finds a new host.
Symbiotic Relations Human beings coexist with various species, but there are particularly interesting symbiotic relationships between humans and their intestinal bacteria. There are plenty of bacterial colonies in the human intestine, depending on our dietary intake, we can help and harm. If this intestinal bacteria keeps health, it will make people healthier. This relationship is symbiotic. We will extend this example to Super Intelligence. And if they can prove to be useful to SI, they may take care of us. Indeed, we may be the initial SI builder so we may prove that maintaining and upgrading them as needed is very valuable. Targeting some form of symbiosis dependence may be the best hope for human and SI to make happiness coexist.
The most known symbiotic relationship between organisms and bacteria is that between hosts or free-living bacteria that do not evolve to maintain symbiosis, or host and intracellular bacteria are present in the host cell and evolve through their genome In order to reduce the burning rate. . Bacteria in squid bulbs represent the third type of symbiosis and preliminary data suggest that these bacteria move from squid bulbs to water. "This is a new paradigm for our consensus on symbiosis, which is the third type of situation in which bacteria are not actually trapped by the host, but they are evolving," Hendry said .
Nematodes are very small insects that feed on plants and algae, bacteria and fungi, or sometimes other nematodes. They adjust other soil populations, provide food sources to other organisms, improve soil structure, and help consume pathogenic bacteria. Their eating habits release ammonium to the soil for use by plants. And they help distribute fungi and bacteria that mesh depends on the area around the roots of plants that meshes require. Arthropods are named after the legs of those joints. They eat fungi, insects and other toes, in the process they ventilate and mix the soil, adjust the number of other organisms, shred large organic matter, fill in the soil structure and promote microbial activities It helps. They also distribute microorganisms through the soil, and this process promotes species evolution over time, if activation and inactivation create opportunities for other organisms. Some also feed on fungal diseases