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  1. When we think of animals, we usually picture them as pets, food, or wildlife, but animals play a central role in the symbolism of human lives as well. Humans relate to animals not only as tangible beings but also as images and symbols that carry personal meaning and communicate cultural norms.

  2. The timeline below shows where the symbol Nature appears in The Fountainhead. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance. Part 1: Chapter 1. Howard Roark stands naked on a granite cliff, laughing as he recalls the events from that morning.

    • Ants and Fungi
    • Goby Fish and Snapping Shrimp
    • Fruit Bats and Fig Plants
    • Mosquitoes and Humans
    • Barber Fish and Sharks
    • Tapeworms and Dogs
    • Head Lice and Humans
    • Sea Sponges and Coral
    • Wolves and Bears
    • Sheep and Cattle

    Type: Mutualism Fungusis valuable for ant colonies. Ants gather food in form of leaves of different plants, but they cannot digest this food well, so they use fungus to digest the food for them! The fungus will feed on those leaves and break the plant cellulose into simpler forms of proteins and sugar. Being in the ant nest also gives the fungus a ...

    Type: Mutualism Goby fish and shrimp demonstrate an elaborate and highly responsive mutual relationship. Shrimp build burrows that they allow goby fish to live in. In return, the goby fish use their superior eyesight to warn the shrimp of nearby predators. The symbiosis was first discovered in the Red Sea in the 1950s. Shrimp have very poor vision ...

    Type: Mutualism Fruit bats and fig plants heavily depend on each other for survival and without each other, they often find it hard to thrive. The trees give the bats food while the bats spread the seeds for the trees. This is a fine example of a mutualistic relationship. The fig plants act as a great reservoir of food for the bats and they heavily...

    Type: Parasitism Mosquitoes feed on the blood of humans. However, they do not directly intend to kill humans as they need their host to be alive for their survival. On the other hand, humans are disturbed to some extent by mosquito bites but are not severely harmed (at least directly) in most instances. Humans are important for the survival of the ...

    Type: Mutualism Barber fish eat parasites off of a shark’s body. The sharks allow them to eat from their body as the barber fish are essentially grooming the sharks. This lowers the shark’s chances of getting infections. Sharks have mutualistic symbiosis with other animals as well. For example, jackfish travel with sharks and use the sharks as a di...

    Type: Parasitic symbiosis Tapeworms attach themselves to the intestinal lining of the stomach of dogs and feed on the food items consumed by the dogs themselves. Dogs don’t benefit from this relationship, but they’re rarely harmed, either. At times, they can irritate the dogs which may affect their normal behavior to some extent, but this is not co...

    Type: Parasitic symbiosis Lice demonstrate a parasitic symbiotic relationship with humans and they generally feed on our blood. They are commonly found to grow on human heads as they love to thrive under hair which provides them with suitable warmth. Moreover, another advantage of existing in the body of a large animal is that large animals won’t t...

    Type: Competitive Symbiosis This is a classic example of competitive symbiosis where coral and sea sponges both rely upon each other and compete with each other to use finite sea resources. Sea sponges and coral are interdependent. However, if sponges end up dominating the majority of the resources then the coral will end up dying. Ironically, this...

    Type: Competitive Symbiosis Bears rely heavily on wolves because they often eat animals that wolves have trapped or harmed. Bears can’t run as fast as wolves, but once the wolves have completed the hunt, bears will often intervene and steal the meat. These two animals go after similar kinds of prey and hence often they end up competing with each ot...

    Type: Mutualism When cattle and sheep are grown together side by side and graze through the same field, they tend to develop a grazing pattern that is commonly seen only in cases of multispecies grazing. When cows graze in a field, they don’t graze as deeply as sheep. As a result, sheep can then come through and graze on the same grass and eat it r...

  3. Jan 5, 2024 · From a dragonfly landing on a turtle’s nose to a sleeping polar bear, the images honored in the Wildlife Photographer of the Year contest offer rare glimpses into astounding, tense and tender...

  4. 1. : a spring that is the source of a stream. 2. : principal source : origin. Did you know? When it first entered English in the late 16th century, fountainhead was used only in a literal sense—to refer to the source of a stream.

  5. May 10, 2016 · In nature, there is no planner, but somehow natural forces conspire to bring about something that looks quite beautiful. Do you have a favorite example of a pattern found in nature?

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  7. fountainhead noun (STATUE) [ C ] a decorative object made of stone, metal, etc. with a small opening that water comes out of as part of a fountain (= a decorative stream of water in a garden, lake, etc.): The yard is full of huge blue and green glazed pots, tiles, plaques and decorative fountainheads. More examples.

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