truth
True
Organisms often compete for food and resources in a process known as interspecific competition, where individuals of different species compete for the same resources. This competition can lead to adaptations and strategies to maximize access to resources and increase survival and reproductive success.
Some organisms win and some organisms lose.
Organisms compete for resources like food, mates, and territory to ensure their survival and reproductive success. Competition can result in one organism outcompeting others and gaining access to more resources, or it can lead to adaptations that minimize competition, such as niche differentiation or resource partitioning. In some cases, competition can also drive evolutionary changes in populations.
because they want that resource
Ecological equivalents live in niches with similar resources, and have similar adaptations but since they live in different regions, they do not compete.
Ecological equivalents live in niches with similar resources, and have similar adaptations but since they live in different regions, they do not compete.
This struggle is known as competition. Organisms must compete with one another for resources such as food, water, and energy when these resources are limited. The competition can be intense and can drive organisms to develop adaptations and strategies to outcompete others for survival.
Organisms on a rocky shore compete for resources like space, sunlight, food, and shelter. Competition is especially intense in intertidal zones where the availability of these resources can change rapidly with the tides.
Competition: intraspecifically (between members of the same species) or interspecifically (between members of different species).
The three most important things that organisms compete for are reproductive rights, food and water resources and shelter. Once an organism has all three of these things, they will thrive in their environment.
Organisms start to compete for resources.