i dont no this im the one who asked it
Yes. There are different niches in the same habitat.
different animals have different niches in their habitats
yes it is possible
yes it is possible
missplaced niches and several but they try to adapt to each other
There niche is how they survive and habitat is were it lives.
Niche: an organism's role in the environment. Habitat: specifically where it lives. For example, many organisms maybe have the same habitat (under a log, if we're considering insects), but as long as they occupy different niches, they will not be in competition.
Competition has restricted the ranges of both species.
The key roles or niches that organisms fill in their habitat are producers, primary and secondary consumers (herbivores, carnivores and omnivores), predators, prey, scavengers and decomposers.
Niche: an organism's role in the environment. Habitat: specifically where it lives. For example, many organisms maybe have the same habitat (under a log, if we're considering insects), but as long as they occupy different niches, they will not be in competition.
No, a single habitat can have many niches. The number correlates with the number of species.
Adaptive radiation occurs when a species occupies a habitat with unoccupied niches