If one is submissive to the other
The remora has learned to coexist with the shark.
Most commonly one species will push the other out of the overlap but under some circumstances their populations balance against each other and the will coexist. Some relationships are very stable with even population declines eventually rebounding to a particular point but in others a small shift in population sizes can lead to one species displacing the other.
As pets no. It is not a good idea to keep these two species together. They can compete for the same things and fight.
They may use different resources. Even if one species feeds on another, so long as they don't exhaust their food supply, both species can coexist. Ticks and rabbits coexist, even though ticks feed on rabbit blood. Rabbits and coyotes coexist, even though coyotes feed on rabbits.
If two species occupied the same niche, they would be competing for the exact same resources. The competitive exclusion principle states that one of the species would drive the other to extinction.
Not indefinitely. The key to occupying the same niche is resource availability. When two different organisms use the same resource in a simliar way, they can coexist without any problem if population density is low. When more individuals are present and occupy the same niche, competition takes over and whichever organism is the most efficient at obtaining the common resource will outcompete others.
although the two people use different techniques they manage to coexist
Two species can coexist in the same habitat by occupying different niches within that habitat. This is known as niche differentiation. Each species may have specific adaptations or behaviors that allow them to utilize different resources or occupy different parts of the environment, reducing competition between them. By occupying different niches, these species can coexist without directly competing for the same resources.
complete competitors cannot coexist; two species with similar ecology cannot live together in the same place; if no differentiation between niches, one species will eliminate or exclude the othe
The competitive exclusion principle states that no two species can coexist if they occupy the same niche and compete for the same resources.There are two possible outcomes of the competition:One species is less capable and becomes extinct.One species undergoes an evolutionary or behavioral shift towards a different ecological niche.
The competitive exclusion principle states that no two species can coexist if they occupy the same niche and compete for the same resources.There are two possible outcomes of the competition:One species is less capable and becomes extinct.One species undergoes an evolutionary or behavioral shift towards a different ecological niche.
I coexist with my family.(coexist - able to live together without any problems)