If the two do not share the same niche, they will eat different food. That decreases the probability of the species competing for the same type of food.
Also, they will not fight over females because they are a different species.
Animals within a species avoid competition by marking their own territory, and avoiding the territory of others.
Some fishes actually change color as a display of emotion.
Either one of the species disappears or they both die out., Also it could have to do with food and living space. If the species share a similar food source then there either needs to be more of that source or less and the species that is stronger will thrive.
firms cann collude and therefore form a cartell to avoid competition
they can disperse their seeds to different areas using wind or animals to spread them far apart to avoid competition for minerals space and light.
Do your homwork :) Then study :)
Thdy can run from the predators
An overlap in their niches
Competition. But more to the point it depends on the species. The Lokta-Volterra equations can be used to produce isoclines that show the expected result but in simpler terms it depends on how well each reproduces and who was there first. Sometimes either species will "win" and force the other out and other times they may find equilibrium where both coexist. On longer timescales the first species that gets the opportunity will generally evolve into a different niche will often take it and move out of the overlap.
Yes. There are different niches in the same habitat.
Because a niche is an organisms place in an ecosystem, specific to only that organism and including its job and what is eats or is eaten by. Two different organisms can have similar niches, but they cannot have the exact same one.
great diversity among the organisms. Hope i helped :D
True
Simply put it is the principle that other organisms, sometimes of your own species, are excluded from your niche by competition for the same resources so organisms tend to different resources and then have their own niches were competition is lessened.
COMPETITION competition
Species that occupy different niches are not likely to compete. This is because each of the species will probably eat different things and seek different types of shelters. They will not need each other's resources.
an overlap in their niches
An overlap in their niches
Competition. But more to the point it depends on the species. The Lokta-Volterra equations can be used to produce isoclines that show the expected result but in simpler terms it depends on how well each reproduces and who was there first. Sometimes either species will "win" and force the other out and other times they may find equilibrium where both coexist. On longer timescales the first species that gets the opportunity will generally evolve into a different niche will often take it and move out of the overlap.
Likely competition. An organism's niche is the specific environment in which they live and procreate the best (which includes climate, food sources, places to live and escape from predators, etc.). An overlap of two different species niches means that the resources these organisms depend on are now in shorter supply. This means they must compete with the other organisms for survival
Yes. There are different niches in the same habitat.
yes.. just YES!
Competition has restricted the ranges of both species.
If the niches of two organisms overlap it can cause problems. Problems could be competition between the organisms eliminating one of them.