Animals do yes, but plants can as well, especially in cases of over crowding.
In the taiga, animals like wolves, lynx, and foxes may compete for resources such as prey like rodents and hares. These predators can also compete with each other for territory and access to food sources. Additionally, herbivores like moose and deer compete for food such as vegetation and browse.
Plants compete for resources such as sunlight, water, nutrients, and space to grow. These resources are essential for their growth, development, and reproduction. Plants use different strategies to outcompete other plants for these resources, such as growing taller to reach more sunlight or developing larger root systems to access more water and nutrients.
Savannah animals often compete for resources such as food, water, and mating opportunities. The limited availability of these resources can lead to competition among different species in the ecosystem.
Antarctic plants primarily compete for access to sunlight, water, and nutrients in the soil. These resources can be limited due to harsh environmental conditions such as cold temperatures and ice cover. Plants must adapt to these conditions in order to survive and thrive in the Antarctic ecosystem.
Plants compete for growing space, nutrients and water. If they are very crowded, they can even compete for sunlight.
Technically, all of the animals compete for resources as they are all limited. Exspecially for water, camels, desert eagles, barn owls, all of the different kinds of goats, rats, they all compete for water.
Trees and grass compete for sunlight and water. As the tree grows taller and thicker, it shuts off light to the grass below. Some trees such as maples have shallow roots that go out under the grass and take a good share of the water that the grass needs to survive.
animals and plats compete over : food,space,sunlight,mates,
water and food.
land, Food and a mate are what animals compete for in the rain forest
The same resources as they do everywhere else: food, water and shelter. In a cave, there is no light, so there are no plants to eat. Animals and fungi who live in caves have to survive by eating other animals or their waste products.
Yes, they compete for resources (light, water, nutrients), they can even compete for the attention of pollinators. You get parasitic plants as well which live off other plants
its so easy have you ever went to the 4th grade plants and animals compete for food, teratory, space, breeding
As you know, organisms are split into 2 groups - Animals and plants. Plants compete for: Water Nutrients from the soil Sunlight for photosynthesis Space to grow Animals compete for: Food Water Shelter from predators A mate to produce offspring Hope it helps
Plants: -space -light -water -nutrients and minerals Animals: -food -mates(lovers) -space -water
In the taiga, animals like wolves, lynx, and foxes may compete for resources such as prey like rodents and hares. These predators can also compete with each other for territory and access to food sources. Additionally, herbivores like moose and deer compete for food such as vegetation and browse.
"Cornivores" are plants that have adapted to grow in cornfields and thrive in the same conditions as corn. These plants can compete with corn for resources such as water, sunlight, and nutrients, potentially affecting the yield of corn crops.