There is no specific number of animals that can ocupy one niche.all of the animals can actually do the same job.
a disaster in the making.
Massive competition occurs when 2 organisms have the sane niche. The organisms are 2 species.
If 2 mouse species tried to occupy the same niche they would fight. The mice fight to right to occupy the niche. The winner of the fight gets the niche.
Only one will survive.
This idea was first formulated by G. Evelyn Hutchinson, an ecologist who proposed the concept of ecological niche in the 1950s. The competitive exclusion principle, based on this concept, states that two species cannot coexist if they occupy the exact same niche in an ecosystem.
Massive competition occurs when 2 organisms have the sane niche. The organisms are 2 species.
a disaster in the making.
COMPETITION competition
COMPETITION competition
Massive competition occurs when 2 organisms have the sane niche. The organisms are 2 species.
When two organisms attempt to occupy the same niche, they often compete for resources such as food, water, shelter, and mates. This competition can lead to one organism outcompeting the other, the partitioning of resources to reduce competition, or the evolution of differences that allow for coexistence. In some cases, one species may ultimately outcompete and displace the other.
If 2 mouse species tried to occupy the same niche they would fight. The mice fight to right to occupy the niche. The winner of the fight gets the niche.
When two organisms attempt to occupy the same niche, they may compete for resources such as food, water, or shelter. This competition can lead to one species outcompeting the other, leading to a decrease in population size or local extinction. In some cases, the two species may undergo niche differentiation to reduce competition and coexist.
The habitat is where an organism lives and has many different organisms within it. The niche is the purpose that organism fulfills in that habitat. No two species can occupy the same niche in the same habitat due to competition for that role.
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.
When two organisms occupy the same niche, they compete for the same resources like food, shelter, and mates. This competition can lead to one species outcompeting the other. Over time, one species may adapt to a different niche or evolve specialized traits to reduce direct competition.
Not for long. Competition for resources will drive one species out.