Gause.
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.
a disaster in the making.
Only one will survive.
In theory, multiple organisms can occupy the same niche through resource partitioning, where each species uses different resources or occupies a different part of the niche. However, intense competition may limit the number of species that can coexist in a specific niche in reality.
According to the competitive exclusion principle, two species cannot continue to occupy the same ecological niche in a community because one will outcompete the other leading to the elimination of the less adapted 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.
Not for long. Competition for resources will drive one species out.
True
a disaster in the making.
COMPETITION competition
COMPETITION competition
Only one will survive.
Only one will survive.
Only one will survive
In theory, multiple organisms can occupy the same niche through resource partitioning, where each species uses different resources or occupies a different part of the niche. However, intense competition may limit the number of species that can coexist in a specific niche in reality.
They can share the same habitat because some animals live in the same houses and they cant share the same niche because their different animals . =) and that's the answer .
Massive competition occurs when 2 organisms have the sane niche. The organisms are 2 species.