they compete for sunlight and nutrients in the ground
Plants compete for growing space, nutrients and water. If they are very crowded, they can even compete for sunlight.
Yes. There are two flowering plants, Antarctic hair grass and Antarctic pearlwort. Very little vegetation grows on Antarctica, mostly mosses and liverworts, and these exist on the warmest area, the Antarctic Peninsula.
Two common examples of plant competition are when neighboring plants compete for sunlight by growing taller, and when plants compete for nutrients in the soil by developing extensive root systems. For instance, in a forest, trees and understory plants often compete for sunlight, while in a garden, different vegetables may compete for nutrients in the soil.
Animals do yes, but plants can as well, especially in cases of over crowding.
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.
Plants compete for growing space, nutrients and water. If they are very crowded, they can even compete for sunlight.
The same as everywhere else, mates, food, territory.
Antarctic pearlwort and Antarctic hair grass
One of the plants in the Antarctic sea is seaweed.
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
There are two grasses that grow on the western side of the Antarctic Peninsula. Otherwise, there are no plants on the continent: it's too cold.
You can find flowering plants on every continent. There are two growing in Antarctica (Antarctic hair grass and Antarctic pearlwort.
only some vegatation can be found such as fungi, moss,lichens and liverwort and some types of algae. There are two native vascular species of plant, the Antarctic Hairgrass and the Antarctic pearlwort
Yes. There are two flowering plants, Antarctic hair grass and Antarctic pearlwort. Very little vegetation grows on Antarctica, mostly mosses and liverworts, and these exist on the warmest area, the Antarctic Peninsula.
There are two species of flowering plants, both of which are found in the Antarctic Peninsula: Deschampsia antarctica(Antarctic hair grass) and Colobanthus quitensis (Antarctic pearlwort).
There are two species of flowering plants, both of which are found in the Antarctic Peninsula: Deschampsia antarctica(Antarctic hair grass) and Colobanthus quitensis (Antarctic pearlwort).
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.