A Lynx and a Snowshoe Hare
Yes, a community can have two or more populations of the same species coexisting together. This can happen if different populations occupy different niches within the community, leading to their coexistence. Additionally, variability in factors like food availability, habitat preferences, or behavior can also allow multiple populations of the same species to inhabit a community.
Two species can coexist in the same habitat by occupying different niches within that habitat. This is known as niche differentiation. Each species may have specific adaptations or behaviors that allow them to utilize different resources or occupy different parts of the environment, reducing competition between them. By occupying different niches, these species can coexist without directly competing for the same resources.
Environmental factors such as competition with other species, limited availability of resources, and biotic interactions could have caused the realized niches of the wildflower populations to be smaller than their fundamental niches. These factors can restrict the distribution of a species and limit its ability to occupy all the suitable habitats within its fundamental niche.
The term that refers to the phenomenon of evolving different adaptive forms from ancestral species is called divergent evolution. This occurs when two or more related species become increasingly different over time due to adapting to different environments or ecological niches.
Allopatric speciation
Similar diets
Yes, two species can occupy different niches within the same habitat as long as they have distinct roles and resources they utilize. This is known as niche differentiation, which allows species to minimize competition and coexist in the same environment.
True
Yes, a community can have two or more populations of the same species coexisting together. This can happen if different populations occupy different niches within the community, leading to their coexistence. Additionally, variability in factors like food availability, habitat preferences, or behavior can also allow multiple populations of the same species to inhabit a community.
yes it is possible
Grasshoppers are different from frogs because these two species have evolved to fill different ecological niches.
Cotton does not replace wool, since the two fibres fill two different kinds of niches in fabric, clothing and needle arts.
Nothing, the two species occupy very different niches, and have no contact either negative or positive.
an overlap in their niches
In the case of the apple maggot flies, it is an example of sympatric speciation. Two different populations occur in different niches where there is no gene flow between the two.
i dont no this im the one who asked it
Two species can coexist in the same habitat by occupying different niches within that habitat. This is known as niche differentiation. Each species may have specific adaptations or behaviors that allow them to utilize different resources or occupy different parts of the environment, reducing competition between them. By occupying different niches, these species can coexist without directly competing for the same resources.