they are all correct in different contexts. If this is an examination question then it is ill thought out. Organisms that have adapted to a particular niche can co exist by using the same resources in different places eg wildebeest and zebra are grazers but the vastness of the serengheti allows co-existance. Another example would be coastal limpets and cockles - some exist at the tidal line, others fill a niche below. Many carnivores are large and powerful able to pull down a massive carcass they cannot eat all by themselves, and scavengers find a niche in the left overs. Birds often take parasites from buffalo, or follow in their footsteps to catch disturbed insects and warn the buffalo of danger when the take flight. Most animals though have some adaptation unique to the species that allows them to outcompete rival organisms, thus increasing the population until the carrying capacity of the environment limits their increase. Eventually the less successful competitor will be starved out and unless it finds a new habitat will become locally extinct.
2006-08-11 07:51:58
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answer #1
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answered by Allasse 5
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competition is where by organisms are in constant interaction as a result of looking for food,shelter, and mates.competition can be reduced or avoided by;1. an organism migrating to an area that has no threat of competition. 2. the organism can change its time of feeding and by that i mean it becomes nocturnal ,this ensures it comes to feed at night and the competitor is out feeding during the day or vice versa. 4. Adaptation mechanisms interms of camouflage,speed and good eye sight are some of the ways an organism can be able to have an upper hand over its competitor.5. have different feeding levels within the same habitat.this can be sen in the case of a tree that supports many organisms.others only feed or look for shelter at the bottom ,others at the top and this reduces competition and negative interactions.
2015-04-17 21:17:35
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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There is not a single answer to this, and I agree with the previous user who said it's a badly designed test question.
Competition can be reduced or avoided by several mechanisms, including A (habitat partitioning), C (symbiosis are adaptations), and any other adaptation that makes them able to exploit other resources or outcompete the other populations in any way, including higher reproductive capacity (D). The organisms could also migrate or expand their geographical distribution to areas with no competitors.
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I came back because another aspect was missing from my answer: the time scale. In ecological scale (=the lifespan of one or more generations of individuals), the avoidance of competition involves basically migration, and maybe selection of different food items, or whatever the shared resource is. The other mechanisms can only be appreciated in a larger scale, evolutionary time. Adaptations are not a characteristic of individuals; they evolve within the population.
2006-08-11 09:59:23
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answer #3
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answered by Calimecita 7
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(D).
Its called the Competitive exclusion principle which is the concept that two species competing for the same limiting resources cannot coexist in the same community. One will use resources more efficiently, thus reproducing more rapidly and eliminating the inferior competitor.
2006-08-11 07:29:14
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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The classic occasion of transformations is the finches dwelling interior the Galapagos Islands. Finches often are seed eaters however the finches interior the islands have adapted to feed on bugs, end result, seeds or maybe blood from molting birds' feathers! If the ancestral finch had remained unchanged there could have been extreme opposition for the comparable nutrition, habitat, and different aspects. The transformations enable greater of the finches to proceed to exist applying aspects no longer being utilized by applying different species.
2016-11-04 09:19:06
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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Poison resources so they are the only ones having use for them. Or find unique resources, like the panda.
All your solutions are based on sharing. If you want to be successful you need to monopolize.
2006-08-11 07:29:37
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answer #6
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answered by Puppy Zwolle 7
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My first thought was to move. So I would say A, since C would not be easy for an organism to do without biophysical changes.
2006-08-11 07:31:09
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answer #7
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answered by Guzman 2
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forget about all those options u listed, an organism cannot stop competing for resources, its nature, u must compete for everything in this life, when u stop competing then go become extinct, or vise versa, if an organism wants to becoem extinct then it shud stop competing
2006-08-11 07:29:56
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answer #8
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answered by gonziiii 2
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they could eliminate the competition by killing the weaker organisms
2006-08-11 07:50:21
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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