Campbell Biology (10th Edition)
10th Edition
ISBN: 9780321775658
Author: Jane B. Reece, Lisa A. Urry, Michael L. Cain, Steven A. Wasserman, Peter V. Minorsky, Robert B. Jackson
Publisher: PEARSON
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Textbook Question
Chapter 54, Problem 2TYU
The principle of competitive exclusion states that
- (A) two .species car. not coexist in the same habitat.
- (B) competition between two species always causes extinction or emigration of one species.
- (C) two species that have exactly the same niche cannot coexist in a community.
- (D) two species will stop reproducing until one species leaves the habitat.
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According to the competitive exclusion principle, two species cannot exist together if they occupy the same niche. Either they diverge their niches so they can coexist or one species will die out.All of the following are consistent with the principle of competitive exclusion EXCEPT
Select one:
a. Birds and bats both consume flying insects, but birds are active in the day and bats are active at night.
b. Two species that share the same niche will exclude other competing species.
c. Different bird species forage for insects in different parts of the same tree.
d. When two species of Paramecium are grown in the same medium, one strain will eventually eliminate its competitor.
What is the principle that teaches us that two species cannot coexist in the exact same niche in the same habitat.This is because species with same niches have comparable requirements, which implies they would fight for the same resources.
If the human species were to suffer a population crash, what are three species that might move in to occupy part of our ecological niche?
Chapter 54 Solutions
Campbell Biology (10th Edition)
Ch. 54.1 - Explain how competition, predation, and mutualism...Ch. 54.1 - According to the principle of competitive...Ch. 54.1 - Prob. 3CCCh. 54.2 - What two components contribute to species...Ch. 54.2 - How is a food chain different from a food web?Ch. 54.2 - Prob. 3CCCh. 54.3 - Why do high and low levels of disturbance usually...Ch. 54.3 - Prob. 2CCCh. 54.3 - WHAT IF? Most prairies experience regular fires,...Ch. 54.4 - Describe two hypotheses that explain why species...
Ch. 54.4 - Prob. 2CCCh. 54.4 - WHAT IF? Based on MacArthur and Wilson's island...Ch. 54.5 - What are pathogens?Ch. 54.5 - WHAT IF? Rabies, a viral disease in mammals, is...Ch. 54 - Prob. 54.1CRCh. 54 - Based on indexes such as Shannon diversity, is a...Ch. 54 - Is the disturbance pictured in figure 54.25 more...Ch. 54 - How have periods of glaciation influenced...Ch. 54 - Prob. 54.5CRCh. 54 - Prob. 1TYUCh. 54 - The principle of competitive exclusion states that...Ch. 54 - Based on the intermediate disturbance hypothesis,...Ch. 54 - According to the island equilibrium model, species...Ch. 54 - Prob. 5TYUCh. 54 - Prob. 6TYUCh. 54 - Prob. 7TYUCh. 54 - The most plausible hypothesis to explain why...Ch. 54 - Community 1 contains 100 individuals distributed...Ch. 54 - Prob. 10TYUCh. 54 - EVOLUTION CONNECTION Explain why adaptations of...Ch. 54 - Prob. 12TYUCh. 54 - WRITE ABOUT A THEME: INTERACTIONS In Batesian...Ch. 54 - Prob. 14TYU
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Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, biology and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- The principle of competitve exclusion states thata) Competition between two species always causes extinction or emigration of one species.b) Two species will stop reproducing until one species leaves the habitat.c) Two species cannot coexist in the same habitat. d) Two species that have exactly the same niche cannot coexist in a community.arrow_forwardCompetitive exclusion occurs under the following conditions: a. when fundamental niches overlap and competition is asymmetric b. when realized niches overlap and competition is asymmetric c. when fundamental niches overlap and competition is symmetric d. when realized niches overlap and competition is symmetric e. when competition is excluded because niches do not overlaparrow_forwardDo resources have to be present in limited supplies for competition to shape species niches? Yes or No.arrow_forward
- Two species of bird live in the same tree. Seeds only grow at the tops of the tree and insects only live at the bottom of the tree. Bird species A lives in the tops of the trees and eats both insects and seeds. Bird species B lives in the bottom of the tree and only eats insects. Which of the following describes why these two species live together in the same community? Group of answer choices Species A and Species B have the same fundamental niche. Species A and Species B have the same realized niche. Species A and Species B have a different fundamental niche. Species A and Species B have a different realized niche.arrow_forwardBoth hawks and owls feed on small mammals to sustain their respective populations without causing competitive exclusion. How can this work when both species live in the same geographic area?arrow_forwardThe principle of competitive exclusion states that(A) two species cannot coexist in the same habitat.(B) competition between two species always causes extinctionor emigration of one species.(C) two species that have exactly the same niche cannot coexistin a community.(D) two species will stop reproducing until one species leavesthe habitatarrow_forward
- Which types of species are most vulnerable to extinction?arrow_forwardThe use of the same limiting resource by two species is called (A) parasitism, (B) competition, (C) mutualism, (D) optimal foraging, (E) character displacement.arrow_forwardIf the human species suffered a population crash, name three species that might move in to occupy part of our ecological niche.arrow_forward
- If 99% of the species that ever existed are now extinct, why is there such concern over the extinction rates over the last several centuries?arrow_forwardIf you were to experimentally remove the snake from the community in the diagram below, and you found that frogs dramatically increased in number while most of the other species declined in number then you could conclude that the snake is..? PICTURE ATTACHED A. an introduced species B. a parasite C. keystone species D. co-evolved with the raccoon E. an example of bottom up controlarrow_forwardHow did the removal of sea otters affect the population of two other organisms? Please explain. (Grey means they are no longer available in the ecosystem)arrow_forward
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