ES101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 21: Interspecific Competition, Intraspecific Competition, Niche Differentiation

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Species interactions can be described as competition and predation, as well as parasitism, mutualism and commensalism. There is a constant struggle between individuals and species to maximize their ability to obtain food and reproduce while minimizing their chance of being consumed as prey. Interspecific competition: the most common interaction between species is competition for shared or scarce resources such as space and food. The most common form of competition is between two species. When competition occurs between individuals of the same species, the term is intraspecific competition. By adapting to other resources to reduce competition. When species competing for similar scarce resources evolve more specialized traits that allow them to use shared resources at different times in different places or different ways. Through evolution broad niches of two competing species can become more specialized and share limited resources. For example when lions and leopards live in the same area lions take the larger animals and leopards the smaller animals.

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