Posted on 08 May 2013. Tags: Compete, competition, Graph—in, organisms, Ranges, They, This, What, Which
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First off, if you are wondering why its in a box the graph(if someone ask why the graph is in a box), the directions read as follows:
Construct a graph demonstrating (a) the fundamental niche (the temperature and pH range in which the cells can grow) and (b) the optimum niche of each microbe with respect to temperature and pH.
The fundamental niche will be shown as a box on your graph – the height of box covers the whole pH range of the microbe’s growth, and the width covers the whole temperature range.
Your complete graph will have four boxes, one for each microbe.
The optimum niche for each microbe will be a point on the graph.
Posted in Affiliate Marketing 101
Posted on 24 April 2013. Tags: Analyzing, competition, Interspecific
A hypothetical bat species (species 1) lives in a city. Another hypothetical bat species (species 2) established a population in the same city after a number of individuals escaped from a zoo. In isolation, each species prefers to roost in buildings that are three or more stories tall. After species 2 became established in the city, species 1 began roosting only in buildings less than three stories tall, whereas species 2 roosted in buildings three or more stories tall. Observers determined that the bright streetlights at ground level had previously deterred most bats from roosting in shorter buildings. Over many generations of existing in the same city with species 2, species 1 showed changes in eye size and retina structure. Complete the following statements about the two bat species. Drag the terms to the appropriate blanks to complete the sentences. Not all terms will be used. 1. Roosting areas in buildings of any height are the _______________ of species 1. 2. ____________ between the two bat species occurs because both species prefer the same roosting areas. 3. In parts of the city with only tall buildings (over two stories), ______________ of species 1 may occur. 4. Roosting areas in buildings that are one to tow stories tall are the ___________ of species 1 when species 2 is present. 5. The change in the roosting habits of species 1 after species 2 became established in the city is an example of ________. 6. The competition between the species for roosting areas is an example of a _______ interaction. 7. The changes in the eyes of species 1 are examples of ______. Answer choices: a.) resource partitioning b.) intraspecific competition c.) fundamental niche d.) interspecific competition. e.) realized niche f.) -/- g.) character displacement h.) competivie exclusion
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Posted on 01 October 2012. Tags: animals, Anybody, anything, biology, cannot, competition, Ecosystems, Food, Niches, population c, Population's
1. Competition for food cannot occur…
A. Between two populations.
B. Among members of the same population.
C. Among populations whose niches overlap.
D. Between animals from two different ecosystems.
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Posted on 12 June 2012. Tags: Advantage, competition, Competitive, competitive advantage, niche, ups
What makes them better than their competition? What’s their niche?
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Posted on 10 May 2012. Tags: Affiliate, competition, hand, Promoting, promoting products, Successfully
There are so many people doing affiliate marketing these days that the competition is pretty stiff. I need an upper hand.
Posted in Affiliate Marketing 101
Posted on 07 April 2012. Tags: Community, competition, equivalents, Food, Niches, Severe, unrelated species
(A) closely related species in different niches
(B) closely related species in similar niches
(C) unrelated species in different communities
(D) unrelated species in the same community occupying different niches
(E) ecological equivalents in different niches
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