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  2. Ecological niche - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecological_niche

    Ecological niche. The flightless dung beetle occupies an ecological niche: exploiting animal droppings as a food source. In ecology, a niche is the match of a species to a specific environmental condition. [1][2] It describes how an organism or population responds to the distribution of resources and competitors (for example, by growing when ...

  3. Niche construction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niche_construction

    Niche construction. Beavers hold a very specific biological niche in the ecosystem: constructing dams across river systems. Niche construction is the ecological process by which an organism alters its own (or another species') local environment. These alterations can be a physical change to the organism’s environment, or it can encompass the ...

  4. Vacant niche - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vacant_niche

    Vacant niche. The issue of what exactly defines a vacant niche, also known as empty niche, and whether they exist in ecosystems is controversial. The subject is intimately tied into a much broader debate on whether ecosystems can reach equilibrium, where they could theoretically become maximally saturated with species.

  5. Competitive exclusion principle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Competitive_exclusion...

    Competitive exclusion principle. 1: A smaller (yellow) species of bird forages across the whole tree. 2: A larger (red) species competes for resources. 3: Red dominates in the middle for the more abundant resources. Yellow adapts to a new niche restricted to the top and bottom and avoiding competition. In ecology, the competitive exclusion ...

  6. Relative species abundance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relative_species_abundance

    Relative species abundance is a component of biodiversity and is a measure of how common or rare a species is relative to other species in a defined location or community. [1] Relative abundance is the percent composition of an organism of a particular kind relative to the total number of organisms in the area. [citation needed]

  7. Invasive species - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Invasive_species

    Every species occupies an ecological niche in its native ecosystem; some species fill large and varied roles, while others are highly specialized. Invading species may occupy unused niches, or create new ones. [18] For example, edge effects describe what happens when part of an ecosystem is disturbed, as when land is cleared for agriculture ...

  8. Realized niche width - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Realized_niche_width

    Realized niche width is a phrase relating to ecology, is defined by the actual space that an organism inhabits and the resources it can access as a result of limiting pressures from other species (e.g. superior competitors). An organism's ecological niche is determined by the biotic and abiotic factors that make up that specific ecosystem that ...

  9. Character displacement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Character_displacement

    Character displacement is the phenomenon where differences among similar species whose distributions overlap geographically are accentuated in regions where the species co-occur, but are minimized or lost where the species' distributions do not overlap. This pattern results from evolutionary change driven by biological competition among species ...