The Competitive Exclusion Principle. No two organisms that compete in every activity can coexist indefinitely in the same environment. To coexist in time, organisms that are potentially competitive must be geographically isolated from each other
- commensalism
- common ancestor
- communication
- community
- community ecology
- comparative anatomy
- comparative ethology
- comparative physiology
- comparative psychology
- competition
- competitive exclusion principle
- comprehension
- compulsive act
- conditioned reflex
- conditioning
- conditions of existence
- conditions of life
- conjugation
- consciousness
- consilience
- constellation causality
Result of Your Query
competitive exclusion principleKonkurrenzausschlussprinzip (ger.)
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see quote
- 1959
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Hardin, G. (1959). Nature and Man’s Fate: 308.
- 1960
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I here refer to the principle by a name already introduced […]—namely, the “competitive exclusion principle,” or more briefly, the “exclusion principle.” It may be briefly stated thus: Complete competitors cannot coexist.
Hardin, G. (1960). The competitive exclusion principle. Science 131, 1292-1297: 1292.
- 1968
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Nach dem „Konkurrenzausschluß-Prinzip“ können zwei nahe verwandte Arten am gleichen Ort nicht zusammen existieren, wenn ihre ökologischen Ansprüche identisch sind und sie um die gleichen [sic!] Requisite (Lebensraum, Nahrung usw.) konkurrieren.
Eichhorn (1968). Natürliche Verbreitungsareale und Einschleppungsgebiete der Weißtannen-Wolläuse (Gattung Dreyfusia) und die Möglichkeiten ihrer biologischen Bekämpfung. Der Forst- und Holzwirt 23 (Nr. 9), 186.
- 1982
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competitive exclusion principle The principle that two species having identical ecological requirements cannot coexist indefinitely; complete competitors cannot coexist; Gause's hypothesis; Grinnell's axiom.
Lincoln, R.J., Boxshall, G.A. & Clark, P.F. (1982). A Dictionary of Ecology, Evolution and Systematics: 53.