They will probably not do well. Part of the study of martial arts is to develop confidence in your own abilities.
1. What happens when markets do not have enough competition?
They will probably not do well. Part of the study of martial arts is to develop confidence in your own abilities.
Well, I could only find COMPETE. Will that be good enough? certatim
For competition to occur, the environment somehow must be limiting (i.e., there must be something to compete for)
They don't, they'll compete pretty hard over food. If there isn't enough, the strongest chick will bully the others out of their shares.
Depends on the competition. Not enough information.
Animals have to compete, or vie, for grass in order to feed. They have to 'stand their ground' ( no pun intnded) to make sure that they are able to eat grass, especially in areas where grasslands are not plentiful. If there are vast grasslands, animals do not need to compete. Carnivorous animals that eat those animals that eat grass also vie for hunting 'rights'.
Competition is different species' struggles to obtain some common necessity, whether it be habitat, prey, etc, within a population. Because environments can only support a certain amount of organisms, these organisms must compete for the resources. This is good for populations because it helps to control reproduction. If an animal is reproducing too fast, for example, another animal may compete with it for food and eventually kill enough to control the overabundance.
No, a butterfly does not compete for food with a honey bee. There is usually enough nectar for both of them.
enough skills to compete with all the other players
If an organism is equipped well enough to thrive in an extreme environment, then the variety of competition is either nonexistent or limited. On the other hand, many organisms that live in an easy environment have to compete with other life-forms.
yes