Interspecific competition
In ecology, interspecific competition is when individuals of different species compete for the same resources, in an ecosystem. Examples for such resources are food, or space. Even species that never meet can compete with each other, because they need the same resources: Two kinds of predators might prey on the same animals. Interspecific competition is important, because it regulates the population of the different species. It is one of the ways natural selection happens. Interspecific competition causes evolution.
When two individuals of the same species compete, this is called intraspecific competition.
Interspecific Competition Media
Subadult male lion and female spotted hyena in the Masai Mara. The two species share the same ecological niche, and are thus in competition with each other.
Naturalised purple-loosestrife plants growing in the Cooper Marsh Conservation Area, near Cornwall Ontario