Answer:
Before the industrial revolution, there wasn't much pollution/soot, and the moths were mostly light colored. When humans started using machines for everything, soot coated the trees and the light colored moths were easier for birds (predators) to see. The moths became mostly dark colored, because it was better camoflauge.
Now that we have environmental restrictions, there isn't as much soot everywhere. Now moths are mostly light colored again, because the dark moths are easier to see.
Answer: Option A) A-C-T-T-G
Explanation:
The base sequence on a strand of DNA is usually paired to specific complimentary bases. These specific pairings are as follows:
Adenine (A) pairs with Thymine (T)
Guanine (G) pairs with Cytosine (C). So when you find A replace with T, so also replace C with G and vice versa.
Thus, the complimentary sequence of the T-G-A-A-C DNA strand is A-C-T-T-G
Carbohydrates are sugars, and they provide energy for all cells. They also provide structure.
<h2>Answer:</h2>
The speciation occurred <u>because of different mating calls.</u>
<h3>Explanation:</h3>
- Speciation is an evolutionary process which occurs when one group of specie evolve due to climate change into distinct specie.
- According to this concept, the gray frogs will change into a distinct specie and they will not evolve to frogs, living in grasslands.
- Basically, the one feature of the specie which prevents them to merge into the same specie of other population is the cause of speciation.
Evolutionary<span> thought, the conception that </span>species<span> change over time, has roots in antiquity - in the ideas of the </span>ancient Greeks<span>, </span>Romans<span>, and </span>Chinese<span> as well as in </span>medieval Islamic science<span>. With the beginnings of modern </span>biological taxonomy<span> in the late 17th century, two opposed ideas influenced </span>Western<span> biological thinking: </span>essentialism<span>, the belief that every species has essential characteristics that are unalterable, a concept which had developed from </span>medieval Aristotelian metaphysics<span>, and that fit well with </span>natural theology<span>; and the development of the new anti-Aristotelian approach to </span>modern science<span>: as the </span>Enlightenment<span> progressed, evolutionary </span>cosmology<span> and the </span>mechanical philosophy<span> spread from the </span>physical sciences<span> to </span>natural history<span>. </span>Naturalists<span> began to focus on the variability of species; the emergence of </span>paleontology<span> with the concept of </span>extinction<span> further undermined static views of </span>nature<span>. In the early 19th century </span>Jean-Baptiste Lamarck<span> (1744 – 1829) proposed his </span>theory<span> of the </span>transmutation of species<span>, the first fully formed theory of </span>evolution<span>.</span>