Really, this is a simple and easy question.
To make it easier to understand, consider a population of moths. These moths are originally white. The trees in the area are a color that allow the moths to camouflage to escape predation.
There is a particular woodland that these moths most reside in, but as industrialization increases in the area, the emission of smog increases, which darkens the trees, this changing the moth's habitat. Due to this environmental change, some moths become darker in color due to the smog emissions on the tree bark. Some mlths, however, are still bright in color. Due to this environmental change, the bright-colored moths are not able to survive and reproduce, and their population eventually dies out.
This is one of the rather basic examples of natural selection.
To answer your question, therefore, the population would eventually die out, due to those organisms not having the compatible adaption for their environment, which line up with the natural selection principle.
Hope you find this helpful.
Answer:
The rock is pulled down by movements in the earth's crust and gets hotter and hotter as it goes deeper. It takes temperatures between 600 and 1,300 degrees Celsius (1,100 and 2,400 degrees Fahrenheit) to melt a rock, turning it into a substance called magma (molten rock).
The recruitment of sensory
neurons is known as population coding. Population coding is a method used to
represent stimuli by applying the joint activities of a number of neurons. Each
sensory neuron has a distribution of responses above some set of inputs, and
the responses of many neurons may be added to ascertain some value about the
inputs.
I'm sorry but can you be a bit more specific on these following observations?