The correct answer is A. Two populations of finches that cannot produce viable offspring
Explanation:
Reproductive isolation is a biological and evolutionary phenomenon that prevents two species from successfully reproducing, this means they cannot produce offspring or the offspring is not fertile, even if these species had a common ancestor. Additionally, as a result of reproductive isolation, each species keeps its genes and features. This phenomenon is best exemplified in "Two populations of finches that cannot produce viable offspring " because this refer to the barriers for different species to reproduce or produce viable offspring, which is the focus of reproductive isolation.
Well, you don't specify the parent traits, so I'll just do one for each...
If both parents are homozygous RR, then all 60 of the babies will be black
If both parents are homozygous WW, then all 60 of the babies will be white
If both parents are heterozygous RW, then there will be 15 black babies, 15 white babies, and 30 spotted babies.
If one parent is homozygous RR and one is homozygous WW, then all of the babies will be spotted
If one parent is homozygous RR and one is heterozygous RW, then 30 of the babies will be black, and 30 will be spotted
If one parent is homozygous WW and one is heterozygous RW, then 30 of the babies will be white, and 30 will be spotted.
The volume<span> of water in a very small beaker is most appropriately </span>measured<span> in ... Two cups of the same</span>size<span> are filled to the brim with clear </span><span>liquids</span>