Following general conditions are necessary for natural selection to occur in population:
- More organisms are born than can survive.
- Organisms vary in their characteristics, even within a species.
- Differences in reproduction and survival are due to variation among organisms.
According to Charles Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection, organisms that possess heritable traits that enable them to better adapt to their environment compared with other members of their species will be more likely to survive, reproduce, and pass more of their genes on to the next generation.
Galapagos Finches: The Galapagos finches studied by Darwin on his famous voyage are probably the most common example of natural selection.
Answer:
3/16
Explanation:
Given,
Black coat color is dominant over brown coat color.
Long mane is dominant over short mane.
BBLL X bbll =
F1: BbLl = Entire progeny has black color and long mane
BbLl progeny will produce BL, Bl, bL and bl gametes. When they interbreed, the resultant F2 progeny will be in 9:3:3:1 dihybrid ratio. Hence in F2,
BBLL : BbLL : bbLl : bbll = 9 : 3 : 3 : 1
3/16 progeny will have bbLl genotype hence 3/16 progeny will have brown, long mane.
Answer:
genes
Explanation:
literally just answered this question i guessed and got it right
This isn't always the case and there is no reason it should be .Whether or not a trait is common has to do with how many copies of that gene version (or allele) are in the population. It has little or nothing to do with whether the trait is dominant or recessive. Let's take eye color as an example.
Based on the observance of DNA, now appearing as 3 segments, the purpose of the enzyme was most likely to split and or break down, cut the DNA at appropriate sites of the respective nucleotide sequences, that the enzyme can recognize and cut, ultimately producing these 3 segments.