An example would be us humans we captive breed them then kill them. So they could adapt and avoid the predator but still get hunted down.
Mitosis<span> plays an </span>important<span> part in the life cycle of most living things, though to varying extents. In unicellular </span>organisms<span> such as bacteria, </span>mitosis<span> is a type of asexual reproduction, making identical copies of a single cell. In </span>multi-cellular organisms<span>, </span>mitosis<span> produces more cells for growth and repair.</span>
The dirt doesn’t, but soil contains bacteria- fungi, and the dead/decaying waste byproducts. So the answer is technically yes
its more than likely economy because economy is the study of goods,which includes resources
Answer:
Option C
Explanation:
Long term hunting has led to following
a) Reduction in population size and hence the gene pool
b) Causation of Bottleneck effect
Due to above factors, the remaining population of Northern elephant seals does not represent the original genetic problem.
Due to this restriction in mating and genetic variation shall prevail pertaining to reduced gene pool.
Due to continuous hunting, the gene pool will further shrink, leading to genetic similarity among the organism
Option C is correct