A given annual (individuals live one year) plant population is pollinated exclus
ID: 135422 • Letter: A
Question
A given annual (individuals live one year) plant population is pollinated exclusively by a certain bumblebee. A dry spring leads to a drought that wipes out all of the bumblebees across the plant's habitat. What is the likely outcome for this plant population? Because they need to change their pollinators, some plant individuals will adapt to be pollinated by other insects. A mutation will arise which will allow the plants to be pollinated by other insects. This plant population will go extinct due to a lack of pollinators. Enough variation exists within the plant population to allow it to adapt to any environmental challenge. Some other insect species will begin to pollinate the plant species to allow it to surviveExplanation / Answer
Ans 1...a...plants need to change their pollinators,some.plants indivisual will adapt to get pollinated by other insects
All of the plant population can no do that.in a given population there are internal gennetic diffrenences which normally has no significance in normal environment but when harsh condition arises these in some can be beneficial which may help it to survive in harsh condition.
Ans 2...C...the side fed wolves will inherit other feature which may help them to eat hard food more efficiently.
In soft bed there may be presence of allle of hard fed .when they mate theie may be formation of a heterozygous trait which is more efficient than the parent one.
Ans 3...C...these traits evolve in response to environment changes,to ensure that population will survive any chnage in its habitat
Environment is the biggest stimulation for any evolution to occur..harsh condition whenever arise leads to survival of the fittest and that thing which enabled the organism to survive evolve over a time
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