Era
That all organisms are variations. That there are many more organisms born than can be supported by the available resources. That their is a struggle for existence and some organisms will be better adapted to survive and out reproduce their fellow organisms. That these organisms that do this will leave descendents that have these same characteristics which will change the morphology and behavior in these population of these organisms over time.
Phenotype
Its phenotype.
seasonal behavior
behavior that is inherited
They are classified by behavior, reproduction, metabolism and appearance.
Yes, territorial behavior extends to organisms of different species.
Do you mean the phenotype?The phenotype is not only the organisms appearance but also the organisms behavior.
It is when one species copies the behavior or appearance of another, un-related species, to fool predators.
Organisms are placed into different taxa based on their shared characteristics, such as physical appearance, genetic makeup, and evolutionary history. Taxonomists consider traits like body structure, behavior, and biochemical processes to determine the relationships between different species and assign them to the appropriate taxonomic groups.
The Behavior of Organisms was created in 1938.
The Behavior of Organisms has 473 pages.
That all organisms are variations. That there are many more organisms born than can be supported by the available resources. That their is a struggle for existence and some organisms will be better adapted to survive and out reproduce their fellow organisms. That these organisms that do this will leave descendents that have these same characteristics which will change the morphology and behavior in these population of these organisms over time.
Peter C. Reynolds has written: 'On the evolution of human behavior' -- subject(s): Animal behavior, Behavior evolution, Evolutionary psychology, Genetic psychology, Human evolution
gray wolves variation trait
yes. it is possible. the child may have inherited his/her apperance or behavior from his/her grandparents or from close relative members.
Roger Abrantes has written: 'The evolution of canine social behavior' -- subject(s): Behavior, Canidae, Evolution