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There is not 13 different species of finches, there are one species. There are variations, but still one species. There are 250 different breeds of dogs, but still dog species
he looked at the different islands and found that the same species on every different island had adapted to their certain island
The species of finches Darwin found were so varied because they had migrated over time to islands of different vegetation, and they adapted to better suit their new environment. Over time, the finches became so different from each other that they turned into new species.
The Finch and the Giant Tortoise on the Galapagos islands.
It because they are of the different
No, evolution has created different species of finches on the Galapagos Islands. There are 15 different species that are found on the Galapagos islands.
he noticed that there were different species of animals on different islands which he concluded was from speciation. the geologic form of the different islands led him to the conclusion that they were once a single species on one island.
because the islands aren't part of the continents, so they were never connected to any of the continents, which have similar species because of Pangaea
the galapagos islands
There is not 13 different species of finches, there are one species. There are variations, but still one species. There are 250 different breeds of dogs, but still dog species
No, Darwin believes that land animals traveled to the Galapagos Islands and adapted to the islands in different ways, causing them to become a different species.
Lava Lizards can be found on all the Galapagos Islands, however saying that, different species of these lizards are found on different Islands.
many species have evolved and since different types of lizards demand different environments they may have migrated through time to other islands
he looked at the different islands and found that the same species on every different island had adapted to their certain island
The geographic uniqueness of the Galapagos islands is the fact that it is a archipelago of volcanic origins. These islands hold many endemic species no longer, or never seen elsewhere.
According to the Australian Government website for environment, there are twenty-eight different species of butterfly that inhabit the Christmas Islands.
Darwin explained why Galapagos species had different adaptations than similar South American species with Evolution.