moths have big boobs and they are usually hispanic =)
they are as ugly as ben jewster on facebook...hes my ex and he thinks hes so "SSUUUPEEERIOOOR" U SHOULD CALL HIM A FAG!DONT FRIEND HIM HE MAKES FUN OF GINGERS AND JEWISH PEOPLE....hes an idiot
The moths around my house always seem to flock around any type of light at night. I'm not sure it is as much the light as it is the heat the light is giving off. Not sure if this helped much or just raised another question..........
Peppered moths have two forms, speckled and dark. In the traditional countryside, tree trunks are covered in lichen and the speckled form is well camouflaged against them, hence the population contained more of the speckled form. (Birds easily saw the dark form and ate them.) When the industrial revolution happened, the lichens died because of air pollution and the trunks became covered in soot. Now the birds could see the speckled moths and the dark ones were camouflaged. The proportions in the population reversed. As heavy industry declined and anti-pollution measures were introduced, the whole situation swung back again.
They get in among the leaves of plants, most commonly in bushes such as thyme and ivy. Some moths live in wood and lay their eggs in the small cracks.
salt marshes, mangroves, sand dunes, lowland forest, wetlands, grasslands and mountain zones
Moths adapt to their environment by migrating if the weather is too harsh for their survival. Some of them are also able to camouflage themselves.
they live mostly in adiks
your moms belly.
which animal is the best adapted to its environment. e.g if u had a white and black peppers moth on the same dark coloured tree the white moth would be spotted first . therefore the black moth would be most suited to its environment naturally and live long enough to bread.
moth
The effects industrial melanism is that it has produced more dark-colored moths than lighter ones. It has changed balance of population between the two types since the lighter ones were killed by the sulfur dioxide brought about by industrial pollution. This is true specifically for the peppered moth or Biston bitularia.
There are a few moths who have black and tan colored wings. A common species of moth with these colors is the Promethea silk moth.
The moth will live in the fur of the sloth until it is time to lay it's eggs. Once a week the sloth goes to the bottom of the tree to lay it's waste. The moth then flies onto the waste and lays it's eggs. After all that the moth hitches a ride on the moth to live the rest of its life.
The peppered moth camouflages into the environment it inhabits. This camouflage returns the moth to it's original environmental state and protects it from predators.
Peppered moth was created in 1758.
check your answer
in trees is where the peppered moth lives.
The peppered moth population would change to a predominantly light species and the dark-colored peppered moth would diminish eventually.
no
B) that a harmful phenotype may become an advantageous phenotype when the environment changes
The peppered moth is a classic example used to demonstrate natural selection. It is said that the peppered moth began a light color to blend in to the trees so it would escape being eaten by its predators. However, during the industrial revolution smog darkened the trees and the peppered moth became better adapted as a dark color.
a huge, green juicy lizard would eat a peppered moth.. well with my research it is. the lizard is called the green spider as it is sly and cruel. It trap's it in its tongue and swallows it in a gulp.
yes
Not at all
betularia (lowercase)