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explain how natural hair pigmentation affects colour
Natural selection has no "sub-processes". It is a continuous process that happens under particular circumstances. The process of speciation is a related process, by which genetically distinct populations evolve from a common ancestor.
Pigmentation disorders can cause the skin to be darker or lighter than normal. They may also cause spots or skin that appears to have smooth white patches.
Florida panthers, like all other life, are entirely formed by natural selection. There's not a single part of them that hasn't been touched, over the course of their evolutionary history, reaching back to the first cellular lifeforms, by natural selection: from their overall shape and colour to the metabolic pathways in their cells. Although these panthers are entirely formed by natural selection, there's not any single feature unique to the florida panther that could easily be linked to a specific feature of their habitat.
Genetically, humans have different pigmentation in their skin that cause them to have different tints.
in my oppinion i think colour affects eating because the colour has cemical but there are some naturall colours that r good for you
A sizzling colour change!
Mauve Colour
Natural selection would also destroy the species because sometimes it also leads to some harmful effects of the species.E.g : if in a population of red beetles a green beetle arises,the green beetle would multiply in number as they are not identified by the crows as the colour of the bushes in which the beetles live and the colour of the beetle would be same.whereas the red beetles would be eaten by the crows and so the beetles population would reduce.
Blonde, but it is not her natural colour. Her natural colour is black/brown i think.
No, red isn't a natural hair colour. You might have ginger or orange hair that's really dark and you might think it is red. It isn't a natural colour at all!
The colour of the peppered moth is often used as an example of natural selection. During the Industrial Revolution, the surfaces on which peppered moths frequently settle became increasingly stained with soot from the chimneys of factories, darkening them. Lighter-coloured moths would more easily be seen on these darkened surfaces by predators, and so the chances of survival were less for lighter moths than for darker moths; having a darker colour bestowed a reproductive advantage. As a result, the average colour for the population as a whole became darker.