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there are six types which are below: 1. geographical isolation 2. ecological (habitat) isolation 3. behavioral (ethological) isolation 4. temporal isolation 5. structural (mechanical) isolation 6. gamete mortality (gamete isolation)
Temporal isolation
On my worksheet for biology the possible answers for that exact question areinfertilityextinctionisolationselection.hope that narrows it down_____________________________The answer is: isolation.
Temporal isolation-species mating at different times of the year.Behavioral isolation-mating behaviors in two groups of isolated populations change, thus making individuals from the two groups not attracted to each other.Pollinator isolation-some closely related plant species have flowers that attract different pollinators, preventing the two species from inbreeding.Mechanical isolation-when reproductive organs in closely related species change drastically, making it impossible for one species to mate with another.Gametic isolation-when incompatibilities between the sperm and eggs of closely related species keep them from fusing.Hybrid inviability or sterility-when the egg gets fertilized, the resulting offspring may not live (inviable) or it is sterile.
A good example would be Australia, an island continent. This type of isolation has enabled some amazing evolutionary convergences. Causes might be vast distances as communities or individuals living in remote areas, certain land forms such as the great lakes, mountain ranges, desert areas, large rivers, islands, tectonic phenomina etc.
Temporal isolation is a prezygotic constraints. Two species that breed at different times of the day, season, or year cannot mix their gametes. Since the breeding times are different there is no chance of reproductive contact. This keeps different species separate.
Temporal Isolation
Temporal Isolation
The three types of reproductive isolation are: 1. Temporal isolation: different times of reproduction 2. Behavioral isolation: different habits of the same species 3. Geographical isolation: species are separated by natural barriers
The three types of reproductive isolation are: 1. Temporal isolation: different times of reproduction 2. Behavioral isolation: different habits of the same species 3. Geographical isolation: species are separated by natural barriers
An evolutionary mechanism that keeps individuals of different species from interbreeding, even if they live in the same environment.
1. When new species form.2. When a group is separated from the rest of its species.3. When members of the isolated group can no longer mate with the rest of species.
The flashing pattern of the firefly is used to attract the opposite sex and find a mate. The patterns attract only other fireflies, not other species, and this is why it is an isolation behavior.
No, a firefly is not an arachnid, it is an insect. There is different kinds of fireflies, like Black fireflies, Eastern fireflies, Photuris species fireflies, etc.
The flashing pattern of the firefly is used to attract the opposite sex and find a mate. The patterns attract only other fireflies, not other species, and this is why it is an isolation behavior.
The form of reproductive isolation that is practiced by different species of butterflies is sexual isolation by conduct. This means that the pattern of flashing lights that the male firefly exhibits is specific to that species, and a variation will cause a female firefly to ignore them.
there are six types which are below: 1. geographical isolation 2. ecological (habitat) isolation 3. behavioral (ethological) isolation 4. temporal isolation 5. structural (mechanical) isolation 6. gamete mortality (gamete isolation)