artificial selection
Artificial selection refers to the process of intentionally breeding desirable traits in either plants or animals. It is also known as selective breeding.
The similarity between natural selection and selective breeding is that they both produce changes in plants and animals.
Selective breeding was first practiced by the Mesoamericans and Romans in prehistory. It is the act of breeding different species of animals and plants to get offspring with certain desired traits.
Humans use selective breeding to pass desired traits to the next generation of plants or animals.
1. an example of selective breeding is crossing a poodle and a labor-doodle that have desired traits. usually this is practiced on by plants and animals.
Most of the domesticated plants and animals you are familiar with have been produced through selective breeding. Dogs, cats, cows, goats, corn, grass, tomatoes, etc .
They selectively breed them. So that the animal has the best characteristics possible. Examples are pigs with more fat or sheep with thicker wool.
domestication
It is called cross-breeding, selective breeding or hybridization.
Selective breeding is when you mate specific plants or animals to pass on a certain genetic trait they may have. For example, if you have two horses with very strong hearts then you may want to breed them so that their offspring may also have a strong heart. Farmers use selective breeding to breed the best plants and animals for feeding, selling or breeding.
Charles Darwin was the first scientist to suggest that plants and animals evolved over time. Darwin was also the first scientist that did early studies in selective breeding.
The term commonly used to refer to the breeding of improved varieties of plants and animals is "selective breeding." This process involves choosing individuals with desirable traits to mate and produce offspring with those traits, ultimately leading to improved genetic characteristics in the population.
The process of manipulated reproduction is called selective breeding.
artificial selection
Humans use selective breeding, which takes advantage OS nauturally occurring genetic variation in plants, animals, and other organisms, to pass desired traits on to the next generation of organisms.
* Because it shows that species can change over time