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A simple coevolution explanation here.

A population of rabbits that is running faster, on average, over time is going to affect the population of foxes that pursue the rabbits as food. Some foxes will have variations that lead to faster running and these foxes will be the ones that are reproductively successful and give rise to following generations of foxes.

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11y ago
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9y ago

A characteristic must be inheritable for it to affect evolution.

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Brittnee Lara

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2y ago
This is sh*t

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15y ago

give a specie on evolution what influence it might have had give a specie on evolution what influence it might have had

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14y ago

The characteristic must be heritable, that is, transmissible from one generation to the next.

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Q: How could the evolution of a characteristic within one species affect the evolution of a characteristic within another species?
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Does the extent of sexual dimorphism in a species affect the rate of evolution in that species?

Perhaps, coupled with sexual selection. Take the elephant seal. The preference of females for large males to head the harems drove the evolution of larger and larger variance in the size of the males to the females and rather quickly.


Does Evolution affect climate?

The word "evolution" means "change". The Theory of Evolution is concerned with change among living things, animals and plants. Such change does not affect climate in any significant way. Earth is also evolving. The tectonic plates are moving; volcanic action is changing the face of the Earth, creating new islands, changing the topography. These changes---the evolution of Earth---do affect climate.


How did cyanobacteria affect evolution process?

Cyanobacteria photosynthesised, which meant that they released oxygen. This was the key to the evolution of eukaryote cells that aerobically respired. From their evolution, the O2 levels in the atmosphere was able to increase; this is why we eventually evolved.


Does an animal's environment affect or does it not affect its adaptation?

This is the fundamental premise of the Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection; the environment has a fundamental impact on the adaptations and evolution of organisms. The environment "selects" for those specimens that survive to have more offspring. Those animals that cannot survive are selected against.


Evaluate the significance of mutations to the process of biological evolution?

Answer 1A.Many mutations do produce changes in phenotype, however. Some can affect an organism’s fitness, or its ability to survive and reproduce in its environment.Answer 2Mutations are an important component of reproductive variation in general. Reproductive variation, the effects that causes siblings to differ both from one another as well as from the parents, is the phenomenon that makes evolution possible.

Related questions

What affect tectonics have on evolution of new species?

what affect tectonics have on evolution of new spiecies


What is affect evolution?

The term coevolution (affect) is used to describe cases where two (or more) species reciprocally affect each other's evolution. So for example, an evolutionary change in the morphology of a plant, might affect the morphology of an herbivore that eats the plant, which in turn might affect the evolution of the plant, which might affect the evolution of the herbivore and so on.


How does adaptation affect the evolution of a species?

It is, in fact, evolution (shifts in the frequencies of traits in populations) that causes adaptation (when these shifts lead to increased fitness).


Why can mutation affect evolution?

Mutation is the cause of evolution. Mutation is what creates differences in individuals within a species, leading to diversion. Then "survival of the fittest" can occur.


Did Darwin theory if evolution affect the way species are classified?

No Darwin's theory was not directly linked to classification .


How might the disapperance of one species affect the survival of another species?

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Why do mutations that occur in the skin or nervous system tend to have little effect on the evolution of a species?

Most mutations that occur have a neutral effect, or none at all, so they would not affect evolution. Organisms with mutations that cause detrimental impact typically will not survive; therefore, they will not reproduce, and the mutation will not be passed on, so the species will not be affected overall. Beneficial mutations are typically the only mutations that will affect an organism's posterity and the evolution of its species, but good mutations are very rare. This is why most mutations have little effect on the evolution of a species.


How does the mutations affect a species?

mutation is the ability to change in a species mutation help s the species to get better equipped with the environment .It is nothing but evolution for example mutation in the animals such monkeys paved the way for the humans to grow


What must be true for a characteristic to affect evolution?

Evolution is the change of allele frequency in a population of organisms. So, for a characteristic to affect evolution it must be heritable, genetically so, it must be selected for, or be the result of recombination processes and it must be in the germ line where it is passed to future generation of, hopefully, reproductively successful organisms who leave enough decedents to change the allele frequency in the populations gene pool over time.


When earth ends is it going to start over?

If life on Earth ended, there would conceivably be time for evolution to create another intelligent species. The Sun will not begin to adversely affect the current type of lifeforms for a few billion years.


Does the extent of sexual dimorphism in a species affect the rate of evolution in that species?

Perhaps, coupled with sexual selection. Take the elephant seal. The preference of females for large males to head the harems drove the evolution of larger and larger variance in the size of the males to the females and rather quickly.


Does the amount of chromosomes in a species affect its rate of evolution?

The "rate" of evolution is most accurately gauged in terms of divergence between genetic sequences. Chromosomes are basically groupings of such sequences. It is certainly possible that the number and order of these groupings affect future developments (for instance: polyploidy and chromosomal fusions can affect speciation events), but they do little to affect the overall "rate" of divergence.