yes
because in major cities dust and dirt and chemicals from industrial buidings go onto trees in the city so the dark peppered moths have adpated to suit this environment. this is the same thing for the peppered moth who lives in the countryside because their is no industrial buildings in the countryside so the trees aren't spoilt so the moths have adpated to suit to the environment. It's all to do with camoflague to hide from predators!
Both, some help and some hurt. Not all moths are the same species.
Darwin discovered Natural Selection. He said that if certain members of a species have characteristics that will allow them to survive longer, or reproduce more. Because of this, more offspring with those same traits(as the traits would be carried in the DNA, which is passed to offspring) The peppered moths in England around the industrial revolution came in two colour. Grey and white. The white ones were able to camouflage against the trees. and therefore were less likely to be seen, and therefore eaten, by predators. As such, the white ones survived, had more offspring, and became more common than the grey ones. The industrial revolution included the discovery of burning coals for energy, the ash from all this burning clung to the trees. The trees were now grey. As such, the white moths stood out, and the grey ones were camouflaged. And the roles were reversed, more grey moths survived, had more offspring, passed on the grey trait.
Not at all
The word 'peppered' can mean "seasoned with pepper."But it can also mean showered with (or within) as when pepper is applied.-- The reporters peppered the mayor with questions : asked many, or all at once-- The shotgun peppered the barn wall : made many small separate holes-- His speech was peppered with slang words : they occurred frequently
they can inter breed and produce fertile offspring.
Peppered; a synonym of scattered, could either be a verb (to pepper) or an adjective (to be peppered). Or the act of adding the spice pepper.She peppered the egg salad with avocado; just how her husband liked it.He was peppered all over his body with small spots and boils. The plague had another victim!This soup has been well over peppered! I can't taste anything else!
A caterpillars favourite food is leaf, this is all they eat!
No, not all bacteria are the same and there are variations within the species.
maybe all species have the same karyotype;/
Some yellow and purple moths can be poisonous, but not all of them. Color patterns in moths can sometimes serve as a warning to predators. It's best to avoid handling or ingesting any wild moth, as some species may contain toxins that can be harmful.
When an animal or species adopts to their suroundings. example, a species of white moths live in a community, very bountiful. Then some trees of a nearby forest get cut down leaving some birds homeless. so they go to the town with all the moths, the moths stick out so the are rapidly eaten. so they slowly change color, then they get darker and they become harder to see.