depends where you put it
genetic variation
The simplest answer is variation or death. If the mutation is abberant enough it renders the organism nonviable...a continum of lesser effects that potentially result in deformity, disorder, pigment variation, behavioral change all the way to some fabulous modification that creates a great adaptation that makes an organism more successful.
No. Asexual reproduction provides no diversity, as it creates an exact copy of the organism. Sexual reproduction, on the other hand, provides diversity by using and combining different genes each time to create an entirely new version of the organism.
The organism remains unaffected by external factors that do not impact its biology or behavior. This could include physical changes in the environment, variation in food availability, or changes in temperature that do not directly affect its survival or reproductive capabilities.
Creation of variation occurs in a species and help in the survival to species as the most suitable or favorable character pass next generation and under unfavorable condition only the most fit organism survive and help in continuation of the species.
Variation is important among organisms for us to indicate which is which :))
variation
genetic variation
No.
The fact that an organism's offspring are not identical is known as genetic variation. This variation arises due to the combination of genetic material from both parents during reproduction, leading to differences in traits among offspring.
An antigenic variation is the mechanism by which an infectious organism changes its surface proteins in favour of circumventing a host immune response.
recombination of alleles
They will show variation, that is they will not be all exactly alike.
every living organism has a different variation of their male reproductive system.
variation is difference between genes and trait among individual* organism within population. mutation is change in genetic instruction I hope it helps
It allows variation in the produced offspring as genes from both parents are present in the organism.
Natural selection determines if a specific variation increases or decreases an organism's fitness in their environment and shifts the population in favour of the beneficial variations.