True, Darwin did realize that the observed variations among individuals within a population were caused by selective breeding.
Although he did do a lot of great stuff. He wrote a book called The Origin of Species.
You should check it out if you would like to find out the stuff that he did and what he found out about evolution. Either that or rent a book from a library about evolution.
decreased its genetic diversity
Selective breeding involves deliberately choosing specific individuals with desirable traits to mate in order to produce offspring with those desired traits. Inbreeding, on the other hand, involves mating closely related individuals, which can result in an increased likelihood of genetic disorders and reduced genetic diversity in the population.
Selective Breeding
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.
There are more than two, but two of them can be Monohybrid Cross (a cross involving one trait/gene from a single locus, and Dihybrid Cross (a cross involving 2 traits/genes occupying two different loci
Selective breeding involves choosing specific traits to pass onto offspring, similar to how natural selection acts on variations in a population. Both processes involve the differential survival and reproduction of individuals with certain traits, leading to changes in a population over time. By artificially guiding the inheritance of desirable traits in selective breeding, it demonstrates how the natural environment can also act as a selective force in shaping evolution.
Selective breeding.
depends what your trying to do if you are trying to restore a population of animals the selective breeding if you are trying to make food then cloning if your trying to make a specific trait then 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 two methods of selective breeding are inbreeding, where closely related individuals are bred to emphasize particular traits, and outbreeding, where unrelated individuals are bred to introduce new genetic variability.
decreased its genetic diversity
Basically selective breeding...
They don't. However, in the future, certain individuals might do that.
Natural selection leads to evolutionary change by favoring the survival and reproduction of individuals with advantageous traits, causing those traits to become more common in a population over time. Similarly, cloning can lead to evolutionary change if the clones exhibit variations in their traits that can be subject to selection. Selective breeding involves intentionally breeding individuals with desired traits, resulting in the amplification of those traits within a population over generations, causing evolutionary change.
Selective breeding involves deliberately choosing specific individuals with desirable traits to mate in order to produce offspring with those desired traits. Inbreeding, on the other hand, involves mating closely related individuals, which can result in an increased likelihood of genetic disorders and reduced genetic diversity in the population.
Selective Breeding
Genetic variation is expressed in genes which form chromosomes. Thus any individual in a population of breeding animals can only 'hold' the gene variations that can fit into that individuals chromosomes, while the number of chromosomes in the population is the number found in the individual * the number of individuals comprising the population, a much greater space for 'holding' variations in genes.