directional selection
Artificial selection.
The most common type of natural selection is stabilizing selection. This type of selection favors average traits in a population, reducing genetic diversity and maintaining the status quo of a population's characteristics.
disruptive selection
Directional selection. In this type of selection, the advantageous trait in a population shifts towards one extreme as individuals with that trait have higher fitness and are more likely to survive and reproduce.
Stabilizing selection is a type of natural selection that favors the intermediate phenotypes in a population, leading to a decrease in genetic diversity. Disruptive selection, on the other hand, favors extreme phenotypes over intermediate ones, resulting in increased genetic variation within a population.
This type of selection is called artificial selection.
Stabilizing selection is the type of selection that keeps the center of the curve at its current position. This type of selection removes extreme phenotypes from the population, favoring the intermediate phenotype.
Natural Selection
Artificial selection.
The most common type of natural selection is stabilizing selection. This type of selection favors average traits in a population, reducing genetic diversity and maintaining the status quo of a population's characteristics.
Natural Selection.
disruptive selection
stabilizing selection
It is stabilizing selection
Go to the Select menu, then select Save Selection. Then type in a name for the selection and click OK.
This is called, sexual selection.
When natural selection favors the intermediate version of a characteristic, it is referred to as stabilizing selection. It is the opposite of disruptive selection.