Natural selection can lead to the decrease or elimination of certain alleles in a population if they are less advantageous or detrimental to survival and reproduction. However, some alleles may persist in a population at low frequencies or in hidden forms due to factors like genetic drift or heterozygote advantage.
No, it's exactly the other way around: natural selection causes adaptation.
Kin altruism is the tendency to behave in such a way as to provide benefit to a close relative at personal cost. One might think of sharing food, or calling out when a predator approaches. Natural selection is the differential replicative success of alleles. If one considers altruistic behaviour as (influenced by) the expression of a complex of alleles, then it is easy to see how aiding organisms that share most of your alleles (ie. relatives) would cause those alleles to spread throughout the population gene pool at an increased rate. In this manner, altruism could evolve as a result of natural selection acting on 'selfishly' replicating genes.
Natural selection can help creatures adapt to their enviorment. Sometimes this can cause unwanted problems.
no
people, rats, and batsYou only need one - its called death.
They help each other by gradually accumulate in a species, while unfavorable ones may disappear. Over a long time, natural selection can lead to changes.
Evolution is simply genetic change within a poulation. That change can occur in several ways. One is immigration/emigration: individuals moving in or out of a population bring in or take out their alleles with them. Another is genetic drift, or chance events which cause the frequencies of alleles in a population to fluctuate. New mutations can change the allelic frequency as well. Finally, natural selection can cause some alleles to become more common at the expense of others. In short, natural selection is one of several mechanisms that can bring about evolution.
In terms of a population, evolution is just the change of allele frequencies over time. Natural selection can cause certain advantageous alleles to increase in frequency, and detrimental alleles to decrease in frequency.
No, natural selection is believed to result in evolution.
No, they are two different things.
No, it's exactly the other way around: natural selection causes adaptation.
Natural selection.
mutation
Kin altruism is the tendency to behave in such a way as to provide benefit to a close relative at personal cost. One might think of sharing food, or calling out when a predator approaches. Natural selection is the differential replicative success of alleles. If one considers altruistic behaviour as (influenced by) the expression of a complex of alleles, then it is easy to see how aiding organisms that share most of your alleles (ie. relatives) would cause those alleles to spread throughout the population gene pool at an increased rate. In this manner, altruism could evolve as a result of natural selection acting on 'selfishly' replicating genes.
Natural selection can help creatures adapt to their enviorment. Sometimes this can cause unwanted problems.
no
natural selection