Biology, asked by Anonymous, 1 year ago

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Que:- give the phosphates of the Darwinism ?


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Answers

Answered by AJAYMAHICH
2

Explanation:

Darwin's theory of evolution is based on five key observations and inferences drawn from them. 1) Species have great fertility. They make more offspring than can grow to adulthood. 2) Populations remain roughly the same size, with modest fluctuations. 3) Food resources are limited, but are relatively constant most of the time. From these three observations it may be inferred that in such an environment there will be a struggle for survival among individuals. 4) In sexually reproducing species, generally no two individuals are identical. Variation is rampant. 5) Much of this variation is heritable. From this it may be inferred: In a world of stable populations where each individual must struggle to survive, those with the "best" characteristics will be more likely to survive, and those desirable traits will be passed to their offspring. These advantageous characteristics are inherited by following generations, becoming dominant among the population through time. This is natural selection.

Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

Hiiii

Explanation:

the main phosphate of darwinism

  1. Rapid population
  2. struggle for food and space
  3. variation
  4. new needs

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