Biology, asked by grahamreiter, 11 months ago

Mules, the offspring of donkeys and horses, are commonly used as pack animals. Despite the existence of mules, horses and donkeys are considered separate species.

Which discovery would change that thinking and define horses and donkeys as the same species?

1 mules looked more like donkeys
2 if mules looked more like horses
3 if mules could produce offspring
4 if mules were sterile

Answers

Answered by omsamarth4315
104

Answer:

option 3 ✔

➡️ if mules could produce offspring.

➡️ the offsprings of donkeys and horses are called Mules.

➡️ if mules could produce offsprings then they will also called Separate species like horses and donkeys.

Explanation:

hope it helps ✔✔

Answered by pallavisami
12

Answer:

The correct answer is C. If mules could produce offspring

Explanation:

In biology, a species is defined as a group of organism that shares common features and produces fertile offspring through sexual reproduction which usually implies a female and male organism of the same species. This means organisms are classified into species not only because they share certain features including DNA, behavior or morphology (the form of the organisms), but because they are able to reproduce and its offspring is fertile.

Considering this in the case of donkeys and horses they are classified in different species, because even though donkeys and horses share common features including similarities in the morphology, behavior and even DNA, the offspring of these species which is called mules is not fertile (sterile) and therefore they do not belong to the same species. Thus, the discovery that would define horses and donkeys as the same species is "if mules could produce offspring", because only organisms that belong to the same species are able to produce fertile offspring.

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