Science, asked by clemsonix, 10 months ago

The smallest species of chameleon is found only on an island in Madagascar. This island has unique geological and climatic conditions that are essential for the chameleon to survive. The chameleon was recently declared an endangered species. Years from now, why won’t this chameleon's remains make for a good index fossil?

Answers

Answered by niharikathakur2005
0

Answer:

Explanation:

As the number of chameleon's population is less there gene pool is also less and as a result their are more chances Of chameleon To get endangered and then it might get extinct

Answered by histrionicus
0

Due to its isolation region in world and narrow range of abundance and availability.

Explanation:

Index fossils will be fossils that are pointers of explicit geological time. All together for a fossil to be a index fossil, it needs to have a place with an animal category that is across the board and abundant. 

Therefore, on account of this type of chameleon, this species has a truly tight range and its numbers are little, so later on, it wouldn't be a decent marker of the fauna of this geographical time.

Thus, the correct answer is : Due to its isolation region in world and narrow range of abundance and availability.

Learn more,

index fossils : https://brainly.in/question/8466858

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