Biology, asked by Sreekutty111, 1 year ago

What are the reasons for variation

Answers

Answered by Raffermation
4
Hey guys this is your answer
Common Cause Variation. Common cause variation is fluctuation caused by unknown factors resulting in a steady but random distribution of output around the average of the data. It is a measure of the process potential, or how well the process can perform when special cause variation removed.
Answered by MrEccentric
1

Variation is defined as the difference in the characters or the traits among the individuals of a particular species...

The process of reproduction introduces favourable variations in the offsprings of a particular species. These variations may enable some of the organisms to survive even in extreme conditions of temperature, climate, etc., While all others of that species die. This will prevent the species from getting wiped out of the Earth. Thus, reproduction help in providing stability to populations of species,

through the introduction of favourable variations...

Reproduction involves the copying of nucleic acids. Variations are introduced in the offsprings, as the DNA copies generated will be similar, but not identical to the original, and to each other. No biochemical process is absolutely reliable. Some of the changes may be so drastic that the new DNA copy may not be able to work with the cell apparatus it inherits. As a result, the newborn cell will die. Thus, variation is beneficial to the species, but not necessarily for the individual...

____________________________________________________

<Judge It Yourself...>

Hope it helps you! ヅ

✪ Be Brainly ✪

Similar questions