Biology, asked by brainlychallenger3, 11 months ago

Will geographical isolation be a major factor in the speciation of a self-pollinating plants species? Why or why not?

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
5

ANSWER

No, geographical isolation will not be a major factor in the formation of new species of self-pollinated plants. This is because self-pollinated plants receive pollen grains from the same flower or another flower on the same plants and its distance from other plants hardly affects its reproduction. Moreover, self-pollinated plants rarely show variations in characters.

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Answered by PagalLadhka
4

No, geographical isolation will not be a major factor in the formation of new species of self-pollinated plants. This is because self-pollinated plants receive pollen grains from the same flower or another flower on the same plants and its distance from other plants hardly affects its reproduction.

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