Will geographical isolation be a major factor in the speciation of a self pollinating plant species? Why or why not
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No
Geographical isolation will not be a major factor in the information of new species of self pollinated plants receive pollen grains from the same flower or another flower on the same plant and its distance from Other plants hardly affect its reproduction. Moreover self- pollinated plants rarely show variations in characters.
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Geographical isolation will not be a major factor in the information of new species of self pollinated plants receive pollen grains from the same flower or another flower on the same plant and its distance from Other plants hardly affect its reproduction. Moreover self- pollinated plants rarely show variations in characters.
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Answer:
No, because geographical barrier do not allow breeding between such individuals of a population which reproduce sexually. Moreover, asexually reproducing organism pass on the parental DNA to offspring which gives no chance of speciation.
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