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How did natural selection shape the evolution of finches on the Galápagos Islands?Multiple choice question.Several different bird species migrated from the mainland to the Galápagos Islands and occupied the habitats to which they were best suited.Birds with different heritable differences were able to better survive and reproduce in different habitats.

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How did natural selection shape the evolution of finches on the Galápagos Islands?Multiple choice question.Several different bird species migrated from the mainland to the Galápagos Islands and occupied the habitats to which they were best suited.Birds with different heritable differences were able to better survive and reproduce in different habitats.

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Solution

The process of natural selection shaping the evolution of finches on the Galápagos Islands can be explained in the following steps:

  1. Initially, a population of finches migrated from the mainland to the Galápagos Islands. This population had a variety of traits among its members.

  2. The Galápagos Islands presented a variety of different habitats, each with its own unique environmental challenges and food sources.

  3. Some finches had traits that were better suited to certain habitats. For example, finches with larger, stronger beaks were better able to crack open the hard seeds found on some of the islands, while finches with smaller, more delicate beaks were better suited to eating the soft insects found on other islands.

  4. The finches with traits that were well-suited to their environment were more likely to survive and reproduce. This is the process of natural selection.

  5. Over time, the finches that were best adapted to each habitat became increasingly different from each other. This led to the evolution of different species of finches, each uniquely adapted to its own specific habitat on the Galápagos Islands.

So, the correct answer to the multiple-choice question would be: "Birds with different heritable differences were able to better survive and reproduce in different habitats."

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Similar Questions

Why did Darwin infer that finches on Galápagos islands had undergone evolution by natural selection?Multiple choice question.Because of the close correspondence between their beaks and their food.Because they all looked nearly identical.Because they were found on an island but not on the mainland.Because they had the same beaks regardless of their food source.

Finches on the Galapagos islands exhibit remarkable variation in the shape of their beaks. What best explains this variation?Multiple choice question.Differences in their feeding habitsSubtle differences in the climate of different Galapagos islandsDifferences in their predatorsDifferences in their breeding strategies

Today, finches occupy every continent except Australia, most eating seeds, a diet for which their bills are well-adapted. Over the past several million years, 13 Galapagos finches have come to occupy the varied Galapagos islands. Finches found on these islands have very different bill shapes and feeding behaviors than finches found on the nearby mainland. Darwin gathered a considerable amount of field data on these finches and their habitats to propose his findings.What major factors allowed the birds to adapt to their new environment?Question 1Select one:A.genetic drift followed by mutationB.the founder effect followed by reproductive isolationC.mutation and disruptive selectionD.mutation followed by reproductive isolationE.mutation and increased reproductive fitness of some offspring

Charles Darwin observed several species of finches on the Galápagos Islands, each with distinct beak shapes and sizes. These differences appeared to be adaptations to the specific types of food available on each island. For example, finches on islands with abundant hard seeds had stronger, thicker beaks, while those on islands with insects had thinner, sharper beaks.Which of the following observations by Darwin most directly led to his theory of natural selection?Question 2Answera.Variation in Traitsb.Adaptation to the Environmentc.Overproduction of Offspringd.Inheritance of Traits

There are thirteen species of finches on the Galápagos Islands. These species must have originated from a few birds of the same species that made their way from South America over 500 miles of ocean.  This is an example of what?Group of answer choicesbiogeographyfossilsmutationnatural selection

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