QUESTION IMAGE
Question
- disruptive selection favors which phenotypic traits?
intermediate
extreme
directional
sexual
Disruptive selection (also called diversifying selection) is a type of natural selection that favors extreme phenotypic traits at both ends of the spectrum, while selecting against intermediate traits. For example, in a population, if there are individuals with two extreme phenotypes (e.g., very small and very large beak sizes in birds) and an intermediate one, disruptive selection would favor the extreme ones, leading to a split in the population's phenotype distribution. The other options: "intermediate" is what disruptive selection selects against; "directional" is a different type of selection (favors one extreme over others); "sexual" refers to sexual selection, not disruptive selection.
Snap & solve any problem in the app
Get step-by-step solutions on Sovi AI
Photo-based solutions with guided steps
Explore more problems and detailed explanations
B. extreme