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Natural selection. WALT. Understand the principle of natural selection Describe features which may be beneficial to an organism’s survival and explain why they may be of advantage. Charles Darwin. ' survival of the fittest '
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WALT • Understand the principle of natural selection • Describe features which may be beneficial to an organism’s survival and explain why they may be of advantage
Charles Darwin 'survival of the fittest' is not of those organisms that were most fit, but of those most well adapted to surviving in their surroundings.
'natural selection' is a process in which individuals which are better adapted to their environment survive and breed, whilst those less well adapted fail to do so.
'evolution' is the change over time due to the presence of variation within species
Start by drawing the outline of your mouse Now choose one possibility from each feature
Hungry owls come out hunting at night. All the white mice were much more easily spotted, so the owls ate all the white mice.....
As the winter gets much colder, some mice face difficulties keeping warm despite the freezing temperatures and die due to hypothermia. Only the mice with medium or thick coats survive...................
Over the summer, a serious outbreak of mites occurs. Mice suffering from these mites itch and scratch themselves until they develop open wounds which become badly contaminated with bacteria. The mice lose weight and eventually die due to serious bacterial infection. The mice which are much more prone to picking up and harbouring the mites are those with curly coats which eventually die off..............
As the winter kicks in, predators are on the hunt again for scarce food sources. Those mice with eyes located laterally are able to spot and hide from predators such as owls on the hunt. Those with eyes located more centrally in the skull are unable to do so, therefore they quickly die of due to high levels of predation.
In the warm summer, mice reproduce and very quickly become a pest to humans in the area. The council lays hundreds of traps throughout the entire summer period. • Only those with medium and long whiskers of at least 15 in number on each side are able to detect the mouse traps and avoid the trap. Those with short, few whiskers die off...........
The damp, fairly warm Autumn season provides ideal conditions for growth of a fungus Trichophyton mentagrophytes. Untreated, this develops into a painful fungal infection in the feet of the mice, leaving them unable to retreat from predators as quickly as previously. Those with long claws harbour this fungus much more seriously and therefore die off due to increased predation.
A long, cold winter sees the main food source for the mice – seeds – freeze for long periods of time. • Only the mice with sufficient molars are able to mechanically break down the seeds enough to release the nutrients inside throughout digestion. All those mice with only 2 pairs of molars suffer death due to starvation.
And so now we see, through years of natural selection, surviving the odds of nature, and all the battle in between, we have developed the ultimate, strongest, fittest, most cunning mouse of all time.....