Stickleback Practice Test

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What information can fossil and living populations reveal about pace of adaptive changes?

The exact gene responsible for the trait

Only present-day variation

The pace of specific adaptive changes

Tracking how fast adaptive changes occur is what fossil records and living populations let us do. By comparing trait values in ancient forms with those in later descendants, and knowing the time separating them, you can estimate a rate of evolution for that trait. Watching living populations over generations adds another chance to observe pace in real time as organisms respond to current environmental pressures. Together, these data show the tempo of adaptation—the speed at which traits shift in response to changing conditions.

The other ideas aren’t as direct a match. fossils don’t usually reveal the exact gene behind a trait, and looking only at present-day variation doesn’t tell you how rapidly changes happened in the past. Climate context can influence pace, but it’s not the information that directly measures how quickly adaptive changes occurred.

The climate at the time of assessment

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