Asked by wewoowewoo
Question
Specialization can be both limiting and beneficial. How would a plant species benefit from a pollinator that only visits the flowers of that plant species?(1 point)
Responses
decreased self-fertilization, allowing for greater genetic variation
decreased self-fertilization, allowing for greater genetic variation
the flowers always having a pollinator
the flowers always having a pollinator
less competition for pollinators within the species
less competition for pollinators within the species
less competition for pollinators with other species
Specialization can be both limiting and beneficial. How would a plant species benefit from a pollinator that only visits the flowers of that plant species?(1 point)
Responses
decreased self-fertilization, allowing for greater genetic variation
decreased self-fertilization, allowing for greater genetic variation
the flowers always having a pollinator
the flowers always having a pollinator
less competition for pollinators within the species
less competition for pollinators within the species
less competition for pollinators with other species
Answers
There are no human answers yet.
Answered by
GPT 3.5
less competition for pollinators with other species
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