A scientist studies a population of lizards isolated on a tropical island over many years. During the study, several rats are accidentally introduced to the island. The rats prey on the lizards. The scientist notices that the lizards with the longest legs run the fastest and are more likely to outrun the rats. Over several more generations, the scientists finds that while the range of leg lengths in the lizards changes little, the average leg length has increased.

Which two statements explain the scientist's observations?

A. Lizards needed to run faster to escape the rats, so they developed longer legs.

B. By running faster to escape the rats, the lizards made their legs slowly grow longer over time.

C. Predation by rats caused new mutations in the lizards, which caused their legs to grow longer.

D. Lizards with longer legs are more likely to survive and reproduce than lizards with shorter legs.

E. There was already variation in the genes controlling leg length in the lizard population before the rats arrived.

1 answer

The two statements that explain the scientist's observations are:

D. Lizards with longer legs are more likely to survive and reproduce than lizards with shorter legs.

This statement explains that natural selection is favoring lizards with longer legs, leading to an increase in the average leg length in the population over time.

E. There was already variation in the genes controlling leg length in the lizard population before the rats arrived.

This statement suggests that the lizard population already had a range of leg lengths, allowing for the possibility of natural selection to act on those traits when the rats were introduced and predation pressure increased.

Together, these statements describe how the presence of predation by rats led to natural selection for longer-legged lizards, resulting in an increase in the average leg length over generations.