Asked by crystal

A biology teacher asks students to give examples of genetic variations that support the idea that changes in a population’s environment affect genetic variation. Which is the least supportive example?
changes in genetics in human populations
antibiotic resistance in bacteria populations
pesticide resistance in garden insects
changes in the color of the peppered moth population in England

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
"changes in genetics in human populations"

Reason: that option is too vague and doesn't necessarily show environmental change causing selection. The other three are clear examples where an environmental pressure (antibiotics, pesticides, industrial soot) altered allele frequencies in the population.