Asked by Chuck Bass
The range of phenotypes within a population is described as genetic variation.
True
False
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Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
False.
The range of phenotypes is phenotypic variation. Genetic variation refers specifically to differences in DNA (alleles/genotypes) that can produce some of those phenotypic differences; environment can also cause phenotypic variation.
The range of phenotypes is phenotypic variation. Genetic variation refers specifically to differences in DNA (alleles/genotypes) that can produce some of those phenotypic differences; environment can also cause phenotypic variation.
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