Asked by jonothan

Biogeographic isolation separates
of a species through geographical and biological forces.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
"Biogeographic isolation separates populations of a species by geographical and biological forces."

Brief explanation: it reduces or prevents gene flow between groups (e.g., mountains, rivers, islands, habitat fragmentation, or ecological/reproductive barriers), allowing genetic divergence that can lead to allopatric speciation. If you prefer a different term, you could use "groups," "demes," or "gene pools."