Asked by Alto saxaphone

Various finch species exist on the Galápagos islands. Finches with beak advantage survived longer and were able to reproduce and pass on their beak shape to offspring more frequently. How does the shape of a finch's beak illustrate the correlation between a specific trait and competitive advantage in a particular environment?(1 point)

Finches with large beaks specialized in cracking hard seeds, giving them an advantage.

Only individuals that had beaks well-adapted to eat food resources found on an island survived and reproduced on that island.

Finches with smaller beaks were limited to softer, smaller seeds, which restricted their food options during shortages.

The shape of a finch's beak evolved to attract mates, ensuring the reproductive success of the species.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
Answer: Only individuals that had beaks well-adapted to eat food resources found on an island survived and reproduced on that island.

Explanation: Beak shape that matched available food gave those finches a competitive advantage, so they survived and passed the trait to offspring (natural selection).