Ask a New Question

Asked by Anon

Humans developed antibiotics to fight bacterial infections. However, some antibiotics are no longer efective in killing the bacteria they once killed. How does the theory of evolution explain this?
12 years ago

Answers

Answered by hh
The answer is B
6 years ago
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!

Submit Your Answer


We prioritize human answers over AI answers.

If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.

Related Questions

Humans developed antibiotics to fight bacterial infections. However, some antibiotics are no longer... Humans have developed cultures and societies that set them apart from other animals. Why did humans... Humans have developed cultures and societies that set them apart from other animals.What is a societ... 1.Antibiotics can be used to cure which of the following diseases? A) the flu B) mononucleosis C) st... How does the use of antibiotics result in the evolution of resistant stains of bacteria. What are Antibiotics? what does not antibiotics do not work against? When the antibiotics don't kill the resistant bacteria, what happens to the next generations of bact... Both antibiotics were prescribed in high dosage slow release capsules. The function C(x)= 5log(x+1)... if antibiotics seem effective against a human illness, then this illness is probably caused by
Submit Your Answer

Question

Humans developed antibiotics to fight bacterial infections. However, some antibiotics are no longer efective in killing the bacteria they once killed. How does the theory of evolution explain this?

Ask a New Question
Archives Contact Us Privacy Policy Terms of Use