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If you examine a natural population of bacteria, it is common to find some antibiotic-sensitive and some antibiotic-resistant strains, even if the population has never been exposed to any antibiotic. Which explanation could account for this situation?

User Colliot
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1 Answer

4 votes

Answer:

The resistant strain developed as a mutation and had no negative effect on fitness.

Step-by-step explanation:

In examining a natural population of bacteria, resistant strain developed as a mutation which has no negative effect on fitness often causes observations of antibiotic-sensitive and some antibiotic-resistant strains, even if the population has never been exposed to any antibiotic.

User Paul Hanbury
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