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What might happen to the finch populations after millions of years

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The birds would be completely different on each island. The rainfall island will have small beaks and the dry land wouldn’t have that many birds, but the ones that are there are finches with large beaks
User Glenn Parale
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Answer:

Step-by-step explanation:

It was, the first place Charles Darwin observed finch was in Galapagos isle. Observing, the scientist noted that there were about thirteen types of finches, each with a different beak from the other, which helped them during their feedings. That is, some had huge beaks to peel and eat seeds, others had delicate beaks to devour insects, and some had very sharp beaks to feed on blood, for instance.

Darwin was intrigued about this and went to study the finches just try to understand why they were from the same family but had such different characteristics. This then led the scientist to claim that species do not exist in the same way over time, they evolve Darwin thinks and analyzes that these changes occur because of adaptations influenced by the environment in which these birds live.

But depending on climate change and why these birds only exist in one place, they may disappear or create adaptations in their body and cells to survive the changes. After millions of years, the finch populations might disapear, like other species that disapeared along these milions years and thousands years before.

User Scamparelli
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