Organisms can adapt to different environments, however, this usually occurs over generations and at the population level. At the level of the individual, an example is mutations, in which the offspring may have different characteristics from the progeny. However, these adaptations of the offspring will either be detrimental or give an advantage depending on the environment in which it is
Because these changes occur gradually over generations, individual organisms cannot increase their fitness on their own. And although there are special cases in which an organism can adapt to environmental changes through a phenomenon called phenotypic plasticity, this is not common in all species and is not due to a genetic change in the individual. Therefore, the answer would be B (sometimes, it depends on where they are located if the adaptation is helpful or not).