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As mentioned in the video, Dr. Nachman and his colleagues have collected dark and light colored mice from dark and light colored rocks in other areas of the American Southwest and found similar patterns (i.e., dark colored mice were more likely to be found on dark rocks; light colored mice were more likely to be found on light rocks). However, genetic analysis showed that the dark fur color in other rock pocket mouse populations was caused by mutations in different genes. This means that there is more than one way (genetically speaking) to make a mouse dark. It also means that adaptive mouse coloration has occurred more than once in similar environments across the southwestern US. How does this information support the concept that natural selection is not a random process

User Duenna
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Complete question:

In a separate study, 68 rock pocket mice were collected from four different, widely separated areas of dark lava rock. One collecting site was in Sonora, Mexico. The other three were in Chihuahua, Mexico. Dr. Nachman and colleagues observed no significant differences in the color of the rocks in the four locations sampled. However, the dark-colored mice from the three Chihuahua locations were slightly darker than the dark-colored mice from the Sonora population. The entire Mc1r gene was sequenced in all 68 of the mice collected. The mutations responsible for the dark fur color in the Sonora mice were absent from the three different populations of Chihuahua mice. No Mc1r mutations were associated with dark fur color in the Chihuahua populations. These findings suggest that adaptive dark coloration has occurred at least twice in the rock pocket mouse and that these similar phenotypic changes have different genetic bases.

How does this study support the concept that natural selection is not random?

Answer:

The study supports the concept that natural selection is not random because in different areas with the same or very similar environmental characteristics, the same phenotype was produced by different types of mutations.

Step-by-step explanation:

All of the sampled animals are inhabiting dark substrate. Probably animals needed to camouflage to survive. They can do it by having a similar fur color that the color of the rocks they live on. Natural selection must have driven them to produce dark color, similar to the substrate color. So animals from the different regions suffered different mutations that drove them to have almost the same dark fur color. The environmental condition is favoring the same phenotype.

User Trinayan
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