Answer:
The correct answer is B) they no longer attempt to interbreed.
Step-by-step explanation:
This question speaks to Speciation and Natural Selection.
What is a species? A species is a group of organisms that are theoretically able to interbreed in order to produce viable offspring.
We say "theoretically," because members of the same species might be geographically isolated (on an island, for example) and yet, if they were able to get together, they could successfully mate because they are wild animals.
A "population" is a subset of a species, and is comprised of organisms of the same species but which live in close proximity and interact with each other, and therefore have an actual chance of mating.
If members of different species attempt to interbreed, the result is usually null.
A species, by definition, is reproductively isolated from other species.
Occasionally, a sterile hybrid can form if closely related species mate.
For example, horses and donkeys are two different, but closely related, species. Horses and donkeys can interbreed, but their offspring, mules, are sterile.
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