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:Alternative meaning Natural Selection (computer game).

Natural selection is the primary mechanism within the scientific theory of evolution, i.e. it alters the frequency of alleles within a population. It was first proposed as the main mechanism of evolution by Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace in 1858. Natural selection can be subdivided into two types; ecological selection, and sexual selection. Natural selection is distinguished from artificial selection by humans. Other mechanisms of evolution include genetic drift and gene flow. MutationThis article is about mutation in biology, for other meanings see: mutation (disambiguation). Mutations are permanent, transmissible changes to the genetic material (usually DNA or RNA) of a cell. Mutations can be caused by copying errors in the genetic ms create the genetic variation on which natural selection acts.

It is important to note that the term "natural selection" is often used in the inaccurate yet fairly harmless metaphorical sense as having causal status. To be precise, natural selection is not truly a "mechanism" in itself, as opposed to something like gravity. Instead, natural selection is the result of genetic and environmental forces acting upon an organism.

1 Overview

The basic concept of natural selection is that environmental conditions (or "nature") determine (or "select") how well particular traits of organisms can serve the survival and reproduction of the organism; organisms lacking these traits might die before reproducing, or be less prolific. As long as environmental conditions remain the same, or similar enough that these traits continue to be adaptive, such traits will become more common within populations. Loss of the species' ecological nicheIn ecology, a niche is a term describing the position of a species or population in an ecosystem. More formally, the niche includes how a population responds to the abundance of its resources and enemies (e. by growing when resources are abundant, and pre or crowding-out due to population growthPopulation growth is changing of the amount of population over time. The term is often used informally in place of " Population growth rate". When the amount of population diminishes, the expressions negative population growth and negative population grow can change drastically the adaptive traits required to survive - in such conditions, or in any circumstance where survival is determined by ecology more than by the secondary sexual characteristics, an ecological selection is taking place (this term is used solely to differentiate processes irrelevant to mating, and is of modern usage, having grown up with the field of ecologyEcology is the branch of science that studies the distribution and abundance of living organisms, and the interactions between organisms and their environment. The environment of an organism includes both its physical habitat, which can be described as th itself).

Darwin's scientific theory of the evolution of speciesThis article discusses biological species. Also see combinatorial species for the mathematical meaning of the term. Species is also a movie by Roger Donaldson. In English "species" is both singular and plural. The word " specie" is unrelated and is used t through natural selection starts from the premise that an organism's traits vary in a non-deterministic way from parent to offspring, a process called "individuation" by Darwin. This theory does not make any specific claims as to how this process works, although more recent scientific discoveries in genetics explain several mechanisms that occur in the process of reproduction: in the case of both asexual and sexual reproduction, random mutation (including DNA transcription errors); in the case of sexual reproduction (which mixes the DNA of two parents into an offspring), gene flow and genetic drift are also important mechanisms. Competition (typically among males to impregnate females) for mates produces sexual selection - a process which Darwin considered secondary to ecological in most species.

Natural selection does not distinguish between ecological selection and sexual selection, as it is concerned with traits, e.g. dexterity of movement, on which both may operate simultaneously. If a particular variation makes the offspring which manifest it better suited to survival or to successful reproduction, that offspring and its descendants will be more likely to survive than those offspring without the variation. The original traits, as well as any maladaptive variations, will disappear as the offspring who carry them are replaced by their more successful relatives.

Therefore, certain traits are preserved due to the selective advantage they provide to their holders, allowing the individual to leave more offspring than individuals without the trait(s). Eventually, through many iterations of this process, organisms will develop more and more complex adaptive traits.



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