Process by which gene frequencies in a population change through certain individuals producing more descendants than others because they are better able to survive and reproduce in their environment. The accumulated effect of natural selection is to produce
adaptations such as the insulating coat of a polar bear or the spadelike forelimbs of a mole. The process is slow, relying firstly on random variation in the genes of an organism being produced by
mutation and secondly on the genetic
recombination of sexual reproduction. It was recognized by English naturalists Charles
Darwin and Alfred Russel
Wallace as the main process driving
evolution.
Natural selection results in evolution in a way that was described by Charles Darwin: individual organisms within a particular species may show a wide range of
variation because of differences in their
genes; predation, disease, and
competition cause individuals to die; individuals with characteristics most suited to the
environment are more likely to survive and breed successfully; and the genes which have enabled these individuals to survive are then passed on to the next generation, and if the environment is changing, the result is that some genes are more abundant in the next generation and the organism has evolved.
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