The four stages for a natural selection of a turtle are the same as any other species;
1. Overproduction- more offspring are produced that will survive.
2. Struggle to survive- only the strong survive and those traits are passed to future generations.
3. Genetic Variation- Different turtles have different traits. Those with desirable traits will reproduce.
4. Successful reproduction- Make it to adult hood and reproduce.
The four stages are: Overproduction, Genetic Variation, Struggle to Survive, and Successful Reproduction
The four stages of evolution are mutation, natural selection, genetic drift, and gene flow. Mutation introduces new genetic variation, natural selection acts on that variation to favor traits that increase an organism's fitness, genetic drift refers to random changes in gene frequencies within a population, and gene flow is the transfer of genetic material between different populations.
Overproduction, genetic variation, selection, and adaption
you have to pass four stages of trials, and be nominated for selection from your school or club
The four stages of natural selection are: variation, heritability, differential reproduction, and adaptation. Variation refers to differences in traits within a population. Heritability involves the passing on of these traits to offspring. Differential reproduction occurs when individuals with certain traits are more successful at reproducing. Adaptation is the process by which these advantageous traits become more common in a population over time.
Inheritance of acquired characteristics is not one of Darwin's four main ideas of natural selection. His four main ideas are variation, competition, heritability, and differential reproductive success.
See the related answer below for an answer to this question.
- natural selection - sexual selection - genetic drift - immigration/emagration
The four pieces of evidence that scientists point to as proof of natural selection are the fossil record, biogeography, homologous structures, and observable natural selection in action. These pieces of evidence all support the idea that organisms have evolved over time through the process of natural selection.
Mutation, Natural Selection, Migration, and Genetic Drift.
overproduction: to many offspring and 3 others
The question is semantically equivalent to asking 'What are the four parts of the existence of a banana?' I cannot answer it.