Selection pressures are like invisible helpers that decide which animals or plants get to grow up and have babies, and which ones don’t.
Imagine you're playing a game with your friends in the park, and it's really hot outside. The kids who wear sunglasses or put on hats stay cool and play longer. The kids who don’t wear any protection might get too hot, feel tired, and leave the game early. That’s like selection pressure: the heat is the challenge, and the sunglasses are the helpful traits that let some people win the game, or in nature, live longer and have more babies.
What Makes a Good Helper?
Not all helpers are the same. If it rains later, then kids who bring umbrellas will stay dry and keep playing too. So the weather changes which traits are most useful. That’s how selection pressures work, they're like the rules of the game, and different rules make different traits win.
Sometimes, a trait that helps today might not help tomorrow. But that's okay, it’s all part of the fun!
Examples
- Birds with beaks better suited for eating specific seeds thrive.
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See also
- How Does Natural Selection Work?
- How Does Five fingers of evolution - Paul Andersen Work?
- Where Do New Viruses Come From?
- Why Don't Any Animals Have Wheels?
- What are diversity of possible evolutionary paths?