Sexual
Dimorphism is when males and females exhibit different characteristics.
These usually involve, color, size, behavior, and other appendages.
In
the animal kingdom, males are typically brighter and more colorful. The
males are trying to prove to the ladies that they have good genes, they
are disease free, and they can escape predators.
Larger
males can win contests against other males also proving their good
genes. Though the males show off, it is the female's choice when she
ultimately makes a decision. It is possible for a female to reject all
males and choose none.
Differences
in size and coloration indicate that there is female choice, the female
will choose a male to fertilize her eggs and in most cases, his job is
done, and she leaves to finish the baby-forming process. All she wanted
was his genes.
When a
large group of organisms all spawn at the same time, the organisms rely
on luck and statistical chance for genetic variation. Males and females
will look similar because there is no choice involved.
When
males and females work together and take an equal role in raising young
or protecting eggs, the males and females tend to look more similar.
They look similar because of their equal roles and because the choice is
longer-lasting. She is looking for more than just a pretty face (and
pretty faces in the animal world do not indicate good egg care or being
able to provide nesting materials, food, etc).
Differences
in size between males and females varies widely. There is no set rule
for who will be bigger, but there is usually a clear reason as to why
one of them is bigger. Males can be bigger because they fight other
males, because they have to guard eggs, or other reasons. Females can be
bigger because they have to carry and nourish a fetus, carry and
develop eggs, protect babies, or other reasons. To know why a male is
bigger or a female is bigger the biology and reproductive strategies
have to be understood.
VSEPR - Valence Shell Ectron Pair Repulsion Theory
-
Valence Shell Electron Repulsion Theory
Electrons do not like each other and when looking at molecular structures -
electrons and unshared electrons (the t...
6 years ago
No comments:
Post a Comment