Variations in Populations
Natural selection can only edit what is already there. Topic 7.12 is about that "already there": the genetic diversity a population carries — the spread of alleles distributed across its members before any environmental pressure arrives. This variation is the raw material for adaptation. A population with a wide range of heritable variants hands selection more to work with; a genetically uniform population hands it almost nothing.
The payoff is resilience. When conditions change — a new pathogen, a drought, a warming trend — a diverse population is more likely to already contain individuals whose traits happen to let them survive and reproduce, so the population can shift and persist. Low diversity is dangerous: a bottlenecked, inbred, or effectively clonal population carries few variants, so a single pressure can sweep through it with nothing to blunt the blow. Diversity does not guarantee survival, but it keeps a population's future options open, which is exactly what a changing environment demands.
Interactive · Variation Lab
Build a population with adjustable genetic diversity, apply an environmental pressure, and run it. Watch a diverse population hold survivors and adapt while a uniform one collapses under the same shock — because selection can only act on the variation already present, never on variation the population "needs."
Variation Lab · Open the full sandbox →The mistake this topic targets is treating genetic diversity as a cosmetic detail rather than the raw material of adaptation (U7-BIO21). Students assume a population can simply produce the variation it needs the moment conditions change, or that a genetically uniform population is just as safe as a diverse one. In reality, selection acts only on variation that already exists, so low-diversity populations — bottlenecked, inbred, or clonal — lose survival and resilience when the environment shifts. Every scenario in this topic asks you to treat diversity as the thing that makes adaptation possible, and to read low diversity as a real threat to a population's future.
The work
3 ways in · any order
Lesson
Variations in Populations
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Genetic diversity is the raw material selection works with: a population can only be selected on the variation it already carries, so diverse populations weather environmental change while low-diversity, bottlenecked, or inbred populations lose resilience. The lesson walks the way students misread that — treating diversity as a cosmetic detail or assuming a population can generate the variation it needs on demand. It closes with a ten-scenario applet that asks you to treat diversity as what makes adaptation possible.
Diagnostic
10-item topic check
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Ten items on genetic diversity as the raw material for adaptation — that selection can only act on variation a population already carries, and that low diversity from bottlenecks, inbreeding, or clonal reproduction reduces survival and resilience when the environment shifts (U7-BIO21). Take it cold to surface whether you still treat diversity as a cosmetic detail, or after the lesson to confirm it holds.
Targeted Practice
Drill a single misconception
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Pick one of the failure modes you missed and drill it on its own. The round is adaptive: two correct in a row clears the misconception and moves you to the next.