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Question
case study
effects of crossbill predation on pines
why do pinecones develop heavier, longer cones after years of predation?
crossbills have a hard time getting their beaks into cones that are heavy, less wide, and have thicker scaling.
why might the population of lodgepole pines have longer cones and thicker scales after crossbill predation?
- to protect against squirrels
- to protect against crossbills
- the production of these cones is random
The problem is about the effect of crossbill predation on pines, specifically why lodgepole pines develop longer cones and thicker scales. The option "To protect against crossbills" makes sense because crossbills have difficulty with certain cone traits (heavier, less wide, thicker scaling), so the pines would evolve these traits as a defense against crossbill predation. The other options: protecting against squirrels isn't indicated here, and the predation isn't random as it's driving the cone trait changes.
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B. To protect against crossbills (assuming the second option is labeled B; adjust label based on actual question's option numbering, but the content is "To protect against crossbills")