Carbon dioxide is produced during cement production as a result of burning fossil fuels.
Selective pressure refers to factors that influence an organism's behavioral changes. These pressures can arise from living (biotic) or non-living (abiotic) elements.
Such pressures may cause the organism to modify their behaviors, shift habitats, experience population decline, or even undergo mutations. These adaptations may affect other species in the same area positively or negatively.
Possible consequences of selective pressure include:
- Flock X might begin consuming different food sources.
- Flock X may relocate to find fruit.
- Flock X could gradually reduce in population.
- Flock X might attempt mutation.