asked 139k views
3 votes
The over-prescription of antibiotics since the 1940s has promoted the evolution of antibiotic resistant strains of many bacterial infections. This process can best be described as what kind of evolutionary force? (Genetic bottleneck, genetic drift, founder's effect, natural selection, directional pressure.)

asked
User Kennia
by
8.6k points

1 Answer

0 votes

Antibiotics are the medicines which prevent and treat the bacterial infections by inhibiting their growth. Antibiotic resistance is the potential of a bacterium to withstand the effects of an antibiotic. It is a consequence of evolution through the process of natural selection. It occurs through the genetic mutation and the bacteria evolve through natural selection. The widespread use of the antibiotics has made many bacteria resistant through the process of evolutionary pressure driving natural selection. The bacteria carrying the genetic mutation of antibiotic resistance survive and reproduce passing the trait to their offspring.

answered
User Avi Dubey
by
7.9k points
Welcome to Qamnty — a place to ask, share, and grow together. Join our community and get real answers from real people.