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I/GCSE Biology - Continuous and Discontinuous variation

Continuous and Discontinuous variation

July 19, 2021

Continuous and Discontinuous variation ๐Ÿ‘…

Diagram: The difference of continuous and discontinuous variation

Continuous ๐Ÿ‘‡ ๐Ÿ‘‡ ๐Ÿ‘‡

  • This is when individuals in a population vary within a range โ€“ there are no distinct categories e.g. humans can be any height within a range, not just tall or short. More examples:
    • Animals โ€“ humans can be a mass within a range.
    • Microorganisms โ€“ the width of e.coli bacteria varies within a range.
    • Plants โ€“ e.g. a tree can have any number of leaves within a range.
  • In I/GCSE Biologya graph of continuous variation is an example of a normal distribution curve. Most people would be around the mean height and fewer people would be at the extremes.

Discontinuous ๐Ÿ‘‡ ๐Ÿ‘‡ ๐Ÿ‘‡

This is when there are two or more distinct categories โ€“ each individual falls into only one of these categories, there are no intermediates. Examples in I/GCSE Biology:

  • Animals โ€“ humans can be only one blood group (see graph below).
  • Microorganisms โ€“ e.g. bacteria are either antibiotic resistant or not.
  • Plants โ€“ the colour of a courgette is either yellow, dark green or light green

That's the end of the topic!

Drafted by Joey (Biology)

Reference:

https://biology-igcse.weebly.com/continuous-discontinous.html