Using the concepts of variability, environmental pressure and natural selection how does the synthetic theory explain the darwinian natural selection?
Genetic variability occurs from recombination of chromosomes during sexual reproduction and from DNA mutations in germ cells and gametes. Such variability creates individuals who are carriers of some new phenotypical characteristics compared to their ancestors. These individuals are submitted to environmental pressure and can be more or less well-succeeded concerning survival or reproduction.
Those better succeeded transmit their genetic patrimony to a larger number of descendants increasing the frequency of their genes in the population; those less well-succeeded tend to transmit their genes to a small number of descendants decreasing the frequency of their genes in the population or even becoming extinct. This process is called natural selection (preservation of organisms that present more adapted phenotypes for the environmental pressure they face).