In the first sentence, "The leopard magpie moth DOES NOT have the speed or the agility to escape from ANY of its potential predators". The ANY would transform into SOME because it is not the opposite of the word ANY that we are looking for, it is the negation which is NOT ANY which could be some. Therefore, that's why the first sentence would be changed into "The leopard magpie moth does have the speed or the agility to escape from SOME (not any) of its potential predators."
In the second sentence, as Rae said, the "some" is a little vague so it would then stay the same and the only thing that would change would be the IS NOT to IS.
I think it still stays. I did the same thing and mine says "complete". I think it's separate.
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In the first sentence, "The leopard magpie moth DOES NOT have the speed or the agility to escape from ANY of its potential predators". The ANY would transform into SOME because it is not the opposite of the word ANY that we are looking for, it is the negation which is NOT ANY which could be some. Therefore, that's why the first sentence would be changed into "The leopard magpie moth does have the speed or the agility to escape from SOME (not any) of its potential predators."
In the second sentence, as Rae said, the "some" is a little vague so it would then stay the same and the only thing that would change would be the IS NOT to IS.