Biology, 27.10.2019 07:43 shreyasrikanth1
Legumes, a type of plant, require rhizobia, a type of soil bacteria, to survive since these organisms fix nitrogen during photosynthesis. rhizobia use the legumes for food. what would most likely happen to the legume population if rhizobia suddenly became extinct?
Answers: 3
Biology, 21.06.2019 16:40
Which of the following is a cause of a dna mutation? o a. the linking of amino acid subunits into a long chain o b. the transcription of dna into rna o c. an error in the repair of damaged dna d. the diffusion of molecules across the cell membrane submit
Answers: 1
Biology, 21.06.2019 22:00
Fan egg cell containing the (n+1) number of chromosomes combines with a sperm cell containing the (n) number of chromosomes, what is the result of this union? a) all future somatic cells of the organism will contain the (2n + 1) number of chromosomes. b) all future somatic cells of the organism will contain the (2n - 1) number of chromosomes. c) only certain somatic cells of the organism will contain the (2n + 1) number of chromosomes. d) all future somatic cells of the organism will contain the normal diploid number of chromosomes.
Answers: 2
Biology, 22.06.2019 00:10
The production of cells during mitosis into specialized function is recombination or differentiation
Answers: 1
Biology, 22.06.2019 10:30
Which of the following statements is accurate about evolution? question 10 options: natural selection only eliminates odd individuals. evolution means that a population never has changes in its genetic frequencies. mutations are always harmful. evolution means that a population undergoes changes in its gene frequencies over time.
Answers: 1
Legumes, a type of plant, require rhizobia, a type of soil bacteria, to survive since these organism...
Mathematics, 10.03.2021 20:30
Social Studies, 10.03.2021 20:30
Mathematics, 10.03.2021 20:30
English, 10.03.2021 20:30
Mathematics, 10.03.2021 20:30
Mathematics, 10.03.2021 20:30
Mathematics, 10.03.2021 20:30
Mathematics, 10.03.2021 20:30
Mathematics, 10.03.2021 20:30
Mathematics, 10.03.2021 20:30
Mathematics, 10.03.2021 20:30