Describe the three types of mammals. Give examples of each. How is reproduction/offspring different in each?
Answer:
1) Monotremes are mammals that lay eggs. The only monotremes that are alive today are the spiny anteater, or echidna, and the platypus. These mammals are really different from other mammals. Their body temperature is lower than most warm-blooded animals, a feature that has more in common with reptiles. Their name comes from the fact that they have only one body opening for both wastes and eggs to pass through.
2) Marsupial mammals give birth to babies that are not completely developed. The babies are very tiny. The babies then crawl up the fur on the mother's belly into a pouch on the outside of the mother's abdomen. The babies drink milk from the mother and continue to develop inside the pouch. Koalas, kangaroos, wallabies, and opossums are some of the better-known marsupials.
3)A placental mammal develops inside its mother's body until its body systems can function on their own. The name of this group comes from the placenta, an organ in pregnant female mammals that passes materials between the mother and the developing baby. Food and oxygen, carried by blood, pass from the mother to the baby through the placenta. Most mammals, including humans, are placental mammals.
Explanation:
In peas, the gene for purple flowers is dominant over the gene for white flowers, which is recessive. If two white flowered plants produce six offspring, how many of those offspring will have white flowers?
A. zero
B. two
C. four
D. six
HELPPPPPPPP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! FAST
Read the following excerpt and answer the question:
Emilie Dressaire, professor at Trinity College (Hartford, CT), and her colleague Marcus Roper (UCLA) discovered that mushrooms create their own microclimates. They create their own moisture through evaporation, which is when a liquid turns into a gas. Heat energy is used in this process, leaving the mushrooms cool and moist.
Use your own words to summarize the effect of thermal energy on a mushroom's environment and how this sustains life. (4 points)
Answer:
Mushrooms can reproduce by using thermal energy to create conventional currents, which are known as pockets. Following the formation of the pockets, the currents disperse microscopic spores in the surrounding air. As a result of the spread, a large spore cloud forms, which is visible at night.
Explanation:
I submitted this and got 100 %
could someone help me with these fast
South America is also home to some of the driest parts on earth like Lima, Peru. Using your knowledge, describe why there is a tropical rainforest that receives a lot of precipitation and Lima is still extremely dry from the same air mass moving across the continent. This should be multiple sentences. [Word Bank: air mass, humid, elevation, rising, clouds, sinking, rain, dry, wind/air movement]
i am soooo sorry but i do not know how to do this
Gametes are said to be ________________ as they only contain half the number of chromosomes, unlike other body cells within the organism which it contain all the chromosomes.
Answer:
Haploids
Explanation:
They are half the number.
Your Welcome.
Answer:
haploid cells
Explanation:
During zygote formation, gametes go through meiosis and the number of chromosomes get halved. This is why they are called haploid cells.
Memories of a Memory
Have you ever witnessed something amazing, shocking or surprising and found when describing the event that your story seems to change the more you tell it? Have you ever experienced a time when you couldn't really describe something you saw in a way that others could understand? If so, you may understand why some experts think eyewitness testimony is unreliable as evidence in scientific inquiries and trials. New insights into human memory suggest human memories are really a mixture of many non-factual things.
First, memory is vague. Imagine your room at home or a classroom you see every day. Most likely, you could describe the room very generally. You could name the color of the walls, the floors, the decorations. But the image you describe will never be as specific or detailed as if you were looking at the actual room. Memory tends to save a blurry image of what we have seen rather than specific details. So when a witness tries to identify someone, her brain may recall that the person was tall, but not be able to say how tall when faced with several tall people. There are lots of different kinds of "tall."
Second, memory uses general knowledge to fill in gaps. Our brains reconstruct events and scenes when we remember something. To do this, our brains use other memories and other stories when there are gaps. For example, one day at a library you go to quite frequently, you witness an argument between a library patron and one of the librarians. Later, when telling a friend about the event, your brain may remember a familiar librarian behind the desk rather than the actual participant simply because it is recreating a familiar scene. In effect, your brain is combining memories to help you tell the story.
Third, your memory changes over time. It also changes the more you retell the story. Documented cases have shown eyewitnesses adding detail to testimony that could not have been known at the time of the event. Research has also shown that the more a witness's account is told, the less accurate it is. You may have noticed this yourself. The next time you are retelling a story, notice what you add, or what your brain wants to add, to the account. You may also notice that you drop certain details from previous tellings of the story.
With individual memories all jumbled up with each other, it is hard to believe we ever know anything to be true. Did you really break your mother's favorite vase when you were three? Was that really your father throwing rocks into the river with you when you were seven? The human brain may be quite remarkable indeed. When it comes to memory, however, we may want to start carrying video cameras if we want to record the true picture.
Which of the following best explains why memories from childhood are unreliable? (6 points)
Group of answer choices
Our brains add details and general knowledge to childhood memories.
Our brains are not as reliable as video cameras are.
Our brains create new stories to make the past more interesting.
Our brains have less connection to reality than we want to believe.
Answer:
I think it would be B: Our brains add details and general knowledge to childhood memories.
Sorry if its not correct
Explanation:
Suppose your cells continue to help heal the scrape that resulted from falling off your bike. What might happen if the cell cycle did not go into a rest phase? Explain.
Answer: tumor
Explanation:
if i can’t see the pic don’t bother answering !!! pls hurry
Answer:
nervous system.
Explanation:
Answer: nervous
Each system gets rid of waste one way or another
In which type of mass movement can soils behave like a liquid and start flowing?
Answer:
a flow
Explanation:
Movement of soil and regolith that more resembles fluid behaviour is called a flow. These include avalanches, mudflows, debris flows, earth flow, lahars and sturzstroms. Water, air and ice are often involved in enabling fluid-like motion of the material.
please this is a test that i have to pass so i can go to the next grade
Which of the following is NOT a method to manage fisheries for sustainable yield? a. using large mesh nets c. using small mesh nets b. aquaculture d. creating fishing limits
Answer:
I think it is a
Explanation:
Using large mesh nets
List two biomes and their features. List the at least three features of each one of your biomes.
Answer:
Tundra Biome and the Deciduous Forest Biome
Explanation:
for tundra the features are Extremely cold climate, Low biotic diversity ,Simple vegetation structure. and for deciduous forest is Deciduous forests have a long, warm growing season as one of four distinct seasons, There is abundant moisture, Tree leaves are arranged in strata: canopy, understory, shrub, and ground.
About Space! Can I please get help, no links or I'll ban your account. What is the life cycle of a star in order. Look at the picture.
1. Nebula
2. Protostar
3. Low-mass star
4. High-mass star
5. Red Giant Stars
6. White Dwarf Stage
7. Black Dwarf Stage
8. Supernova
9. Neutron Star
10. Black hole
Hope this helps.
Lesson 3, Interactions among living things
Be able to define and give an example of each.
1. natural selection
2. adaptations
3. niche
4. competition
5. predation, predator, prey
6. symbiosis: mutualism, commensalism, parasitism: parasite and host
Which example is a biotic factor of an ecosystem?
Answer:
A biotic factor is a living organism that shapes its environment. In a freshwater ecosystem, examples might include aquatic plants, fish, amphibians, and algae.
A. Fungus is a living organism
1.) In your own words, describe the difference between DNA and GENES
2.)in your own, explain the difference between ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION and SEXUAL REPRODUCTION
Answer:
1. DNA is the hereditary material in all living cells. Genes are a unit of heredity and are made up of DNA.
2. Asexual reproduction is reproduction that only requires one parent and that produces offspring that are genetically identical to their parent. Sexual reproduction involves two parents and produces offspring that are each genetically different.
Describe the three types of mammals. Give examples of each. How is reproduction/offspring different in each?
What happens in an algal bloom? Why are they harmful?
Answer:
As algal blooms grow the deplete oxygen in the water and block out sunlight from fish and plants. When the algae die off, the microbes which decompose the dead algae use up even more oxygen which make the fish die or leave that area.
Explanation:
Of the 8.3 billion metric tons produced, 6.3 billion metric tons have become plastic waste. Of that, only nine percent has been recycled. The vast majority—79 percent—is accumulating in landfills or sloughing off in the natural environment as litter. Meaning: at some point, much of it ends up in the oceans, the final sink. True False
Answer:
I'm going to say true, hopefully this helps
What is the best way to "NOT" prevent a viral infection?
а
b
Cleaning wounds
Hygiene
Good eating habits
Vaccines
с
d
Answer:
Good eating habbits
Explanation:
Why do you think the western gorilla’s hands are shaped the way they are? What does the western gorilla use its hands to do?
why do you think the European mole’s hands are shaped the way they are? What does the European mole use its hands to do?
Explanation:
Gorilla: This is very hard to think about but to like help support the the gorillas body when it's like doing that with its hands
Mole: The way there hands are built, it can easily claw it's way through the ground and get places easier.
Both the animals hands might be shaped the way they are due to the required adaptation for their own environment as it differs from place to place. The gorilla may use their hands to have a faster way of transportation as they move to foraging.
What is foraging?Foraging is a behavior which includes all the methods by which an animal acquires and utilizes sources of energy and nutrients. This also includes the location and resources consumption, as well as their recapture and storage, within the context of the larger community.
The european mole's hands are in that shaped due to the need of survival and to build their shelter. The european mole may use their hands to dig to provide themselves a safe shelter and to hide from predators.
For more information regarding animal adaptation, visit:
https://brainly.com/question/29594
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Compare and contrast the advantages and disadvantages of selective breeding versus genetic modification. Why might a person choose to use selective breeding over genetic modification? Why might a person choose to create a GMO over a selectively bred organism? Use three to five sentences to formulate your argument. 100 POINTSSS
Answer:
Here are just some facts that you can put into paragraph form:
Pros of GMO:
They are "perfect" in theory
Most likely won't have any diseases or infections
Genetically modified so everything will be almost exactly the way people want it to be
Pros of Breeding:
Definitely more organic and healthy (i guess)
More authentic - they're the "real stuff"
People might feel safer when eating organic stuff
Explanation:
I rlly hope this helps :)
An organism that uses energy from sunlight to produce food.
A. FOOD WEB
B. FOOD CHAIN
C.PRODUCER
D. CONSUMER
Answer:
Producer is the answer
Explanation: they take sunlight to produce food aka photsynthesis. Plants are a great example of this!
Identify the primary consumers, tertiary consumers, and secondary consumers in the image attached. Which organism has the greatest population in the presented ecosystem? Which organism would normally have the smallest population?
Where do fossil fuel emissions come from? What is the main cause of pollution in general?
Answer:
Most of the nitrogen oxides released in the U.S. due to human activity are from the burning of fossil fuels associated with transportation and industry. When fossil fuels are burned, they release nitrogen oxides into the atmosphere, which contribute to the formation of smog and acid rain.
Explanation:
As you move to a higher elevation (e.g. in the mountains), the air pressure drops significantly. In turn...
the temperature of water increases and the density goes up as well.
the temperature of water drops and the density of it goes down as well.
the evaporation rate of water increases at all temperatures causing an increase in volume.
the evaporation rate of water decreases at all temperatures causing a decrease in volume.
Answer:
the temperature of water drops and the density of it goes down as well.
Explanation:
The higher the altitudes, the lower the temperature.
At high altitudes, molecules tend to be more spread out, so the density of the molecules decrease.
Which of these are present in both woody and herbaceous stems? (Select all that apply.)
rings
seedlings
phloem
xylem
Help if you can please?
Leachate is produced as:
A) Rainwater absorbs water-soluble compounds in layers of trash
B)Toxic waste is emptied into ponds and streams
C) Metal comes into contact with water
D) Plastic flows into ponds and streams
A.
The liquid formed when rain water filters through wastes placed in a landfill. When this liquid comes in contact with buried wastes, it leaches, or draws out, chemicals or constituents from those wastes
Describe the amphibian life cycle. Include the different phases and traits of each phase.
Answer:
Another Brainly Answer
Explanation:
The Amphibian life cycle isn't as simple as it seems. The main Amphibian that has a longer process are called Frogs. Everyone knows frogs, but they are different from most animals such as turtles. The first stage of frogs are when their in eggs of course. These eggs are called "Tadpoles" and look different than most eggs. These eggs are kept in water until they grow. Which brings me to the next stage. When the tadpoles hatch you would start to see something like a baby fish swimming around. That's still the same tadpoles you saw before just hatched. When it comes to this topic most are confused because frogs don't have tails. Well during these stages a tail is used to help them survive in the water and move around. The third stage of these interesting creatures are when they grow legs. That's when they are able to walk on land. They still have their tail of course. It still helps them swim in water. I don't understand much about why they still have a tail if they've grown legs, but that's for me to find out soon. Eventually they grow more and more and get better with their legs and lose the tail. Well the tail doesn't just magically disappear. It's actually absorbed by using something called apoptosis. Then it's pretty much and adult frog.
A plant seed is formed from:
a fertilized egg
growth of an egg
growth of a spore
a mature pollen
Answer:
D. a mature pollen
Explanation:
Answer:A plant seed is formed from a fertilized egg.
What is a seed?A seed is an embryonic plant enclosed in a protective outer covering. The formation of seed begins with fertilization, which occurs when the pollen from the male reproductive organ (stamen) fuses with the female reproductive organ (pistil). The fertilized ovule develops into a seed that contains the embryonic plant and a supply of nutrients to support its initial growth until it can begin photosynthesis. The seed coat is the outer covering that protects the embryo from desiccation, disease, and physical damage.
Explanation: