If an animal has a set of organs held together and protected by surrounding fluid, the animal is a _____. acoelomate
pseudocoelomate
coelomate

Answers

Answer 1
Answer: The answer is coelomate.

Coelomates are animals which body cavity (coelom) is filled with fluid. Fluid surrounds organs, protects them and allows their free movement and growth. All vertebrates are coelomates.

Pseudocoelomates have pseudocoelom partly filled with fluid. So, fluid surrounds organs, but not as tightly as in coelomates. The example for pseudocoelomates is a roundworm.
Acoelomates have no coelom. The example is a flatworm.
Answer 2
Answer:

Answer:

coelomate.

Explanation:


Related Questions

Do you think it is wrong to traffic animals?
Use an analogy to describe the role of ATP in living organisms
The square that is used to make all the possible combinations of gametes is called a Punnett square. A) True B) False
Karina is looking at a cell under the microscope. It is the only cell in the organism, which has a cell wall and no nucleus or membrane bound organelles. In which kingdom should this organism be classified?
What two ideas from geology were important to Darwin's thinking

How have humans offset the balance of the carbon cycle(EXPLAIN HOW YOU GOT THAT LETTER CHOICE)
A. Cutting trees which increase the amount of carbon available for food/
B. Cutting trees which will increase carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
C. Cutting trees which reduces available oxygen for humans.
D. Cutting trees which will reduce water in the atmosphere.

Answers

The correct answer is C. Trees provide oxygen for humans, so by reducing trees you reduce oxygen available for humans.

The proteins in the cell membrane allow substances to come or go, based on their concentrations. This is an important part of _________________, which maintains the immediate conditions necessary for life.

Answers

The movement along the concentration gradients allows for the cell to maintain homeostasis. Keeping a cell in the proper conditions inside and out allows for it to function properly and carry out the duties that it is required to do as part of its bodily system.

C) homeostasis is the answer

Which is a negative consequence of using DNA technology in forensics?

Answers

DNA profiling has many uses, both positive and negative, in our society.
Aside from its usefulness in many legal investigations, DNA profiling can be
used in the workplace to discriminate against employees whose profiles could
pose a financial risk. For example, genetic technology can and has been used to
determine the capacity of a person to contract certain diseases, such as sickle-
cell anemia, which could cause many employers to hesitate in the hiring and
training of such people. In the early 1970's, the United States began a carrier
screening for sickle-cell anemia, which affects 1 in 400 African-Americans.
Many of those identified as carriers mistakenly thought they were afflicted with
this debilitating disease. Furthermore, confidentiality was often breached, and
in some cases, carriers were discriminated against and denied health insurance.
Nevertheless, genetic profiling has been beneficial in paternity suits and rape
cases, where the father or the assailant could be identified. However, despite
its growing number of utilizations, DNA profiling is extremely hazardous when
results are inaccurate or used to discriminate.
The frequency of genetic testing in criminal investigations (more than
1,000 in the U.S. since 1987) has been increasing dramatically despite the
inconclusive testing by the scientific community in many aspects of forensic
identification.

Disadvantages:
Biological process
The use of genetically modified organisms has sparked significantcontroversy in many areas.Some groups or individuals see the generationand use of GMO as intolerable meddling with biological states orprocesses that have naturally evolved over long periods of time, whileothers are concerned about the limitations of modern science to fullycomprehend all of the potential negative ramifications of geneticmanipulation. Other people see this as a continuation in the rolehumanity has occupied for thousands of years, modifying the genetics ofcrops by selecting specimen of crops with the most desirablecharacteristics as parent for the next generation of crops.
Foodchain
The safety of GMOs in the foodchain has been questioned by someenvironmental groups, with concerns such as the possibilities that GMOscould introduce new allergens into foods, or contribute to the spread ofantibiotic resistance.According to a study published in 1999, there wasno current evidence to suggest that the processes used to geneticallymodify food were inherently harmful. However, a number of more recentstudies have raised concern, and environmental groups still discourageconsumption in many countries, claiming that GM foods are unnatural andtherefore unsafe.Such concerns have led to the adoption of laws andregulations that require safety testing of any new organism produced forhuman consumption.
GMOs' proponents note that because of the safety testing requirementsimposed on GM foods, the risk of introducing a plant variety with a newallergen or toxin using genetic modification is much smaller than usingtraditional breeding processes. Transgenesis has less impact on theexpression of genomes or on protein and metabolite levels thanconventional breeding or plant (non-directed) mutagenesis. An example ofan allergenic plant created using traditional breeding is the kiwi. Onearticle calculated that the marketing of GM salmon could reduce thecost of salmon by half, thus increasing salmon consumption andpreventing 1,400 deaths from heart attack a year in the United States.
Trade in Europe and Africa
In response to negative public opinion, Monsanto announced its decisionto remove their seed cereal business from Europe, and environmentalistscrashed a World Trade Organization conference in Cancun that promoted GMfoods and was sponsored by Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow(CFACT). Some African nations have refused emergency food aid fromdeveloped countries, fearing that the food is unsafe. During aconference in the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa, Kingsley Amoako,Executive Secretary of the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa(UNECA), encouraged African nations to accept genetically modified foodand expressed dissatisfaction in the public’s negative opinion ofbiotechnology.
Agricultural surpluses
Patrick Mulvany, Chairman of the UK Food Group, accused somegovernments, especially the Bush administration, of using GM food aid asa way to dispose of unwanted agricultural surpluses. The UN blamed foodcompanies and accused them of violating human rights, calling ongovernments to regulate these profit-driven firms. It is widely believedthat the acceptance of biotechnology and genetically modified foodswill also benefit rich research companies and could possibly benefitthem more than consumers in underdeveloped nations

When the critical hormone ___________ is released in high enough concentration by the mother's pituitary gland, the mother's uterus begins periodic contractions?

Answers

Oxytocin

When the critical hormone oxytocin is released in high enough concentration by the mother's pituitary gland, the mother's uterus begins periodic contraction.

Oxytocin is a peptide hormone produced by the hypothalamus and released into the blood stream by the posterior pituitary. Oxytocin works on certain organs in the body such as the breast and uterus. Oxytocin influences important functions of the reproductive system, including causing contraction of the cervix and uterus during labor, lactation, and sexual reproduction.


What natural process removes carbon dioxide from the air?

Answers

Photosynthesis. 
Combustion. 
Respiration.

Describe how the following stages occur in a neuron in terms of ion movement across the cell membrane: resting potential, threshold potential, depolarization, repolarization.

Answers

We have two surfaces of nerve cell the outer and inner surface

- resting : when the outer layer ion charges more positively than the inner layer - depolarization : we have the counter part of this state
- repolarization : return to the polarization
- hyperpolarization : the inner negative ion charges will be more negative even more than the resting potential

I hope that this is the answer that you were looking for and it has helped you.

Answer:

Resting potential is when there are more positively charged ions outside the cell than there are inside the cell, and this is the regular state.

Threshold potential is when there is a triggering event that depolarizes the cell body, where positively charged ions enter the cell body at a rapid rate.

Depolarization is when the membrane potential gets smaller, and the cell begins to equalize itself on the inside and out. Positively charged ions enter the negatively charged axon, resulting in the cell being positively charged.

Repolarization brings the cell back to its resting potential - the ion gates of the cell close, keeping the positively charged ions out, while the potassium gates remain open.