Answer:
Diaphragm
Explanation:
Correct answer: Zygomycota
The Zygomycota is also known as conjugation fungi, it includes molds that invade bread. One of the identifying characteristics of Zygomycota is the formation of zygospore during sexual reproduction, it lacks the hyphal cell.
The asexual spore of Zygomycota includes conidia, sporangiospores, and chlamydoconidia etc.
They are found near the plants in the soil and on dead and decaying matter and help to decompose soil and play an important role in the carbon cycle.
b. herbivorous
c. potable
d. saline
The treatment for this patient will be with antibiotics, the most common being penicillin. This drug pioneered the treatment of bacterial infections by successfully destroying the bacterial cell wall of microorganisms. Discovered by Alexander Fleming in 1928, penicillin revolutionized the history of medicine, encouraging new scientific studies and saving the lives of many patients.
The skin is the answer. It is an organ of protection.
The skin is made up of two layers namely the epidermis and the dermis. Under the dermis is found hypodermis which is subcutaneous fatty tissue.
The skin has three major functions namely protection, regulation and sensation. When the skin is broken, i.e. wounded, all these functions are affected.
The skin acts as a barrier, providing protection from radiation from the sun, mechanical impacts, pressure and changes in temperature, as well as from microorganisms and chemicals.
integumentary that's the answer
Answer:
they are vesicles, which can be secretory vesicles, or even lysosomes
Vesicles, which are a part of the cell's endomembrane system along with the endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, and plasma membrane, bud off from the ER and Golgi apparatus, and fuse with other membranes to package, tag, and transport proteins and lipids for cellular membranes.
The structures described in your question are known as vesicles. These are small membrane-enclosed compartments that bud off of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and Golgi apparatus and can fuse with other membranes of the endomembrane system or the plasma membrane. They are part of the endomembrane system of a cell which also includes the nuclear envelope, lysosomes, as well as the plasma membrane. The cellular components found in this system work together to modify, package, tag, and transport proteins and lipids, which in turn form cell membranes. For instance, transport vesicles that leave the ER fuse with the Golgi apparatus to process the proteins, and additional transport vesicles containing the modified proteins and lipids pinch off from the Golgi apparatus and move to fuse with the plasma membrane or other organelle membranes.
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