Bacteria is everywhere! Just watch out next time you type you might hurt a few hundred.
Like I said bacteria is every where an it is very much alive. Bacteria can be good and bad, our own body is made up of bacteria that goes in bad and makes the change to help our body.
Hope I helped. :)
Answer:
The correct answer would be C) respiratory system.
Respiratory system is made up of set of organs which help in taking in oxygen and expelling out carbon dioxide from the body.
In humans, it is composed of nose, pharynx, larynx, trachea, bronchi, pair of lungs, and diaphragm.
Alveoli (in lungs) are the site of gaseous exchange where oxygen is exchange with carbon dioxide.
Carbon dioxide is the toxic waste product of cellular respiration. Circulatory system helps in transporting CO₂ from cells to the alveolar site where it is exchanged with oxygen and excreted out as a part of exhaled air.
Answer: C
Explanation: got it right
The dead cells that act as "straws" inside the plant to pull water and nutrients from the soil is known as xylem.
Xylem is the vascular tissue in plants that conducts water and dissolved nutrients upward from the root and also helps to form the woody element in the stem.
Answer:
C) Its ability to dissolve gases
Explanation:
it can dissolve gases such as oxygen, which is necessary for respiration, and other vital substances like amino acids.
(B) Force of gravity decreases
(C) The volume of water increases
(D) The slope of the river increases
Answer:
Chloroplast
its function is to create chemical energy using light energy
Explanation:
Photosynthesis occurs in chloroplasts which can be compared to mitochondria because they both produce energy for the organism. The Chloroplast contains within it a pigment, chlorophyll which captures the sun's energy and turns into energy which is used to create other parts of photosynthesis. Chloroplasts capture light energy from the sun to produce the free energy stored in ATP and NADPH through a process called photosynthesis. Chloroplasts are one of the many organelles found in the body, and are generally considered to have originated as endosymbiotic cyanobacteria. In this aspect, they are similar to mitochondria but are found only in plants and protist.