Answer:
Insulin
Explanation:
Answer:
D. The energy flow is not dependent on any members of the ecosystem
Explanation:
The energy flow in an ecosystem is not dependent on any member of the ecosystem. It is the flow of energy through the food chain, energy is passed from members in one trophic level to members in another or the next trophic level. The flow of energy in an ecosystem is important because it helps in maintaining balance in ecology.
Answer:
The correct answer is option a. "Shared DNA sequences".
Explanation:
The most reliable evidence that suggest that vertebrates are more closely related to echinoderms than are any other invertebrate phyla is the fact that vertebrates share DNA sequences with echinoderms. Among the different genes that have been analyzed between vertebrates and echinoderms, the genes involved in immunology and biomineralization are the ones practically identical among these two categories of species.
b. electrical signals and chemical neurotransmitters
c. respiration and absorption
d. myosin and actin
When an action potential reaches presynaptic terminal on a neuron, it will induce a release of neurotransmitters from the neuron. Neurotransmitters pass through the synaptic cleft and bind to the receptor on a postsynaptic neuron.
The right answer is 5.
To answer this question, we must think in the same way as the demonstration showing that codons of 3 are necessary to encode an amino acid (in terrestrial species).
To calculate the number of nucleotides in a codon in these new species: we should use the law of:
nucleotides existing ^ (number of nucleotides in a codon) = number of codons. (in order to have the number of possible codon combinations)
The number of codons must be greater than or equal to the number of amino acids (17).
2 ^ 1 = 2 (<17)
2 ^ 2 = 4 (<17)
2 ^ 3 = 8 (<17)
2 ^ 4 = 16 (<17)
2 ^ 5 = 32 (> 17)
32> 17 so the number of nulceotides in a codon must be 5.
The minimum size of a codon for the hypothetical Martian life-forms, which use only two bases (A and T) and have only 17 amino acids in their proteins, should be five bases. This size is needed to generate a minimum of 17 different codons.
The question is asking for the minimum size of a codon in these hypothetical Martian life-forms that use only two bases (A and T) in their DNA and have only 17 amino acids in their proteins. To analyze this, we must comprehend how codons function. A codon is a sequence of nucleotides in RNA that codes for a specific amino acid in a protein. In life on Earth, each codon is made up of three bases (each base can be A, T, C, or G), which makes for a total of 4^3 = 64 possible codons coding for 20 different amino acids.
However, in the Martian organisms, there are only two available bases (A and T) for constructing codons. In order to generate at least 17 different codons to code for the 17 different Martian amino acids, each Martian codon would have to be made up of at least 5 bases (since 2^4 = 16 is not enough, and 2^5 = 32 would be sufficient).
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