Answer:
It combines genes from two different organisms.
Answer:
b. giving birth to live young (viviparous)
Explanation:
Monotremes include duck-billed platypus and few other mammalian species that are oviparous. These mammalian species do not give birth to young ones, that is, they are not viviparous. Rather they lay eggs and are oviparous.
These species are also characterized by the absence of teeth. The primitive monotremes also exhibit external fertilization.
Examples of egg-laying mammals include anteaters or echidnas and the duck-billed platypus. The laid eggs are carried by females in an abdominal ouch to keep them warm.
During DNA replication, the two strands separate as the hydrogen bonds connecting the parent strands are broken by an enzyme called helicase. In the DNA molecule (double strand) complementary bases are joined by hydrogen bonds; that is; Adenine paired to thyamine and guanine to cytosine; during replication the enzyme helicase separates the double helix by breaking the hydrogen bonds between the complementary bases.
Transcription starts at the template strand of DNA where mRNA attaches and is constructed from 5’ to 3’ direction. The nucleotides of the DNA strand is attached to either A, U, G, C ribosomal nucleotides. mRNA Dissembles when it reaches a terminating codon and then it attaches to ribosomal RNA where tRNA carries the amino and mRNA caries the code to construct proteins with the ribosome.