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baherus [9]
2 years ago
9

1. Those who were successful in Round One did not survive equally well when others were

Biology
1 answer:
Montano1993 [528]2 years ago
4 0

Large beak will not be successful if the food is small in size because they can't eat that food.

<h3>Which beak was not successful and why?</h3>

Large beak was not successful if there is small sized food is present on the dish while on the other hand, if the dish has big sized food then the small beak can't survive the second round because they are unable to eat that food.

So we can conclude that big beak will not be successful if the food is small in size because they can't eat that food.

Learn more about beak here: brainly.com/question/668440

#SPJ1

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You are working in an outpatient clinic when a mother brings in her 20-year-old daughter, C.J., who has type 1 diabetes mellitus
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Answer:

The additional questions are listed in the explanation

Explanation:

1. For how long has C.J. been drowsy

2.  What have C.J.'s blood glucose levels been running?

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OLEGan [10]

What do you know about ecosystems?

An ecosystem is a community of living things in a habitat that are in conjuction with the ninliving things in tehri habitat. The abiotic and biotic factros living together in a habitat in harmony that are all linked together by biochemical cycles and energy flows.

What living things do you think we would find in a rainforest ecosystem? What might those living things need to grow?

Living things that would be found in a rainforest ecosytem include the animals liek jaguars, spider monkeys, tapirs, camians, sloths, harpy eagles, mosquitos, ants, clouded lepord and amur leporad, apes liek chimpanzees and organguatans, tigers, brids of paradise, gorillas, elephants, frogs, bats, katydids, and so many more! Plants include pitcher plants, orchids, venus fly trap and otehr carnivorous plants, Açai Palm, rubber trees, various palm tree species, vines, bamboo, banana trees, strangler figs, giant red cedar, and many other flower tree, grasses, planst, bushes, fruit, vines, and otehr vegetation species. These living thinsg need to grow fruit, in size, in numbers, and many ways the rainforest.

What living things do you think we would find in a desert ecosystem? What might those living things need to grow?

Cati, succulents, tarantuals, scorpians, gila monster, cactus blossoms, sandwinders, dry grasses, coyotes, jackals, dingos, fennec foxes, vultures, gazelle, snakes and vipers, lizards, (remeber the artic ecosytems are deserts too! ) penguins, polar bears, seals, killer whales, lemmings, elk, walrus, beluga whales and narwhal, and so many more! these living things need to grow their fight and defense system features like the narwal's horn or walrus's tusks.

What living things do you think we would find in a savanna ecosystem? What might those living things need to grow?

In a savanna many things live here, porcupines, acacia trees, cheetahs, lions, lepords, hyeans, zebras, elephants, baboons, giraffes, rhinoceros, crocodiles, hippopotamus, termites, ostriches, ardvarks, anteaters,snakes, boa constrictors, kangaroos, scorpions, tartantuals, buffalo, baobob, scutch grass, and many more. These living things need to grow in their size to survive and grow in their knowledge of survival for life.

What living things do you think we would find in a coral reef ecosystem? What might those living things need to grow?

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Answer:

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Verdich [7]
<span>C. Theyvare always multicellular </span>
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tatiyna

Answer:

The Earth has a finite amount of water. The water that is here today is the same water that will be here in 20 or even 20 million years’ time. So, if all living things use water, how is it that we don’t use up all our water? The answer is that water is constantly recycled through the Earth’s system through a process called the water cycle.

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To use this interactive, move your mouse or finger over any of the labelled boxes and click to obtain more information.

The water cycle encompasses a number of processes that circulate water through the Earth’s subsystems. Water evaporates from within soils and through vegetation and from bodies of water (such as rivers, lakes and oceans). This evaporated water accumulates as water vapour in clouds and returns to the Earth as rain or snow. The returning water falls directly back into the oceans, or onto land as snow or rain. It soaks into the soil to move into the groundwater or runs off the Earth’s surface in streams, rivers and lakes, which drain back into the oceans. The water may be taken up by plants and returned to the atmosphere through processes like transpiration and photosynthesis. Water may also be returned to the atmosphere through the combustion of plants in fossil fuel.

Explanation:

ARTICLE The water cycle EXPLORE

ADD TO COLLECTION

Add to new collection

CANCEL

The Earth has a finite amount of water. The water that is here today is the same water that will be here in 20 or even 20 million years’ time. So, if all living things use water, how is it that we don’t use up all our water? The answer is that water is constantly recycled through the Earth’s system through a process called the water cycle.

Dynamic and complex: the global water cycle

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To use this interactive, move your mouse or finger over any of the labelled boxes and click to obtain more information.

The water cycle encompasses a number of processes that circulate water through the Earth’s subsystems. Water evaporates from within soils and through vegetation and from bodies of water (such as rivers, lakes and oceans). This evaporated water accumulates as water vapour in clouds and returns to the Earth as rain or snow. The returning water falls directly back into the oceans, or onto land as snow or rain. It soaks into the soil to move into the groundwater or runs off the Earth’s surface in streams, rivers and lakes, which drain back into the oceans. The water may be taken up by plants and returned to the atmosphere through processes like transpiration and photosynthesis. Water may also be returned to the atmosphere through the combustion of plants in fossil fuel.

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Water and the biosphere, hydrosphere and geosphere

When water returns to Earth, it can either enter the hydrosphere or the geosphere.

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