<span>Some amino acids have multiple different codons that can code for them. So for some point mutations, one wrong nucleotide in a codon may still allow it to code for the same amino acid. For example. Serine has 4 different possible codons which can code for it. UCA, UCC, UCU, and UCG. Note that if the last letter were change in any instance, it would still code for serine. There are MANY other examples for this question; almost all amino acids have more than one codon which can code for it.</span>
Answer: A
Explanation: Transpiration is the loss of water from the plant through evaporation at the leaf surface. It is the main driver of water movement in the xylem. Transpiration is caused by the evaporation of water at the leaf–atmosphere interface. Up to 90 percent of the water taken up by roots may be lost through transpiration as only a small amount of that water is used for growth and metabolism.
The term "cardiac" refers to the heart. Cardiac muscle is found in the heart and nowhere else in the body.
Plants absorb sunlight and turn that energy into food; the process is known as photosynthesis. This is a compound word made up of photo (which means "light") and synthesis (which means "to put together").
Amino acid<span>, </span>any of a group of organic molecules that consist of a basic amino group (−NH2<span>), an acidic carboxyl group (−COOH), and an organic </span>R<span> group (or side chain) that is unique to each amino acid. </span>