Why are the seminal vesicles important for human reproduction?
This might help:
The seminal vesicles (Latin: glandulae vesiculosae), vesicular glands, or seminal glands, are a pair of simple tubular glands posteroinferior to the urinary bladder of some male mammals. Seminal vesicles are located within the pelvis. They secrete fluid that partly composes the semen.
They pass through the prostate, and open into the urethra at the seminal colliculus. During ejaculation, semen passes through the prostate gland, enters the urethra and exits the body via the urinary meatus.
I believe that the answer is:
A.
They allow the sperm to travel to the urethra to be released.
For many of their illnesses scientist and doctors haven't treated them before so they don't know how to treat them or exactly if the animal can handle the treatment
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The right answer is 3 nucleotide bases.
5'-CGGCACCGCCCTAAGTCTCT-3'
5'-AGGCACCGCCCTAAGTCTAC-3'
It would be necessary first to align the two sequences side by side so as to be able to compare them, and they should also be in the same direction.
The nucleotides marked in bold are the nucleotides that differ between standard and O. Kisutch.
These nucleotide changes are necessarily due to substitution mutations that exchanged one nucleotide for another in the same location.