Answer:
True
Explanation:
Light causes the same change to all matter/materials
Answer:
A mutation during protein synthesis may not affect the protein since the mutation causes a new code for the same amino acid, the protein will still function normally.
Explanation:
Protein synthesis depends on the transcription of DNA to RNA, and on the sequence of nucleotides in the chain, determining the triplets or codons that encode a specific amino acid.
In protein synthesis, when a mutation alters the codon, changing one nucleotide for another, it is possible that the mutation does not alter the amino acid and the protein functions correctly. This is because an amino acid can be encoded by several codons, as occurs with leucine, which is encoded by CUU, CUC, CUA and CUG.
<em> The other options are not correct because one mutation does not give better amino acids or more powerful proteins.</em>
Answer:
Growths exist as single cells or as fanning systems of multicellular fibers. How does the structure of the fibers identify with their capacity? ... Their long, fanning structure assists organisms with finding an area to create posterity
Explanation:
I think the correct answer would be C. It would be restricting water and/or nutrients, instead of supplying ample quantities of both that would not change the results of the experiment. This is because you are still supplying the same amount of nutrients and other things needed by the plant so the ratio of the growth of the plants will still be the same.