One of the plants in this grouping are chrysanthemums.
Answer:
<h2>because she says that some of them grew white and some grew red.</h2>
Explanation:
<h2>idk if this is correct</h2><h2 />
The vascular cambium produces secondary phloem and xylem tissue.
<span>Vascular cambium, a plant tissue located between the xylem and the phloem in
the stem of a vascular plant. It is also the source of both secondary xylem growth
and the secondary phloem growth. Vascular
cambium is usually found on dicots and gymnosperms not on monocots which
usually lack secondary growth. It does not transport water, dissolved food or
minerals by plants. </span>
<span>Vascular cambia are cylinders of unspecialized meristem cells which
divide to make new cells which
specialize to form secondary vascular tissues.</span>
Answer:
A It makes the most sense!
Explanation:
Hope this helps!
So what roles do society, politics, and economics play in science?Economics determines how much money is available to fund scientific research. Certain federal grants come directly out of the national economy, which determines if certain research projects can continue or are cut off.Politics affect science by passing some bills that directly affects science, congressmen can determine whether those funds from the economy will be used for research or not. Just a side note: wealthy lobbyists control alot of what politicians do, by donating millions into their election campaigns. Society affects science by our citizens democratically electing those politicians that we think will or will not endorse scientific research projects. For example, embryonic stem cell research has been under fire by conservatives for taking future babies' cells to study. Liberals, however, tend to be in favor of change and new advances scientifically
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if you need it shorter "Society, made up of the country's citizens, can influence science by electing politicians (president and congressmen); the politicians can then affect the economic funding of scientific research, either by increasing or decreasing government grants to scientific projects."