When it comes to freshwater wetlands, hydrology plays a large role in
nutrient stoichiometry and sensitivity to nutrient inputs. Although
wetland biogeochemists intuitively understand these important
relationships between landscape position, hydrology, and sensitivity to
nutrient inputs, these relationships have never been quantified using
geospatial data. The objective of this project will be to evaluate and
quantify the linkages between watershed catchment characteristics and
freshwater wetland nutrient sensitivity ur welcome
Answer:
population I stars.
Explanation:
A star is a giant astronomical or celestial object that is comprised of a luminous sphere of plasma, binded together by its own gravitational force.
It is typically made up of two (2) main hot gas, Hydrogen (H) and Helium (He).
The luminosity of a star can be defined as the total amount of light radiated by the star per second and it is measured in watts (w). Also, the apparent brightness of a star is a measure of the rate at which radiated energy from a star reaches an observer on Earth per square meter per second. The apparent brightness of a star is typically measured in watts per square meter.
Some of the examples of stars are; Canopus, Sun (closest to the Earth), Betelgeus, Antares, Vega etc.
New stars that are found in the spiral arms and formed from recycled dead star material are known as population I stars. Also, it comprises of association and clusters formed a million or billion years ago in the spiral arms of Milky Way galaxy.
A galaxy can be defined as a collection or group of many billions of stars and other planetary body which are existing independently.
Bones and skull is the answer
The answer is tissue fluid. Tissue fluid holds far smaller quantity of protein molecules because they are too large to escape easily over the tiny holes in the capillary endothelium. Tissue fluid doesn't contain red blood cells because they are too large, but does comprise some white blood cells.
Answer: (TFIID) TBP-> TFIIB IIA--> TFIIF RNA POL II
Explanation:
Remember that in eukaryotic organisms, transcription and processing are coupled processes. There are 3 different types of Rna pol. In the case of RNA pol II transcribes genes that encode proteins (mRNA synthesis). Transcription factors are involved, for example: TFIID, TBPs, TAF (recognizes TATA promoter center, regulatory functions), TFIIA (stabilizes TBP union, antirepressant function), TFIIB (RNA Pol II starting point selection).