Animals get carbon by eating plants or by eating other animals.
so the correct answer would be C
The lion eats an herbivore that ate the grass
Plants use carbon dioxide for photosynthesis. By doing so, they remove inorganic carbon from the atmosphere and incorporate it into the plants’ tissues in the form of organic carbon (sugar and starch).
Carbon is returned to an inorganic state in a number of ways. As an animal breathes (respires), it exhales carbon dioxide, returning it back to the atmosphere. When an animal or plant dies, it is broken down by bacteria and fungi and again the carbon is released (this process is called decomposition).
Sometimes, instead of completely decomposing, a plant or animal may be fossilised, leading to its carbon being stored in a rock. After millions of years and under the right conditions, these fossils may turn into fossil fuels (oil, coal and natural gas).
hope this helps!!
Charles Lyell: Principles of Geology. Charles Darwin read, and was much influenced by, Lyell's Principles of Geology while aboard HMS Beagle. This frontispiece image illustrates the main point of the book: that evidence of the forces of geological change that have been shaping Earth for millennia is observable today.
True. A population can consist of human beings or animals in their distinct habitat
I think they use the scientific method
Answer:
RNA
Explanation:
Transcription is the first process of protein synthesis and it involves copying the information encoded in the genetic material (DNA) to a RNA molecule. It involves making a complementary strand of mRNA from a DNA template.
The process of transcription commences when an enzyme called RNA polymerase binds to the promoter region of a gene on the DNA, signalling the unwinding of its double-stranded structure. The RNA polymerase then adds nucleotides to the growing RNA molecule, complementary to the ones it reads on the DNA. The RNA synthesized during transcription is called messenger RNA (mRNA).
The mRNA is then used as a template for amino acids synthesis during translation.