Answer:
The first person to observe cells was Robert Hooke. Hooke was an English scientist. He used a compound microscope to look at thin slices of cork.
Explanation:
Sorry if I am wrong let me know if I am.
The following statement is false: MOST US STATES PROHIBIT THE IMPORTATION OF ANIMAL SPECIES LIKELY TO BECOME INVASIVE IF THEY ESCAPE INTO THE WILD.
Presently, most US states do not have any law, which prohibit people from bringing into the US animal species that are likely to become invasive.
Invasive plant and animals are a great source of problems in America. These species usually destroy habitats and native species, this usually throw the ecological communities out of balance. The government spend as much as $120 billions every year to control these invasive species.
Answer:
e) unicellular, colonial, or multicellular.
Explanation:
Protists originates from the Kingdom Protoctista. They comprise of organisms that are unicellular (Amoeba) or unicellular-colonial (volvox) in nature and which have no tisssues, therefore they are at the cellular level of organization.
Examples include, Amoeba, Paramecium, Euglena, Slime mold, Kelp, Diatoms, DInoflagellates. etc.
Some of them are also considered to be multicellular eukaryotes e.g slime molds, red algae etc. Eukaryotic organisms are organisms that possess cells containing a nucleus.
Characteristics in which protists exhibit varies from one species to the other.
For example, the mode of nutrition in eukaryotic algae are autotrophic in nature, in amoeba, they are gifted with pseudopods(false feets) in which they used to engulf prey(a term known as phagocytosis) therefore making them to be heterotrophic in nature.
In protist, locomotion varies from one organism to another. For example, in Amoeba , locomotion is achieved by extending and retracting pseudopods, Euglena are flagellated in nature , hence they move with the flagella. In Paramecium that are ciliated in nature, they move by propelling their cilia. etc.
An isometric exercise is a form of exercise involving the static contraction of a muscle without any visible movement in the angle of the joint.