Answer:
I agree with Joelle.
Explanation:
Just out of common sense, not all cells are the same.
-Sienctists have studied and evaluated that cells in different matter have different make-ups. For instance, plant have cell walls and a cell membrane while animals (incluing humans) only have a cell membrane. Plants have a chloroplast, used to make their own food using the process photosythesis, While animals don't, an consume other living things.
-I don't know if you have to fill it out or anything, but if you were to fill it out, You'd put a check under each cell part for each thing.
(Not sure about the frog blood)
Answer:
Inside a star there is force of gravity balanced by the outward force of pressure. The star nuclear reactions are kept under control by a pressure temperature thermostat.
Explanation:
Answer:
1. Muscle Fibers
2. Bones
3. Joints
Explanation:
Muscle tissue is made of muscle fibers. The plasma membrane of a muscle fiber is called sarcolemma while its cytoplasm is known as sarcoplasm. Muscle cells are characterized by the presence of specialized endoplasmic reticulum which is called sarcoplasmic reticulum.
Muscle cells exhibit contractility and extensibility. The ability of muscle cells to shorten their length forcibly in response to a stimulus is their contractility. Muscle fibers have the ability to extend and shorten themselves.
Extension and contraction of muscle fibers are responsible for the movement of the human body and its parts.
Muscles are attached to bones via tendons which in turn are the fibrous connective tissues. Muscles are also part of our joints where they assist in the movement by pulling the bones as well as stabilize and strengthen the joints.
Light lets plants grow for the animals eat them
temperature lets the animals know when they have to hibernate or come out and hunt
i think soil composition helps the animals to get new types of food or lets them get water ?
Glycolysis is the common initial pathway for the both catalytic degradation pathway for ATP production and the anabolic pathway for the synthesis of hydrocarbon(gluconeogenesis)
Most important glycolysis, and then gluconeogenesis