Not sure what you mean but here's what i think
1.They are substrate-specific, because it's a lock-and-key mechanism.
2. They are re-used
3. They can catalyze reactions
4. They decrease activation energy
5. They are proteins by nature.
They do not influence the salinity level in their environment, they maintain the salinity in their body. If they don't, osmosis will cause their cells to shrink due to the fact that the salinity in the cell is lower than outside the cell. This will make water leave the cells. So they need to get rid of excess salt all the time. Freshwater fish need to retain the salt in their bodies, otherwise the opposite will happen. Salinity level in the cell is higher than outside the cell and this causes influx of water which will make the cell build up turgor pressure. Ultimately they will explode. So fishes in both environments adapted to deal with osmosis.
One similarity you could draw between the two acceptance speeches is the overall tone of <u>hopelessness</u>.
A monosomy occurs when a zygote has a single chromosome missing in each cell. This happens when<span> a portion of the chromosome has one copy while there are two copies in the rest of the other chromosomes.An example of an disorder is the Turner Syndrome which has only 1 X chromosome in female genome.</span>
Answer:
This illustration shows how water transfer imitates energy transfer through an ecosystem.
Note here that just as there is energy loss in the transfer of energy, there is also water reduction in the transfer of water.
A student is to dip cup 1 in the first container loaded with water. He will at that point move the water from cup 1 into cup 2 which is in his left hand. There will be a dim plate/ container under his left hand to hold water coming from the openings in cup 2, exchange the water in cup 2 to his partner who is holding cup 3 and they will proceed with the water transfer until they arrive at the last container.
They may notice that there is going to be a considerable amount of water reduction from the first container to the last container.
Explanation:
Energy moves through ecosystems a single way from photosynthetic living beings. The all out energy found in living beings from one tropic level in a natural way of life is accessible to life forms in the following tropic level as just a part of energy reduction; the rest is used in metabolic cycles or changed into heat.