Answer:
c. mosses
Explanation:
Primary succession occurs in places that have never been occupied by a community. Simple species are established first, as they help enrich the soil, allowing other species to become established. The first organisms to appear in areas of primary succession are often pioneer species such as mosses or lichens.
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Answer:
Codon
Explanation:
mRNA bases are grouped into sets of three, called codons.
E. Caomouflage is what prey use to blend into their surroundings.
RNA splicing was first discovered in 1970s in viruses and subsequently in eukaryotes. Not long after, scientists discovered alternative patterns of pre-mRNA splicing that produced different mature mRNAs containing various combinations of exons from a single precursor mRNA. The first example of alternative splicing of a cellular gene in eukaryotes was identified in the IgM gene, a member of the immunoglobulin superfamily. Alternative splicing (AS) therefore is a process by which exons or portions of exons or noncoding regions within a pre-mRNA transcript are differentially joined or skipped, resulting in multiple protein isoforms being encoded by a single gene. This mechanism increases the informational diversity and functional capacity of a gene during post-transcriptional processing and provides an opportunity for gene regulation