I dont see a photo? can you rewrite it
A is the answer I think hoped I helped
<span>Neutral mutations are neither harmful nor beneficial.
Therefore, they are invisible to natural selection. (Since they neither improve nor worsen one individual's chances of survival and reproduction over another.)
However neutral mutations can still spread into the population by just random replications and matings. This is called genetic drift.
In other words, they are 'silent'. They are mutations that exist and propagate in populations, but seem to have no effect at all.
The reason they can become important to evolution is that a day can come when they *do* have an effect. In other words, even though an individual mutation may have no immediate effect on survival or reproduction, a *combination* of neutral mutations may provide some new benefit or harm ... at which point natural selection *will* act on that combination.
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B. the last phosphate group has a lot of energy stored in the bond that connects it to the other two phosphates.
Answer:
G1 - S - G2 (may be is option D)
Explanation:
The interface begins with phase G1 where the cell increases its volume and the mass is doubled.
Then, we continue with the S phase where DNA and histones are synthesized.
Afterwardsy we reach the G2 phase where the chromosomes are duplicated.
Finally we reach, the begining of mitosis.