Blood clots will do this. Cutting off blood flow while also increasing blood pressure. Also, if the viscosity (thickness of the blood) is thick which will slow down the flow and cause the body to use more effort to pump blood.
Answer: Yes, they would either need a blood relative to take DNA samples from or something the deceased had before their death such as a baby tooth or hair.
Cooperation is common in non-human animals. Besides cooperation with an immediate benefit for both actors, this behavior appears to occur mostly between relatives.[1] Spending time and resources assisting a related individual may at first seem destructive to the organism’s chances of survival but is actually beneficial over the long-term. Since relatives share part of their genetic make-up, enhancing each other’s chances of survival may actually increase the likelihood that the helper’s genetic traits will be passed on to future generations.[6] The cooperative pulling paradigm is an experimental design used to assess if and under which conditions animals cooperate. It involves two or more animals pulling rewards towards themselves via an apparatus they can not successfully operate alone.[7]
Answer:
The gametophyte is green and nutritionally independent in mosses, liverworts, and fern.
Explanation:
The gametophyte is the sexual stage of growth in plants and algae.
During this stage, there is production of reproductive organs which produce sex cells.
During this stage, the gametophyte is independent since it relies fully on itself for food production.
The presence of chlorophyll enables this independence.
The gametophyte produces its own food through photosynthesis.