Answer:
<em>Bracketed and indented keys are two dichotomous/or branching keys with an ordered, numbered couplet, and spatially differentiated respectively.</em>
Explanation:
Dichotomous keys are used in the identification and classification of taxa.
Bracketed keys, or parallel keys, are easy to understand- for efficiency, these keep the first two entries of every couplet or pair being compared. It also makes use of a numbering system in the couplet choices for easy tracking.
Indented keys maintain an equal distance from the margin on the left of the pages. Successive couplets are indented til the taxon is identified.
Answer:
Uncomfortable heat and humidity
Explanation:
After it rains for a long time, the humidity level rises, and most of the time it also brings heat with it. The author was using the metaphor of the broccoli being dropped into a steamer to explain the heat and humidity outside.
Hope this helps :)
Answer:
0.1% of energy
Explanation:
Energy flow: From the whole quantity of energy that reaches the earth's surface, autotroph organisms or producers absorb only 0.1 or 1%.
From the input of solar energy begins a unidirectional energy flow through all the organisms in the ecosystem, from autotrophs to heterotrophs, until it is dissipated in the environment.
At each trophic level occurs an energy transfer to the next, with only 10% being usable in each of them. This assessment is called "The 10% rule". As a general rule, only about 10% of the energy stored as biomass at one trophic level, per unit time, ends up as biomass at the next trophic level, in the same unit of time.
If wheat transferred 10% of the energy to mice, and of that 10% mice transferred 10% of the energy to hawk, then the percentage of energy transferred from the first trophic level to the third equals 0.1%.
10% (1st TL-2nd TL) / 10% (2nd TL - 3rd TL) = 0.1% (1stTL - 3rd TL)
<em>TL = Trophic level </em>
Answer:
i wish i knew but i dont sorry
Explanation:
Man im sorry i dont know because i should now it but sorry