They are less likely to be separated during crossing over.
Explanation:
Well, one could use a magnet to see if it's ferrous. One could melt it to check which type it is, use a metal detector, or just use their senses: If it dings or clinks like metal, and feels like it’s texture. If it polishes with metal polish, is reflective, can be shaped or shape when heated… It usually is a metal. If it rusts, or oxidizes, it is or contains metal. If it “smells" like metal, most likely, it is metal. Finally, if it walks like metal, and quacks like metal, most likely we have a metal
Why dies???? what do you mean
Larches trees are usually grown as an ornamental plants, that is, they are grown for their beauty. They are deciduous conifers and evergreen plants. Larches typically need cold climate and plenty of water to grow and they are found in large quantity in Northern Europe, Asia and America.
Larches trees in Siberia are not harvested much because they are majorly planted as ornamental plants.
Burning fossil fuels and deforestation