Answer:
I don't think there is a #6, so I'm gonna answer the "Mammals and plants don't belong in the same domain".. If this is the wrong one I can help with the one you actually need help with.
Explanation:
Myth: Mammals and plants don't belong in the same domain.
Fact: Mammals, being a group of animals do not belong in the same domain as plants. Evidence: All living organisms are divided into three domains: Bacteria, Archaea and Eukarya. All of the organisms that possess a eukaryotic cell, plants, animals, protists, and fungi are in the Eukarya domain. Therefore, mammals and plants belong to the same domain, the Eukarya domain.
Answer:
1. <u>The height of bean plants</u> depends on the amount of water they recieve.
2. The higher the temerature of the air in the oven, <u>the (speed of which) a cake will bake.</u>
3. Lemon trees receiving the most water produced the most<u> lemons (amount)</u>
4. An investigation found that more <u>bushels of potatoes</u> were <u>produced</u> when the soil was fertalized (amount) more.
5. The amount of <u>pollution</u> produces by cars was measured for cars using gasoline containing different amounts of lead.
Explanation:
The independent variable is what you change and the <u>dependent</u> variable is what is being measured. It is like cause and effect.
(sorry this is my first answer apologizes for any mistakes)
The correct answer is - B. Beak size determines what the bird can eat.
The beak of a bird can come in many different shapes and sizes. It can be pointy, long, short, rounded, scythe-like, thin, thick... All of those shapes and sizes have a specific role, and that role is to enable the bird to feed itself with certain type of food source. Every food source requires certain type of beak in order for the bird to be efficient in getting its nutrition, so depending on hat the bird eats, we can easily see a pattern in the beaks, where birds that eat nuts have one strong and shorter beak, the ones that eat warms and insects have thin, pointy one, the predator birds have claw like, sharp beak...
Reproductive isolation. Species refer to the group of organisms which share common morphological features and can interbreed and produce a viable offspring. Thus, the organisms of one species are reproductively isolated from the organisms of other species