Answer:
A. As a young naturalist, Charles Darwin traveled around the world and made many discoveries on a small British navy ship, HMS Beagle.
Answer:
I have identified <em>Escherichia coli </em>and<em> Bacillus sp.</em>
Explanation:
I obtained my sample from soil, in a park near my house. The common bacteria on soil are gram positive and gram negative.
I found rods, and some are gram positive and long. They others are gram negative and very small and short.
The color of the gram positive is a dark blue, almost purple, and they are big and abundant, they are almost in lines, so I think they are a species of <em>Bacillus.</em>
The gram negative bacteria are extremely small and they look hot pink. They are very probably enterobacteria, and the most common enterobacteria is <em>Escherichia coli</em>. They do not have a particular order of arrangement.
You can classify them in what phase they are in: solid, liquid, gas
You can classify them in Sizes
You can classify them by the number of moons they have
You can classify them by distance from the sun
You can classify them all as heliocentric or orbiting/circling around the sun
You can classify them by color
Answer:
This question lacks options, options are: a.related. b. homologous. c protein-coding, d. comparative. The correct answer is b.
Explanation:
Homology refers to the fact in which the sequences of two or more proteins or nucleic acids are very similar due to the fact that they have the same evolutionary origin. Normally two sequences have a high similarity because they are homologous, that is, they share a common ancestor.
If two sequences in an alignment are from a common ancestor, mismatches can be interpreted as point mutations (substitutions), and gaps as insertion or deletion mutations introduced into one or both lineages in the time since they diverged.