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Naily [24]
3 years ago
8

Just need some help answering this question

Biology
1 answer:
boyakko [2]3 years ago
8 0
What question is it? I'm in 11th, so I should be able to help you.

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Explain how the generation of electricity by hydroelectric, tidal
sveta [45]

Hydroelectric, tidal and wind sources are similar in the sense that are all renewable sources of electricity generation.

<h3>Generation of electricity</h3>

Electricity is generated in many ways. Some of the ways are renewable while some of the ways are non renewable. The renewable means of generation can be reused while the non renewable can not be reused.

Now,  hydroelectric, tidal and wind sources are similar in the sense that are all renewable sources of electricity generation.

Learn more about renewable sources of electricity: brainly.com/question/13258110?

5 0
2 years ago
A molecule that can be used as a molecular clock has a neutral mutation rate of one mutation per 5 million years. How many years
gregori [183]

Answer:To put dates on events in evolutionary history, biologists count how many mutations have accumulated over time in a species’ genes. But these “molecular clocks” can be fickle. A paper in the 28 September Physical Review Letters mathematically relates erratic “ticking” of the clock to properties of the DNA sequence. Researchers may eventually use the results to select which genes make the best clocks.

Although mutations in DNA are rare, they are crucial for evolution. Each mutation in a gene changes one small piece of a protein molecule’s structure–sometimes rendering it non-functional and occasionally improving it. The vast majority of mutations, however, neither hurt nor help, often because they affect an unimportant part of their protein. Such a “neutral” mutation usually dies out over the generations, but occasionally one proliferates until virtually every individual has it, permanently “fixing” the mutation in the evolving species.

Over thousands of generations, these fixed mutations accumulate. To gauge the time since two species diverged from a common ancestor, biologists count the number of differences between stretches of their DNA. But different DNA segments (genes) often give different answers, and those answers differ by much more than would be expected if the average rate of mutations remained constant over evolutionary time. Sometimes they also disagree with dates inferred from fossils. Now Alpan Raval, of the Keck Graduate Institute and Claremont Graduate University, both in Claremont, California, has put precise mathematical limits on this variation.

Raval’s work is based on representing possible DNA sequences for a gene as a network of interconnected points or “nodes.” Each point represents a version of the gene sequence that differs by exactly one neutral mutation–a single DNA “letter”–from its immediate neighbors. The network contains only neutral mutations; non-functional versions of the sequence aren’t part of the network.

Models and simulations had suggested that if the number of neighbors varies from point to point–that is, if some sequences allow more neutral mutations than others–mutations accumulate erratically over time, making the molecular clock unreliable. Raval calculates precise limits on how unsteady the clock could get, based on properties of the network, such as the average number of neighbors for each node or the number of “jumps” connecting any two randomly chosen nodes. “The great strength of this paper is that it’s now mathematically worked out in much more detail than before,” says Erik van Nimwegen of the University of Basel and the Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics in Switzerland, who developed the framework that Raval uses.

Still, the relevant network properties are “not very intuitive,” van Nimwegen observes. Raval agrees. “The real question from this point on would be to identify what kinds of proteins would be good molecular clocks.” He says that according to his results, for a protein to be a good clock, “virtually all single mutations [should] be neutral”–many neighbors per node–but “as you start accumulating double and triple mutants, it should quickly become dysfunctional.” Raval is working to relate these network features to protein properties that researchers could measure in the lab.

Researchers have suggested other explanations for the erratic behavior of molecular clocks, such as variations in the mutation rate because of changes in the environment. But such environmental changes are relatively fast, so their effect should average out over evolutionary time, says David Cutler of Emory University in Atlanta. He says that in network models, by contrast, changes in the mutation rate are naturally slow because the point representing the current sequence moves slowly around the network as mutations accumulate.

Explanation:

4 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
It takes 1000 years for deep waters that sink in the North Atlantic to emerge in the North Pacific. Why do waters sink in the No
Paladinen [302]

Answer:

North Atlantic Deep Water is a deep water mass formed in the North Atlantic OceanWhen this water reaches the North Atlantic it cools and sinks through

7 0
3 years ago
Punnett Squares are used by geneticists to determine the likely genotypes of the offspring of two parents.
PilotLPTM [1.2K]
That's correct - it's a square where on one axis, the paternal allele (allele = one of the possible forms of the same gene), and on another the maternal allele is listed. Often, it's also indicated whether an allele is recessive or dominant.

Then, in the table that results, all the possible "combinations" of allele between the paternal and maternal party are created. If you count how often a certain combination appears, it indicates the likelihood of that combination.
See the picture (though it is directly from Wikipedia, please note). The likelihood of BB is 25%, of Bb is 50%, and of bb 25%.

6 0
3 years ago
Free oxygen formed on earth after
harina [27]

Answer: (1) photosynthesis occurred

Explanation: The photosynthesis process in cianobacteria changed the composition of earth's atmosphera, rising oxygen levels. This could be possible since photosynthesis used energy from the sun to produce energetic intermediaries to synthesize sugars, and as byproduct due to water photolisis, is oxygen.

5 0
3 years ago
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