Yes. Absolutely. Without heart, no one can live. It helps in pumping of oxygen rich blood to all body cells and tissues. It also helps in transportation of various materials like potassium, sodium, calcium etc. in our body. The main function is that it helps in excretion of wastes.
Since blood is liquid and heart pumps it, the waste materials like CO2, gets diffused and becomes impure blood. Then it is taken to lungs for purification and again reused.
So, heart actually helps us indirectly in many ways.
<em>Hope</em><em> it</em><em> helps</em><em> you</em><em>.</em><em>.</em><em> </em><em>pls</em><em> mark</em><em> brainliest</em><em> if</em><em> </em><em>it </em><em>helps</em><em> you</em>
BIG BRAIN ANSWER:
Before Darwin, a naturalist named Jean-Babtiste Lamarck believed that the environment altered the shape of individuals and that these acquired changes were then inherited. Meanwhile, Charles Darwin was a naturalist on a ship called the HMS Beagle, and he discovered that the beak shape varies among finch species in the Galapagos Islands. He found that the beak of an ancestral species of finch had somehow been transported to these islands, and adapted over time to acquire different food sources that were available, causing variation, and that nature just selected for the most suitable beak shape and against less useful ones.
The table given in the figure below reflects the data being referred to (from the book: <em>Campbell Biology Australian and New Zealand Edition </em>by Reece, et al. (2014)).
The number 22,877 of the gene that encodes the first protein with the protein ID 298599 indicates that the
amount
of the RNA transcript of this gene made in the mycorrhizal
parts of the fungus was 22,877 times higher when they were associated with the Douglas fir compared to those made in soil mycelium away from the root of the plants.
A.high blood pressure causes fluid to leak from..