Answer:
The correct pair is A: "apicomplexans—parasites of animals"
Explanation:
- Euglenophyta is a group of unicellular, eukaryotic organisms. They are small, free-living forms, or parasites that present different feeding mechanisms and behaviors, such as heterotrophy, autotrophy, or mixotrophy.
- Dinoflagellates are unicellular, flagellated, free-living protists that might form colonies. Most of them are autotrophic organisms but some of them are heterotrophic, or mixotrophic. In these last cases, dinoflagellates can feed on other dinoflagellates, protozoans, or diatoms. They can also be parasites.
- Entamoebas are endoparasitic organisms with no mitochondria as an adaptation of living in environments with low oxygen concentration.
- Apicomplexa is a unicellular, protist group. They have medical and economic importance as they are<u> animals</u> and human parasites. They have an apical complex that helps them to fixate to the host cell and release a substance that provokes an invagination in the host membrane. This invagination allows the parasite to get into the host cell.
Magnetic is the answer, hope this helps!
When a client comes into the emergency room (er) after hitting his head while playing any sport, if he is alert and oriented. immobilize the client´s head and neck would be a priority nursing intervention, because a head injury is treated as if a cervical spine injury is present until x-rays confirm their absence, then call for an immediate head computed tomography to look for any spine or head injury.
Answer: omega 3's
Explanation:
-combination of marine & food biotechnology
-polyunstaturated fatty acids (PUFAs)
-3 types in human physiology
->α-linolenic acid (ALA) - found in plant oils
->eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA)
->docosahexaenoic acid (DHA)
-N-3 fatty acids have health benefits & are considered essential fatty acids, meaning that they cannot be synthesized by the human body - but are vital for normal metabolism
->table of dietary source of Omega-3
-->fish is commonly used but dangerous as you can contract mercury poisoning