<h3><u>
Answer;</u></h3>
C. Different species can share the same common name.
<h3><u>Explanation;</u></h3>
- <em><u>Different organisms can share the same common name</u></em>, and thus the reason why scientists avoid using common naming while naming organisms.
- Additionally, s<em><u>cientists avoid using common names because they are not specific to a specific species.</u></em> For instance, Robin is a common word that may be used to describe the many species of robin that are found in different regions of the earth, for example, Robin in England which has yellow breast, and robin in United states and have red breasts.
- Therefore, <em><u>for the purpose of avoiding ambiguity and confusion in naming organisms scientists use scientific names while identifying various species.</u></em>
Answer: in this order: internal, external, cancer, tumors, benign, malignant, metastasize
Explanation:
Answer:
A
Explanation:
i am pretty sure its A sorry if its wrong
Picture attached
Answer:
A - G1 phase
B - G2 phase
C - S phase
D - Mitosis
E - Interphase
Explanation:
Interphase is all the parts of the cell cycle excluding mitosis, and encompasses G1, S, and G2 phases. Cells spend most of their lives in interphase
G1 is the first gap phase, where the cell is growing and making checks in preparation for mitosis. During S phase (the synthesis phase), the DNA is replicated. This is so a full copy of the DNA can be passed on to the daughter cells.
During the G2 phase, the final checks are made before the cell undergoes mitosis, which is where the cell divides.