4 and 5 are correct,
Hormones are Endocrine
Fingernails are Integumentary
Sperm is Reproductive
Bladder is Excretory
Killing Pathogens is Immune
1. An example of secondary consumer is snake. Secondary consumers are the ones who eat the primary consumers, which makes them carnivore.
2. Photosynthesis is a process used by plants and (some other organisms) that converts water (H2O) and carbon dioxide (CO2) with the presence of sun energy (collected in the chloroplasts) into chemical energy that is later stored in sugars (carbohydrates). Organisms that do the photosynthesis are called autotrophs (produce food by themselves).
3. The energy pyramid represents energy flow in a community, where the different levels represent different groups of organisms.
The food chain is a circulation of energy that comes from the sun and passes from the producer organisms to the primary consumer, secondary and tertiary consumer organisms.
4. For example, plant is producer that is eaten by primary consumer-herbivore (e.g. bugs). Than secondary consumer-carnivore (e.g. snake) eat that herbivore and than is being eaten by tertiary consumer (apex predator that have no natural predator).
5. One trophic level gets only 10% of the energy of the previous level. So, if the plant have 10.000 units of energy and is eaten by rabbit, rabbit gets 1000 units of energy, and when the fox eats an rabbit, it gets 100 units of energy.
6. Trophic level is the position of an organism in the food chain.
<h2>Birds and Reptile</h2>
Explanation:
Birds and reptiles share a branch on the chordate phylogeny tree because
a. They share similar traits.
Birds and reptiles are vertebrates and they are thought to originate from a common ancestor. This is because of the presence of certain common traits like keratinous scaly wings, similarities in skeletal structure , way of reproduction, similarities in circulatory system such as nucleated red blood cells etc.
Answer:
Yes
Explanation:
Mycorrhizal network. Mycorrhizal networks (also known as common mycorrhizal networks or CMN) are underground hyphal networks created by mycorrhizal fungi that connect individual plants together and transfer water, carbon, nitrogen, and other nutrients and minerals.