Answer:
The correct answer is - true.
Explanation:
In the meiosis cell division, there are four cells present with n number of chromosomes which means these cells generated from by the meiosis have a half number of the chromosome as their parents. This is the reason this type of cell division is known as a reduction division.
These cells that are produced are sex cells or reproductive cell sperm in male and egg in female all have n number of chromosome number as they have to fuse to form a zygote.
Evolutionary<span> thought, the conception that </span>species<span> change over time, has roots in antiquity - in the ideas of the </span>ancient Greeks<span>, </span>Romans<span>, and </span>Chinese<span> as well as in </span>medieval Islamic science<span>. With the beginnings of modern </span>biological taxonomy<span> in the late 17th century, two opposed ideas influenced </span>Western<span> biological thinking: </span>essentialism<span>, the belief that every species has essential characteristics that are unalterable, a concept which had developed from </span>medieval Aristotelian metaphysics<span>, and that fit well with </span>natural theology<span>; and the development of the new anti-Aristotelian approach to </span>modern science<span>: as the </span>Enlightenment<span> progressed, evolutionary </span>cosmology<span> and the </span>mechanical philosophy<span> spread from the </span>physical sciences<span> to </span>natural history<span>. </span>Naturalists<span> began to focus on the variability of species; the emergence of </span>paleontology<span> with the concept of </span>extinction<span> further undermined static views of </span>nature<span>. In the early 19th century </span>Jean-Baptiste Lamarck<span> (1744 – 1829) proposed his </span>theory<span> of the </span>transmutation of species<span>, the first fully formed theory of </span>evolution<span>.</span>
A) Thylakoid
B) Lumen
C) Granum
D) Stroma
Answer:
The correct answer is option D. "It neglects the loss of habitat".
Explanation:
The main objective of the international treaty on plant genetic resources for food and agriculture is to achieve the conservation and sustainable use of all plant genetic resources and the fair and equitable sharing of the benefits obtained from their use. This treaty is managed by Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations and is applied in many countries of the world. One of the limitations of this treaty is that it neglects the loss of habitat, which can also affect the availability of plant genetic resources. The international treaty on plant genetic resources is limited to work on loss of biodiversity and management of genetic resources such as seeds.