It's all dependent on the amount of oxygen your lungs take in and deliver to the heart
I think B. I hope this helps.
The answer is tunicates. Tunicates are commonly known as sea squirts and are in the Chordata phylum, even though they don't have a back bone. Which is really weird. But they just got put into the same category as humans. This is because they have a notocord and a back bone when they are larvae. But they lose all these when they become adults.
Cellular products such as hormones and neurotransmitters are released by the process of exocytosis. <span> Exocytosis is the term that describes the transport of material out of a cell.</span>During this process <span>vesicles fuse with the plasma membrane and release their contents to the outside of the cell.
</span><span>This process is the counterpart of endocytosis.</span>