Answer: Option (A) is the correct answer.
Explanation:
Beaches are the places which are part of shore of an ocean, sea, large river etc.
There are pebbles and sand at the shore of a beach. Waves of water in an ocean always change the ocean due to erosion and addition of sand.
It is the force acted by the wave that pushes or pull the sand in different directions every time the wave comes.
So we can conclude that the statement beaches are always changes due to factors such as waves adding and eroding sand best describes beaches.
For the generalized scheme of Alternation of generations (see p. 120), plants have two forms based on a genetic complement that are the Sporophytes (2N diploid) and Gametophyte (N haploid). The processes connecting the two stages are gametangia producing haploid spores and zygote cell growth producing haploid gametophyte. Group of answer choices
<span>C. by making and breaking the chemical bonds in organic compounds. Don't worry I'm a science geek. </span>
Answer:
See the answer below
Explanation:
A DNase is also known as deoxyribonuclease and it is an enzyme that catalyzes the degradation of deoxyribonucleic acid by cleaving the phosphodiester linkage in their structures. Thus,<em> if the RNA is treated with a DNase before the plants are exposed to it, it will not make any difference. The plants will develop the same types of lesions as if they have been exposed to the mosaic virus.</em>
Unlike DNase, RNase is a ribonuclease, an enzyme that is capable of carrying out catalytic degradation of ribonucleic acids. <em>This means that if the RNA is treated with RNase before the plants are made to be exposed to it, they will not develop the lesions because the RNA would have been degraded by the enzyme.</em>
A protease is an enzyme that degrades the structure of proteins. <em>Treating a RNA with protease will thus have no effect on the structure of the RNA. Exposing the plants to the protease-treated RNA will make no difference. The plants will still come down with the lesions as if they have been exposed to the virus. </em>