Answer:
Our sun is extremly hot. like our sun, hydrogen is being converted into helium, a process which gives off energy that heats the star
Explanation:
Answer:
I think this should be the chart you were interested in...
Explanation:
Individual Shape in shaded
phenotype pedigrees
Male with gen. TT PTC taster square No
Male with gen. Tt PTC taster square No
Male with gen. tt Non-taster square Yes
Female with gen. TT PTC taster Circle No
Female with gen. Tt PTC taster Circle No
Female with gen. tt Non-taster Circle Yes
*gen- genotype
Answer:
rice cultivation.
Explanation:
There are two methods of sowing a crop in the field i. e. sowing of seed and transplanting. Seeds sowing in the field is used for almost all the crops except rice in which transplantation is done. In transplanting method, plants are grown inside a nursery and when the plant reaches to a certain height, it is transported to the field. This method is done in the cultivation of paddy rice because water is present at a certain height in the field and rice is the only crop in which roots respire in water.
Answer:
The food chain showing seven organisms can be drawn as follows:
Plants → grasshoppers → mice → frog → snakes→ eagles → decomposers
The plants are the primary source of food in a food chain or a food web. The animals which feed on plants will be termed as herbivores or primary consumers like the grasshopper. The organisms feeding on primary consumers will be the secondary consumers like mice.
An energy pyramid for three of the organisms can be shown as follows:
mice (10 kilocalories)
↑
Grasshoppers (100 kilocalories)
↑
Plants ( 1000 kilocalories)
As the energy pyramid shows, only about 10% of the energy travels from one trophic level to another.
Explanation:
Reproductive success is defined as the passing of genes onto the next generation in a way that they too can pass on those genes. This is not solely the number of offspring produced by an individual, but also, as Ronald Fisher outlined in 1915, the probable reproductive success of those offspring, making mate choice (a form of sexual selection) an important factor in this success,[1] making biological fitness a key element in the theories of natural selection and evolution.