Carbon Monoxide. Carbon Monoxide is polluting the air not water, everything else on the list is something that can pollute the water.
During respiration, the diaphragm moves upwards and returns to dome shape from the flattened shape before during expiration.
This movement of diaphragm can decrease the lung volume, increase the pressure inside and thus force the air out. This process is expiration.
However, if we breathe in again, which makes that inhalation, the diaphragm moves downwards into a flat shape so that it can increase the lung volume and thus we can breathe in as much air we can. This process is completely opposite from expiration.
1. The population is under selection pressure from predators
<span>2. Hey now, no population is ever at H-W equilibrium: </span>
<span>mutations happen </span>
<span>immigration and emigration can occur </span>
<span>the population is not huge, which means that genetic drift can happen </span>
<span>mating is not completely random -- a rat is more likely to mate with someone local than with someone living in Paris, France. </span>
<span>b) The small rats will be selected for (assuming there are predators in this ecosystem that are less likely to look in bushes, and further assuming that the small rats do not have reduced fertility by dint of being small) </span>
<span>This is "directional selection" </span>
<span>c) I would expect the "smallness" allele frequency to increase in this population over time, and the "normal size" allele frequency to decrease.</span>
Drinking Salt water would dehydrate you making you more thirsty and eventually you'd die. You could desalinate small amounts of water by distillation with the appropriate tools all you'd need to do is heat the salt water and catch the vapor/steam in a different container. This could be done slowly using heat from the sun and clear plastic water bottles if no other heat sources are available. the salt stays in the heated container while the vapor/steam is desalinated drinking water.
Answer:
free points i guess? whatever mine now.