For example, a lily, which is a mono-cot, has 3 sepals, 3 petals, 6 stamens, and a 3-part ovary formed from the fusion of 3 carpels. The flower of a wild geranium, a dicot, consists of 5 sepals, 5 petals, 10 stamens, and 5 fused carpels with separate stigmas.
The answer is B, the luminosities and distances can both be different
not only in the land but also in the ocean there is food web that is why we can find different spices of creature in the ocean alive
there are producer consumer and decomposer
u can present by giving example
u can give oration how the organisms are adapted in the water
Complete question:
Which survivorship curve best describes most marine organisms (few adults produce a large number of eggs and larvae).
- Type I
- Type II
- Type III
- None of the above
Answer:
<em>Type III </em>
Explanation:
There are three survivorship curves, each of them corresponding to different species according to their reproductive strategies.
- <u>Type I</u><u>.</u> Organisms do not tend to die when they are young or middle-aged, but they do when they are old. These species, in general, have a few descendants and parents provide much parental care to ensure their progeny to survival.
- <u>Type II.</u> Organisms that have more or less the same probabilities of dying in each age interval. These organisms can also have a few descendants and they can provide significant parental care.
- <u>Type III</u>. Only a few individuals survive their first period of life or their firsts years. However, the lucky ones to reach a certain age generally have a long life. These organisms have a lot of descendants at the same time, but they do not provide much parental care. This is the case of most marine organisms that produce a large number of eggs and larvae when they are adults, but they do not provide parental care.
Thier are 37.2 trillion
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