1answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
Shkiper50 [21]
3 years ago
7

wild animals are commonly divided into groups with similar characteristics. the two categories used for mammals are

Biology
2 answers:
vovikov84 [41]3 years ago
8 0
There are actually three types of mammals. They are monotremes, marsupials and placental mammals. Monotremes are the least common and are mammals that lay eggs. The most popular example is the platypus. Marsupials are mammals that grow their young in pouches. The kangaroo is an example of a marsupial. The last and most popular group are placental mammals. As the name suggests they grow their young in the womb and nutrients are fed to the developing fetus via the placenta. 
Neko [114]3 years ago
6 0

Wild animals are commonly divided into groups with similar characteristics. the two categories used for mammals are monotremes and marsupials.

Further Explanation:

Wild animals:

Creatures that have not been tamed or restrained and are generally living in a common habitat, including both game and nongame species.  

Monotremes:  

Monotremes are one of the three primary gatherings of living warm blooded animals, alongside placentals and marsupials. The monotremes are embodied by basic contrasts in their minds, jaws, stomach related tract, regenerative tract, and other body parts contrasted with the more typical mammalian sorts. These are Egg-laying Mammals somehow or another, monotremes are crude for warm blooded animals since, similar to reptiles and flying creatures, they lay eggs as opposed to having live birth.  

Marsupials:  

Marsupials are any individuals from the mammalian infraclass Marsupialia. Every surviving marsupial are endemic to Australasia and the Americas. An unmistakable trademark basic to these species is that a large portion of the youthful are conveyed in a pocket.  

Marsupials recreate:  

Individuals incorporate the kangaroo, koala, Tasmanian fallen angel and the Virginia opossum. Marsupials bring forth fetal-like youthful after a concise growth period. Marsupial youthful are fundamentally incipient organisms during childbirth. When conceived, the youthful must move with a swimming movement up the hide on the female's adbomen and hook onto a nipple.

Subject: biology

Level: High School

Keywords: Wild animals, Monotremes, Marsupials, Marsupials recreate.

Related links:

Learn more about evolution on

brainly.com/question/10651026

brainly.com/question/511781

You might be interested in
Identify the 2 major groups of enzymes that make the redox reactions possible: Describe their role in these reactions.
adell [148]

Answer:Enzymes that makes redox reactions possible in a biochemical process includes those that help to catalyze the transfer of electrons, atoms, or functional groups.

Explanation:

Here are some class categories of these enzymes and their roles ;

• Oxidoreductases - Transfer of electrons (hydride ions or H atoms)

• Transferases - Group- transfer reactions

• Hydrolases - Hydrolysis reactions (transfer of functional groups to water)

• Lyases - Addition of groups to double bonds, or formation of double bonds by removal of groups Transfer of groups within molecules to yield isomeric forms

• Isomerases - Formation of C-C, C-S, C--0, and C-N bonds by condensation reactions coupled to ATP cleavage

The above are however classified, given code numbers, and assigned names according to the type of transfer reaction, the group donor, and the group acceptor.

7 0
4 years ago
Many schools require applicants to take a test, such as the SAT or the ACT, as part of the admissions process. These tests deter
Ray Of Light [21]
"Hippocampus" is the one part of the central nervous system among the following choices given in the question that helps students remember the correct answers to the questions on these exams. The correct option among all the options that are given in the question is the second option or option "B". 
7 0
4 years ago
Which event takes place during normal fertilization?
Minchanka [31]

The event which takes place during normal fertilization is zygote formation.

<h3>Which event takes place during fertilization?</h3>

The major event which is characteristic of fertilization is zygote, otherwise termed cell formation in which case, the zygote is capable of undergoing cell division to form a new living cell. The fusion of two gametes necessary for fertilization kick-starts several reactions in the egg.

Read more on zygote formation;

brainly.com/question/1151355

#SPJ12

5 0
3 years ago
When oxygen is available,<br>cellular respiration takes place.​
nexus9112 [7]

Cellular respiration is a process that all living things use to convert glucose into energy. Autotrophs (like plants) produce glucose during photosynthesis. Heterotrophs (like humans) ingest other living things to obtain glucose. While the process can seem complex, this page takes you through the key elements of each part of cellular respiration.

Cellular respiration is a collection of three unique metabolic pathways: glycolysis, the citric acid cycle, and the electron transport chain. Glycolysis is an anaerobic process, while the other two pathways are aerobic. In order to move from glycolysis to the citric acid cycle, pyruvate molecules (the output of glycolysis) must be oxidized in a process called pyruvate oxidation.

Glycolysis

Glycolysis is the first pathway in cellular respiration. This pathway is anaerobic and takes place in the cytoplasm of the cell. This pathway breaks down 1 glucose molecule and produces 2 pyruvate molecules. There are two halves of glycolysis, with five steps in each half. The first half is known as the “energy requiring” steps. This half splits glucose, and uses up 2 ATP. If the concentration of pyruvate kinase is high enough, the second half of glycolysis can proceed. In the second half, the “energy releasing: steps, 4 molecules of ATP and 2 NADH are released. Glycolysis has a net gain of 2 ATP molecules and 2 NADH.

Some cells (e.g., mature mammalian red blood cells) cannot undergo aerobic respiration, so glycolysis is their only source of ATP. However, most cells undergo pyruvate oxidation and continue to the other pathways of cellular respiration.

Pyruvate Oxidation

In eukaryotes, pyruvate oxidation takes place in the mitochondria. Pyruvate oxidation can only happen if oxygen is available. In this process, the pyruvate created by glycolysis is oxidized. In this oxidation process, a carboxyl group is removed from pyruvate, creating acetyl groups, which compound with coenzyme A (CoA) to form acetyl CoA. This process also releases CO2.

Citric Acid Cycle

The citric acid cycle (also known as the Krebs cycle) is the second pathway in cellular respiration, and it also takes place in the mitochondria. The rate of the cycle is controlled by ATP concentration. When there is more ATP available, the rate slows down; when there is less ATP the rate increases. This pathway is a closed loop: the final step produces the compound needed for the first step.

The citric acid cycle is considered an aerobic pathway because the NADH and FADH2 it produces act as temporary electron storage compounds, transferring their electrons to the next pathway (electron transport chain), which uses atmospheric oxygen. Each turn of the citric acid cycle provides a net gain of CO2, 1 GTP or ATP, and 3 NADH and 1 FADH2.

Electron Transport Chain

Most ATP from glucose is generated in the electron transport chain. It is the only part of cellular respiration that directly consumes oxygen; however, in some prokaryotes, this is an anaerobic pathway. In eukaryotes, this pathway takes place in the inner mitochondrial membrane. In prokaryotes it occurs in the plasma membrane.

The electron transport chain is made up of 4 proteins along the membrane and a proton pump. A cofactor shuttles electrons between proteins I–III. If NAD is depleted, skip I: FADH2 starts on II. In chemiosmosis, a proton pump takes hydrogens from inside mitochondria to the outside; this spins the “motor” and the phosphate groups attach to that. The movement changes from ADP to ATP, creating 90% of ATP obtained from aerobic glucose catabolism.

7 0
3 years ago
A diploid cell contains three pairs of homologous chromosomes designated C1 and C2, M1 and M2, and S1 and S2; no crossing over o
Lady_Fox [76]
The diploid cell has the chromosomes
C1 C2
M1 M2
S1 S2
The possible combinations that will be present in the haploid cells are
C1 M1 S1
C1 M1 S2
C1 M2 S2
C2 M1 S2
C2 M1 S1
C2 M2 S1
C1 M2 S1
8 0
3 years ago
Other questions:
  • How you identify cytoplasm
    11·1 answer
  • What are our chances of staying under that threshold in the power sector? (Back your answer up with numbers.)
    13·1 answer
  • All of the following are hormones of the anterior pituitary EXCEPT
    9·2 answers
  • Blood moves into and then out of a heart chamber because 1. the veins and arteries constrict and dilate to propel and attract bl
    7·1 answer
  • What is the advantage of having different shaped beaks?
    5·1 answer
  • Please answer, I'll give points and brainlest.
    14·2 answers
  • An acute accelerated drop in the hemoglobin level, which is caused by red blood cells breaking down at a faster rate than normal
    14·1 answer
  • Compounds have _________________________ properties than the elements that make them up
    9·1 answer
  • Question 14 (2 points)
    11·2 answers
  • Differential diagnoses for consideration when assessing gender dysphoria in adolescents and adults include ____________
    8·1 answer
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!