Answer:
Hi there!
Your answer is:
It is very important for the cell membrane to be <em>semi-permeable</em> because the ability to pick and choose what comes in and out of the cell keeps the cell safe! The membrane can choose to block out nasty germs and can also choose to get rid of internal waste.
An example of when this is important is in this scenario:
Let's say the cells are in a really salty solution. Naturally, salt will want to pull the water out of the cell. If the membrane <u>wasn't</u><u> </u> semi permeable, the water would listen to the salt and leave the cell. This would cause cell death. <u>BECAU</u><u>SE</u> the membrane is semi permeable, they can choose <em>not</em> to give the salt any water, keeping them alive
Hope this helps
<span>Compare: both RNA and DNA have 3 nitrogenous bases: Adenine Cytosine and Guanine. Also b</span>oth have a phosphate groups in their nucleotides<span>
Contrast: </span>RNA is a polymer with a ribose AND a phosphate backbone. It has four different nitrogenous bases: adenine, guanine, cytosine, and uracil.
DNA<span> is a long polymer with deoxyriboses AND phosphate backbone. It also has four </span>different<span> nitrogenous bases: adenine, guanine, cytosine and thymine.
</span>
Hope this helps
1.
Paramecium
2.
Amoeba
3.
Paramecium
4.
Euglena
5.
Volvox
6.
Amoeba?
7.
Amoeba
8.
Cilia
9.
Flagellum
10. Psuedopods
11. Flagella
12. Euglena
(Chloroplast)
13. Amoeba
14. Euglena
15. Paramecium
16. Paramecium
17. Amoeba
18. Volvox
I hope this is all correct!
Answer:
Proteins
Explanation:
Generally just a guess so