Answer:
Ecosystem engineers are species that modify their environment in a significant manner, creating new habitats or modifying existing ones to suit their needs.
Answer: ATP and NADH respectively.
Explanation:
Glycolysis is the cellular degradation of the simple sugar glucose to yield pyruvic acid, and ATP as an ENERGY source.
So, the net 2 moles of ATP generated per mole of glucose oxidized in glycolysis carries energy; while the 2 moles of NADH (Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide) generated carries energy electrons as a hydrogen atom or hydride ion.
Thus, the carriers for energy and high energy electrons during glycolysis are ATP and NADH respectively.
Answer:
Complete answer: The ribosome of bacteria, mitochondria, and chloroplasts have a 70S type of ribosome. They all have their own nucleic acid. The bacterial ribosome is made of two subunits, the 50S, and 30S.
Request: Please mark me as the brainliest.
Dozens of tower cranes dot DC's skyline, and so many of them are building new high-rise apartments that the District now ranks ninth among US cities with the most housing units under construction. It sure looks like a lot of new housing supply is being built, and certainly plenty of new luxury apartments within the District. However, the downtown high-rises under construction only tell half the story of Greater Washington's housing growth story.
While all those cranes are easy to see from afar, what isn't immediately apparent from the airport (but might be from a plane) is that many fewer acres of the countryside around us are being bulldozed for subdivisions–which for the past century has been where most lower-cost, low-rise housing was built. As a result, the region as a whole isn't building enough housing for our rising population.
Reducing sprawl is good, but we haven't built enough housing in city cores to meet demand
Fewer than half as many single-family houses are being built at the suburban fringes of Greater Washington every year, compared to the region's long-range average. Taken together, the single-family houses that aren't being built around Greater Washington each year would cover four square miles–an area the size of Rock Creek Park. The slower pace of suburban development over the past ten years has meant tens of thousands of acres of farms and forests around our region haven't been bulldozed for subdivisions and strip malls.