Hii ana ruba.....................
Answer:
The correct answer is - True.
Explanation:
The negative feedback loop of the endocrine system is that when a hormone is inhibited by its own mechanism or its products. The negative feedback mechanism in the blood is when the level of testosterone and inhibin inhibit the release of the GnRH, LH, and FSH. The low level of GnRH, LH, and FSH affects spermatogenesis and ovulation in males.
In females, the high levels of estrogen and the progesterone exhibit the negative feedback hormone prevents LH and GnRH production by acting on the hypothalamus and inhibit ovulation.
Thus, the correct answer is - True.
Answer:
Phoebus Levene.
Explanation:
Two types of nucleic acids are DNA and RNA. The monomers of mucleic acid contains the pentose sugar, nitrogenous bases and the phosphate group attached with the bases.
Friedrich Miescher was the first scientists who discovered the nucleic acids. He identified the nucleic acids from the bandage that contains the nuclei of white blood cells. The new compounds discovered is known as nucleic acid. But the monomers of the nucleic acids was first explained by Phoebus Levene. Different forms of nucleic acid was also postulated by Phoebus Levene.
Thus, the answer is Phoebus Levene.
Answer:
to get the heat of the planet
Explanation:
From this one migrant species would come many -- at least 13 species of finch evolving from the single ancestor.
This process in which one species gives rise to multiple species that exploit different niches is called adaptive radiation. The ecological niches exert the selection pressures that push the populations in various directions. On various islands, finch species have become adapted for different diets: seeds, insects, flowers, the blood of seabirds, and leaves.
The ancestral finch was a ground-dwelling, seed-eating finch. After the burst of speciation in the Galapagos, a total of 14 species would exist: three species of ground-dwelling seed-eaters; three others living on cactuses and eating seeds; one living in trees and eating seeds; and 7 species of tree-dwelling insect-eaters.
Scientists long after Darwin spent years trying to understand the process that had created so many types of finches that differed mainly in the size and shape of their beaks.