Yes that is the correct answer choice
Answer:
A) They have low-maintenance and are easy to keep track of for mutations.
B) The deduction can be "Single Gene Mutation"
Explanation:
After examining the example given in the question on Neurospora crassa and the details about how they reproduce, the following points can be made regarding the questions;
A) It is stated that they form a colony in time and that they are asexual spores and the first reason to choose them would be because they contain somatic cells (which refer to the cells other than reproductive cells) and non-motile gonidia which can multiply by dividing themselves and these properties make the colony's maintenance easy. And since they multiply by division, it is easier to keep track of the occuring mutations.
B) Given the information in the question that the mating is between an albino strain and a wild type, and then between two albino strains which have the same genotype. The results indicate that the strains have gone through single gene mutation during the process.
I hope this answer helps.
Answer: More than 99 percent of all organisms that have ever lived on Earth are extinct. As new species evolve to fit ever changing ecological niches, older species fade away. But the rate of extinction is far from constant. At least a handful of times in the last 500 million years, 75 to more than 90 percent of all species on Earth have disappeared in a geological blink of an eye in catastrophes we call mass extinctions.
Though mass extinctions are deadly events, they open up the planet for new forms of life to emerge. The most studied mass extinction, which marked the boundary between the Cretaceous and Paleogene periods about 66 million years ago, killed off the nonavian dinosaurs and made room for mammals and birds to rapidly diversify
Answer:
arcic tundra
Explanation:
Tundra has two types: arctic and alpine. The coldest one is the arctic one as it is located in the northern hemisphere. Its conditions are very cruel, very cold.
The temperatures of an arctic tundra can go from 10 to 20 degrees of Farenheight in the summer. In the winter, the temperatures can go to -50 degrees. Thundra biome is one of the coldest and the biggest on Earth. It is located in the Arctic circle, mostly.