The correct answer is A). They are rich in oil which promotes fire movement through the biome.
The chaparral biome has hot, dry summers, cool, moist winters with thin, nutrient poor soils. The vegetation includes both evergreen and deciduous forms. Plants in this biome are dominated by woody evergreen shrubs with small, leathery leaves. Herbs with fragrance and oil grow during winter and die in summer. Herbs contain flammable oils are always threat to fire.
Answer:
Man-made
Explanation:
We are over harvesting the animals, so the reason for their extinction would be man-made.
Answer:
all
Explanation:
Biogeochemical cycles are pathways by which nutrients flow between the abiotic and abiotic compartments of the Earth. The abiotic portion of the Earth includes the lithosphere (the geological component of the Earth) and the hydrosphere (the Earth’s water).
Ecosystems rely on biogeochemical cycles. Many of the nutrients that living things depend on, such as carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorous are in constant circulation.
Essential elements are often stored in reservoirs, where they can be taken out of circulation for years. For example, coal is a reservoir for carbon.
Humans can affect biogeochemical cycles. Humans extract carbon and nitrogen from the geosphere and use them for energy and fertilizer. This has increased the amount of these elements in circulation, which has detrimental effects on ecosystems.
The question is incomplete,below is the complete question.
Mr. B has been transferred to your floor to wait and see whether the chest tube allows his lungs to completely re-expand. But when he arrives, he is in severe respiratory distress. He says "I felt better before I came into the ER! Is this tube doing anything?"
You tell the Clinical Nurse Specialist (CNS). As the two of you move him into the bed, you notice that his chest tube bottle is lying on its side on the gurney, with air going into it. When you point this out to the CNS, she immediately grabs the bottle and sets it upright on the floor. You see air start bubbling through the fluid right away. "That was the problem!" she says. "They lost the water seal, and air was going into his chest from the bottle. You would not believe how many times that happens on transport." When you examine Mr. B, you have trouble detecting his lung sounds on the left. Even stranger, his apical heart sound is in the wrong place - it is over toward the right side of his chest. His respiration rate and heart rate are both increased, and he is struggling to breathe. "Let's give him a little oxygen. He'll be a lot better in a half-hour," says the CNS. "Check back on him."
QUESTION - Why would accumulation of air in his pleural space cause his heart sounds to be in the wrong place?
Accumulation of air in Mr B pleural space will cause his heart sound to be heard in the wrong place because the left side is his chest is being filled up with air making the organs in his chest to to be pushed over to the right side.
We are tasked to find the substance that is made from
glucose through glycolysis, and supplies energy to living cells through the Krebs cycle when oxygen is present (aerobic respiration), and alternatively
ferments to produce lactate when oxygen is lacking (fermentation). Upon
checking on the Glycolysis cycle, Kreb’s Cycle and fermentation, one common substance
is present and called Pyruvate.