Answer:
Phytoplankton are essential for atmospheric and climate regulation.
Explanation:
Phytoplankton are autotrophs, they use solar energy, along with inorganic carbon and water to produce their own food source via photosynthesis. During photosynthesis, they also produce oxygen, integral for the planet's atmospheric composition.
At their large biomass, phytoplankton contribute to a majority of the oxygen used by consumers (most animals).
6 CO2 + 6 H2O + light → C6H12O6 + 6 O2
Carbon Dioxide + Water + Light Glucose + Oxygen
Along with fossil fuels, human agricultural practices have contributed large amounts of CO2 to the atmosphere, This causes global warming, a major environmental crisis- global warming also leads to landmass loss, biosphere disruption and reduces biodiversity in mass extinction events.
Phytoplankton carbon cycling produces organic matter which functions as carbon sinks in our oceans. Thus, as phytoplankton use large amounts of CO2, they help combat warming cycles, along with producing O2 in atmospheric and climate regulation.
It’s a simple thing really, the more options or “diversity” it’s more likely that it will be more sustainable and things will find a way to survive. Think about it like a video game level, the more tries you have the more likely you are for success
Out of the choices given, the two Middle Eastern people that can be referred to as a Semite is the Jews and the Persians. This will make the correct answer D.
<span>The scientific view's order of Earth's first living things to the most recent is described by choice C. cyanobacteria, hagfish, crocodilians, giant ground sloths. Cyanobacteria have lived on the Earth since the Precambrian supereon. Actually, they first appeared in the Archean eon (4-2.5 billion years ago). Hagfish, as other jawless fish, appeared in the Paleozoic era (541-252 million years ago). Crocodilians appeared in the Cretaceous period (145-66 million years ago). Giant ground sloths, also known as megatherium, appeared in the Pliocene epoch (5.33-2.58 million years ago).</span>