The right answer for the question that is being asked and shown above is that: "Secondary Succession" Assuming this land was once a farmer’s field with previously established vegetation, the process that does this photograph best represent is secondary succession.
Answer: By either emigration or natural increase.
Explanation: Natural increase is where in a population, the birth rate, or number of live births per year, is greater than the death rate, or deaths per year. Emigration is when individuals leave their region to move to another, often due to economic or political reasons. Eventually, a population will reach its carrying capacity, where the land the population occupies is only just able to support the population. Once the carrying capacity is breached, the population will start to collapse.
ATP enters the Calvin Cycle. Glucose (G3P) is a molecule that leaves the cycle.
Answer:
b. actively transport Cl- from the ECF to the external environment.
Explanation:
Chloride cells are cells that are found in the gills of teleost fishes which pump large amount of sodium and chloride ions out from the extracellular fluid (ECF) into the sea or environment against a concentration gradient in marine fish.
The opposite of this process occurs in freshwater fishes where the gills of freshwater teleost fish, cause an influx of sodium and chloride ions into the fish from the environment, also against a concentration gradient.
Mechanism of action
Salt water teleost fishes take in large amounts of seawater to decrease osmotic dehydration. The excess of ions derived from seawater is thrown out of the teleost fishes through the chloride cells. These cells employs active transport on the basolateral (internal) surface to diffuse in chloride, which then is pumped out of the apical (external) surface, straight into the surrounding environment. Such mitochondria-rich cells are located in the region of the gill lamellae and filaments of teleost fish.
Diseases that can affect the circulatory system include:
Atherosclerosis. Atherosclerosis is a hardening of the arteries. ...
Heart attack. ...
Mitral valve prolapse. ...
Mitral valve regurgitation. ...
Mitral stenosis. ...
Angina pectoris. ...
Arrhythmia and dysrhythmia. ...
Cardiac Ischemia.