Elephants and rhinos tolerate the small birds the ride their backs and eat insects on their skin. The relationship between the elephants and the birds is called ________.<span>commensalism.</span>
From the question you can immediately infer that it's either B or D, as A and C basically mean the same thing and it isn't anything related to a microscope. I can tell you now that you don't need an electron microscope to see cells, they're only required for the atomic level.
Therefore, the answer is B, as you can't see cells without a microscope but you only need a light microscope, not an electron microscope.
That is a simile because you are saying you are like something. It means that you will fall down easily like a domino would if you knocked it.
The repeats which occur together on a chromosome are referred to as VNTR. The length of each repeat is 60bp.
The first primer is 20bp and is 53 bp away from 1st repeat. Therefore, the total length of sequence amplified by the first primer till 1st repeat = 20+53 = 73bp. Beyond this point 6 repeats on 60 bp are present, hence, the length becomes = 73 + (60X6) = 433bp.
Now the reverse primer which is 21bp in length is located 28bp from the repeat on its side. Reverse primer comes from the opposite direction, so it must be present after the 6 repeats.
The total length of the amplified region = 433 + 28 + 21 = 482 bp.
Answer:
50,000 women as part of the Wangari Maathai Green Belt movement
Explanation:
From the time when Wangari Maathai began the movement in 1977, more than 51 million trees have been planted and more than 30,000 women have received training in forestry, food processing, beekeeping and other trades that help them earn income while preserving their land and resources. Communities in Kenya (both men and women) have been motivated and organized to prevent further destruction of the environment and restore what has been damaged. The main theme of the Green Belt Movement remains to "mobilize community awareness for self-determination, justice, equity, poverty reduction and environmental conservation, using trees as an entry point."