Answer:
Climate change?
Explanation:
A massive extinction event that took place 200 million years ago may have been caused by climate change, new research suggests. The findings shed new light on the pace of mass extinction, and imply that relatively small changes in atmospheric carbon dioxide levels may be enough to trigger an extinction event.
The rate of something being and the rate of something being used
Question Completion with Options:
a. increasing the size of your cohorts.
b. increasing the diversity of your cohorts.
c. increasing the size of your affected cohort.
d. increasing the diversity of your affected cohort.
Answer:
All of the following modifications to the study are likely to allow identification of new variants associated with the disease, EXCEPT
a. increasing the size of your cohorts.
Explanation:
Option A is chosen because increasing the size of the cohorts will be equally divided between the affected and unaffected cohorts since the study discovered that these two classes are roughly the same size. Therefore, new variants of the disease may not likely be identified and isolated unless the other modification options are followed instead of Option A.
Answer:
<em>The answer is plant cells they would be the type of cells you would find a permanent. an animal cell would not have that.</em>
Explanation:
<em>The reason plant is the answer is because plant cells contain a cell wall made of cellulose to strengthen the cell. They also have a permanent vacuole which is filled with cell sap to help keep the cell turgid.</em>
<em>The reason why animal cells don't have a permanent is because Animal cells may have more than one vacuole, and they are smaller than a plant cell's. Vacuoles are used to store materials in the cell that may be used by the cell or wastes that must be moved out of the cell.</em>
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<span>E. Stimulation of T-cell by APC</span>
The initial exposure of the body to an infectious agent e.g. through a vaccine, triggers an immune response most of which rapidly diminishes after the vaccination. However some cells of the immune system called lymphocytes remain with a memory of that pathogen.As a result, if the same pathogen infects a vaccinated person, the memory cells remember and recognize it and rapidly spring into action triggering a much more rapid response specific to that pathogen than the initial exposure, effectively dealing and neutralizing the pathogen.