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Elena-2011 [213]
4 years ago
11

What does k-selection refer to?

Biology
1 answer:
Maksim231197 [3]4 years ago
7 0
A. species that produce relatively few offspring but invest a large amount of parental care. (For example: Elephants or dolphins produce live young and only  one or two at a time and they take care of the children until they are okay on their own)
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Pls help
Tems11 [23]
What is diversitopia?
4 0
3 years ago
The success of altruistic behavior hinges on the ability to distinguish kin from unrelated individuals. Hamilton proposed that a
skelet666 [1.2K]

Answer:

This scenario has been discovered and studied in slime molds.

Explanation:

The green beard effect is one of the three fundamental mechanisms of kin selection. In the 1960s, W.D. Hamilton in his work on the evolution of altruism brought it into the highlight. The other two mechanisms are kin discrimination and population viscosity. Green-beard effect functions even when the altruist and her recipients are not genealogical kin.

4 0
3 years ago
Marianne is comparing two animals: a fruit fly and a fruit bat. She asks, "Do a fruit fly and a fruit bat share a common ancesto
Ludmilka [50]

Answer: c. maybe, depending on specific traits at organism in cellular levels of both animals

Explanation:

Evolutionary history has to do with the processes through which living organisms evolve from their ancestors to their present generations.

It's quite possible for the fruit fly and the fruit bat to share a common ancestor based on their evolutionary history depending on specific traits at the organism and cellular levels of both animals.

Therefore, the correct option is C.

6 0
3 years ago
In what order do these three organ systems of the human body operate during a reflex arc in response to a stimulus of sharp pain
Snezhnost [94]
<span>This indicates that the first event in this sequence is a 'stimulus'. 
'Stimuli' is the plural form, referring to more than one stimulus. In this context a stimulus is something that human sensory receptors are able to detect, e.g. sounds, physical contact, tastes, visual sensation, etc..The next stage in the pathway is the sensory receptors sensing the stimulus.
These receptors are located all over the body but some types of receptors are in specific areas of the body, e.g. taste receptors in the mouth.Sensory neuron(s) then transmit information from the sensory receptor(s) to the central nervous system (CNS), i.e. the brain and spinal cord. This is happens because peripheral nerves connect to the spinal cord via the network of nerves within the nervous system.Information so received by the CNS is further transmitted by relay neurone(s) within the CNS. 
This is shown in more detail in Figure (2), below.</span>

The information may or may not be processed in the brain.

Some stimuli lead to 'reflex responses' that can be described in terms of the 'Simple Reflex Arc', whereas other stimuli (such as all visual stimuli) always involve processing by the brain. More information about the simple reflex arc is shown in Figure (2), below.

Following either simple reflex arc response, or processing by the brain, neural 'instructions' may be sent via a motor neurone to an effector (usually a muscle or gland). In this way, the effector is instructed to take action. The action may be physical movement of a muscle - hence perhaps also a body part such as a limb, or e.g. a chemical action by a gland. Whatever the consequent action, this has occurred due to the function of the nervous system, in response to the initial stimulus or stimuli.

A 'Simple Reflex Arc'

The following diagram shows the sequence of events described above in more detail, specifically for the case of the 'simple reflex arc'. i'm unsure if this helps at all or is even truley fully related as im not the best with this kind of thing but when i was doing studies about the human bodies i noted that.

3 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
There are 20 naturally occurring amino acids, therefore, there are only 20 mRNA codons. True or false
weqwewe [10]

Answer:

False. There are 20 amino acids, but 64 possible codons.

Explanation:

Genetic information for the aminoacids assembly during the protein synthesis is stored in short sequences of three nucleotides named codons in the mRNA. Each of the codons represents one of the 20 amino acids used to build the protein. The total number of possible codons is 64, from which 61 codify amino acids -more than one codon codify for the same amino acid-. One of these amino acids is also the start point of protein synthesis. And the left three codons are stopping translation points.

The codons indicating the initiation or stop points during the translation process are:

• The start codon AUG is the most common sequence used by eukaryotic cells and places near the 5´extreme of the molecule. However, other codons might be used as well. Prokaryote cells might use the codons GUG or UUG.

• The end codons are UAA, UAG, UGA.

4 0
3 years ago
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