Answer:
false
Explanation:
it happens in the whole plant
Answer:
CDR approaches that employ trees, plants and soil to absorb carbon have ... saturated after 10 to 100 years, depending on climate, soil type and how it is managed. ... If we burn plants for energy at a power plant and capture and store ... could be scaled up to capture and store 1 gigatonne of carbon a year ...
Answer: D. Frameshift mutation
Explanation:
A nonsense mutation is one in which a codon codifying for an amino acid is replaced by a stop codon, resulting in a premature end to translation (e.g. TAT [Tyrosine] >> TAG [stop]).
A missense mutation is one in which a codon is altered in such a way that it ends up codifying for a <em>different</em> amino acid (e.g. AUA [Isoleucine] >> AUG [Methionine]).
A point mutation is any mutation which involves the altering of a single nucleotide (such as the examples given above), <em>regardless</em> of its effect on the resulting protein.
Finally: a frameshift mutation is one which alters the <em>reading frame</em> of a gene, which results in a whole different set of nucleotides being treated as individual codons by the translation machinery. The consequence of this is a significant change in the resulting amino acid sequence. Frameshift mutations may be the result of several mechanisms which include insertions and deletions. The example given in the picture appears to show an example of one such mutation.
Answer:
Cytoplasm
Explanation:
All cell organelles are suspended in the cytoplasm.
Plants use the sun and rely on themselves while animals rely on food