Albert, a student researcher, varies the amount of food given to rats in an experiment to measure the effect on their learning behavior. In albert's study, the amount of food given is the independent variable.
An independent variable is under the control of the experimenter. Independent variable does not depend on the other variables involved in the experiment. Since the amount of food is varied, it is not depending on other variables like size of mice, weight, etc.
Answer: Photosynthesis
Explanation: Photosynthesis removes CO2 from the atmosphere and replaces it with O2. Respiration takes O2 from the atmosphere and replaces it with CO2.
Turbidity<span> is the cloudiness or </span>haziness<span> of a </span>fluid<span> caused by large numbers of individual </span>particles<span> that are generally invisible to the </span>naked eye<span>, similar to </span>smoke<span> in </span>air<span>.</span>
Answer:
Explanation:
The Julia butterfly (or dryas iulia) isn't trying to cheer up the turtle, it is actually a symbiotic relationship between the two creatures. The butterflies undertake the process of lachryphagy, or 'tear feeding' as a way of gaining much needed nutrition.
Answer:
The process occurring in Box A is Glycolysis
Explanation:
Glycolysis is the pathway by which glucose, a six-carbon molecule is oxidized to molecules of pyruvate, a three-carbon molecule with the release of ATP and electrons which are carried by NADH molecules.
The process occurs in the cytoplasm of cells and requires 10 glycolytic enzymes.
The pyruvate molecules from glycolysis is first oxidized to acetyl-CoA and carbon dioxide molecules. The acetyl-CoA molecules enter the citric acid cycle occurring in the mitochondria and are used up in the production of ATP, CO2, and electrons carried by NADH and FADH2.
The electrons carried by NADH and FADH2 from glycolysis and citric acid cycle are used in the oxidative phosphorylation pathway occurring inside the mitochondrion for transformation of oxygen molecules into water molecules with release of ATP.