Taxonomy
The Radio-ulna and digits of most primates and animals represents a homologous structure
An example of another internal structure is the genes.
The homologous chromosomes have the same genes in common. Each cell has at least two sets of chromosomes which one comes from one’s father also called as paternal chromosome and mother, called as the maternal chromosomes. These chromosomes are what makes the child obtain the characters and may depend on the traits the parents possess. Homologous chromosomes are not duplicated chromosomes or identical however, they are analogous or similar. The alleles for a specific characteristics isn’t the same but the same genes are in the same order.<span> </span>
Yes and it consists of abiotic factors, river, rocks, etc
This looks like mitosis where chromosomes split up and duplicate
<span>The answer is Monarch butterflies migrating southward. This describes the innate animal behavior, </span>Monarch Butterflies perform one of the longest migration known in insects. Starting from North America, they spend their summer in North America, and migrate south to Mexico for the winter.<span>
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Adenine always pairs with Thymine, and Cytosine always pairs up with Guanine in DNA. When dealing with RNA, however, Uracil replaces Thymine. So in RNA, A pairs with U and C pairs with G. (just a fun fact) :)