1answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
Naya [18.7K]
3 years ago
13

The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is an area in the North Pacific Ocean that contains trash and causes harm to ocean life and thos

e that consume that life. What lessons can be learned from this floating pile of trash?
There is no relationship between our daily activities and the environment.
There are more polluters in the Pacific Ocean than in the Atlantic Ocean.
There are areas of the ocean to avoid with boats.
There is a relationship among all living things on Earth.
Biology
1 answer:
Olin [163]3 years ago
4 0

The correct answer is that there is an association between all the living things on Earth.  

The Great Pacific Garbage Patch refers to the biggest of the five offshore plastic gathering zones in the oceans of the world. It is situated amid the California and Hawaii.

The robust and more buoyant plastics demonstrate resiliency in the marine environment, permitting them to be translocated over more distances. They are found lying at the surface of the sea as they make their way offshore, mediated via converging currents and eventually gathering in the form of a patch.  

As these plastics get within the gyre, they are not likely to leave the region until they get dissociate into smaller microplastics under the influences of waves, sun, and marine life. With more and more plastics are discarded into the environment, the concentration of microplastics in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch will only keep on rising.  

Due to the formation of Great Pacific Garbage Patch, the entire health of the ecosystem is influenced enormously. The entanglement and ingestion of marine debris straightforwardly influence marine life. Also, the existence of marine debris can hamper an overall food web via its indirect consequences.

Read more on Brainly.com - brainly.com/question/7131534#readmore

You might be interested in
How are two different species most likely to evolve from one ancestral species?
sukhopar [10]

Answer:

sexual selection in speciation.

Explanation:

Discussion of most topics within Evolutionary Biology begins with Darwin. Indeed, On The Origin of Species (1859) continues to influence much of modern Evolutionary Biology. Darwin viewed evolution by natural selection as a very gradual mechanism of change within populations, and postulated that new species could be the product of this very same process, but over even longer periods of time. This eventual process of speciation by natural selection is illustrated by a sketch drawn by Darwin in his personal notebook nearly 20 years before the Origin of Species was published. Here, he proposed a model whereby lineages form from their ancestors by evolving different characters over relatively long periods of time. Darwin indicated that species could form by the evolution of one species splitting into two, or via a population diverging from its extant ancestor to the point it was a new species. Darwin's insights into evolution were brilliant, especially in light of their being made in the absence of genetics. Indeed, ideas about heredity and the introduction of new genetic material via mutation were to come long after Darwin's founding theories of evolution.

Darwin’s famous sketch indicating that evolution within species may eventually give rise to entirely new ones.

The role of sexual selection in speciation.

A view that is becoming increasingly popular is that sexual selection, or selection related to variation in reproductive success, plays a role in speciation (Panhuis et al. 2001, Ritchie 2007). This model suggests that differential patterns of trait variation related to reproductive success within populations contribute to the reproductive isolation among populations. A compelling example is related to the explosive radiation of cichlid fishes in the African Rift Lakes, where populations with overlapping distributions are diverging as a function of the differential preference of male color in mate selection (Seehausen et al. 2008).

A current debate is whether sexual selection can lead to speciation in the absence of ecological divergence (van Doorn et al. 2009). Indeed, compelling examples that implicate an important role of sexual selection leading to new species sometimes also involve the evolution of different signals used in mate-selection among populations in different ecological contexts, such as light environment (Seehausen et al. 2008, Maan & Seehausen 2010). Here, signals used in mate-selection become adapted to new ecological environments where the transmission of these traits is more perceptible or audible in a new habitat.

Genetics/Genomics: New Directions with Genetics

Genetic studies have long-been at the forefront of speciation research (Coyne & Orr 2004). For example, studies examining the genetic basis of hybrid sterility and inviability have supported the existence of ‘Dobzhansky-Muller Incompatibities' and patterns predicted by ‘Haldane's Rule'. Recent advances in genomics now allow such studies to be taken to the genome-wide level, where biologists can examine hundreds of thousands of gene regions, rather than just a handful. To help understand this genome-wide variation, biologists have developed the metaphor of ‘genomic islands of divergence' (Turner et al. 2005). A genomic island is any gene region, be it a single nucleotide or an entire chromosome, which exhibits significantly greater differentiation than expected under neutrality (i.e., divergence by genetic drift alone). The metaphor thus draws parallels between genetic differentiation observed along a chromosome and the topography of oceanic islands and the contiguous sea floor through which they are connected. Following this metaphor, sea level represents the threshold above which observed differentiation is significantly greater than expected by neutral evolution alone. Thus, an island is composed of both directly selected and tightly linked loci. Major remaining questions concern the size, number and distribution (i.e., chromosomal location) of these genomic islands, and how variation in these factors affects the process of speciation. Clear answers to these questions will likely require experimental studies that measure selection at the genomic level to directly quantify how selection acts on the genome. Nevertheless, the integration of geographic, ecological, and new genomic approaches is likely to yield new insight into speciation over the coming decades.

7 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Which of the following is an example of an X-linked recessive disorder?
yKpoI14uk [10]
An example for X-linked recessive disorder is (C). Color Blindness 
3 0
3 years ago
Which of the following statements about enzymes is NOT true? All options are true Enzymes are regulated by feedback inhibition E
SSSSS [86.1K]
All options are true. However, the line "Enzymes are regulated by molecules that bind to regions other than their active site" is not 'always' true, since that line only describes non-competitive inhibition. There is another form of inhibition called competitive inhibition where an inhibitor binds directly to the active site of an enzyme, slowing the rate of reaction.
8 0
3 years ago
Which of the following events would you predict as carbon dioxide is released from your muscles into the surrounding capillary b
Juli2301 [7.4K]

Answer: C. Oxygen delivery to muscle is increased when more carbon dioxide is produced by the muscle.

Explanation:

When someone is doing an exercise, for example, his heart rate increases. This increases the rate at which oxygen is carried from the blood to the muscles and carbon dioxide is moved from the muscles to the lungs, where it will be breathed out.

8 0
3 years ago
The activation energy for the catalyzed reaction is the same as for the uncatalyzed reaction, but the equilibrium constant is mo
Angelina_Jolie [31]

Answer: False

Explanation:

The activation energy is the energy required which is required to initiate a chemical reaction.

In case of enzyme- catalyzed  reaction the amount of energy required to initiate a reaction. More energy is used in product formation.

It is different from the uncatalyzed reaction in a way that the activation energy is more as compared to catalyzed reaction.

Hence, the given statement is not true.

8 0
4 years ago
Other questions:
  • Which of the following is the correct complimentary DNA strand to: AAGCTGT
    13·1 answer
  • What signals the end of one cycle and the beginning of another?
    11·1 answer
  • How can we easily distinguish the spermatozoa in a slide of the testes?
    13·1 answer
  • Question 2
    13·2 answers
  • What occurs in a chemical reaction?
    6·1 answer
  • Suppose that seed size in a particular plant species is a polygenic trait. A grower crosses two different pure-breeding varietie
    8·1 answer
  • From fastest to slowest rate of diffusion, which of the following is in the<br> correct sequence.
    11·2 answers
  • Definition of respiration​
    13·2 answers
  • The lungs contain all of the
    8·1 answer
  • Why is a theory a hypothesis?
    7·2 answers
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!