B. Hold large amounts of food.
Some parts of plant materials, like cellulose, are hard to digest. The digestive tract of herbivores is adapted so that the food can be digested properly.
I shall name every “thing” here on this planet Sam
The right answer is B) Specialized tissues come together to create the stomach, which is an organ.
* Cells linked to each other form a set called tissue. The cells composing a tissue are not all identical, but they work together to provide a specific function.
* Each organ is a recognizable structure (eg, heart, lungs, liver, eyes, stomach) that provides a specific function. An organ consists of different types of tissues and, therefore, different types of cells.
The stomach is a thoraco-abdominal organ, located in the abdomen and in contact with the chest wall.
The stomach is a dilated segment of the digestive tract located between the esophagus and the duodenum. Its main function is to turn the food bolus into a mixture called gastric chyme.
The stomach is composed of two parts, two sides (anterior and posterior), two edges (small and large curvature) and two orifices (the cardia, upper orifice, and the pylorus, lower orifice).
1. Once a dam is constructed, electricity can be produced at a constant rate.
<span>2. If electricity is not needed, the sluice gates can be shut, stopping electricity generation. The water can be saved for use another time when electricity demand is high. </span>
<span>3. Dams are designed to last many decades and so can contribute to the generation of electricity for many years / decades. </span>
<span>4. The lake that forms behind the dam can be used for water sports and leisure / pleasure activities. Often large dams become tourist attractions in their own right. </span><span> </span>
<span>5. The build up of water in the lake means that energy can be stored until needed, when the water is released to produce electricity.
6</span><span>. When in use, electricity produced by dam systems do not produce green house gases. They do not pollute the atmosphere </span>
<span>DISADVANATGES: </span>
<span>1. Dams are extremely expensive to build and must be built to a very high</span>
<span>2. The high cost of dam construction means that they must operate for many decades to become profitable. </span>
<span>3. The flooding of large areas of land means that the natural environment is destroyed. </span>
<span>4. People living in villages and towns that are in the valley to be flooded, must move out. This means that they lose their farms and businesses. In some countries, people are forcibly removed so that hydro-power schemes can go ahead. </span>
<span>5. Although modern planning and design of dams is good, in the past old dams have been known to be breached (the dam gives under the weight of water in the lake). This has led to deaths and flooding. </span>
<span>6. Dams built blocking the progress of a river in one country usually means that the water supply from the same river in the following country is out of their control. This can lead to serious problems between neighbouring countries. </span>
<span>7 Building a large dam alters the natural water table level. For example, the building of the Aswan Dam in Egypt has altered the level of the water table. This is slowly leading to damage of many of its ancient monuments as salts and destructive minerals are deposited in the stone work from ‘rising damp’ caused by the changing water table level.</span>
I just took the test. The answer is climate