Antenatal clinic is a clinic that is involved in provision of care to pregnant mothers. They are given advise on nutrition that is the food to eat and the ones they are not supposed to eat among other advises. The care is provided by doctors, midwifes and nurses. Pregnancy is divided into trimester namely first trimester ( first 3 months), second trimester (middle three months) and third trimester (last three months of pregnancy). During the third trimester many changes may be observed and the nurses may report the following findings to the provider during this trimester; they include varicose veins, Hemorrhoids and lordosis (change in the curvature of the spine) which are normal however client teaching is recommended. In addition, the findings may include leg cramps (normal) and fainting spells not normal but may be felt when the client is rising.
The answer for this question would be B
The answer is A. Fertilizer
The other answer choices don't make sense Herbicide is a poison that kills plants, Pesticide is an insect killer, while a Growth Hormone is designed to help the plant grow not to put nutrients into the soil.
Answer:
Peas exhibit a variety of contrasting traits (purple vs. white flowers; round vs. wrinkled seeds). The shape of the pea flower protected it from foreign pollen.
Explanation:
Answer:
Chloroplast absorbs sunlight and it is used to make feed for the plant together with water and carbon dioxide gas. Chloroplasts are used to generate the free energy stored in ATP and NADPH via a photosynthesis process.
Explanation:
The site of photosynthesis action is chloroplast within a plant cell consisting of two chlorophyll molecules (PS1 and PS2), which have been embedded in the thylakoid membranes. The chloroplast consists of two chlorophyll molecules (photosynthetic pigments responsible for the green color of chloroplast). Each chlorophyll molecule absorbs light, caused to depart the chlorophyll molecules. This absorbs two electrons from each phenotype. PS2 electrons pass through the transportation chain for electron carriers, a series of redox reactions that release the energy used to synthesize ATP via Photophosphorylation/Chemiosmose (as the H+ ions diffuse through the stalked particles ATP, which changes the shape and catalysts, the electrochemical gradient diffuses down through the stalky particle ATP synthase).
Then these electrons replace the electrons lost in PS1. PS2 electron is replaced by photolysis electron, which when light strikes chloroplast, splitting the water into oxygen gas, H+ ions, and electron enzymes in the thylakoid space are catalyzed. The PS1 electrons combine to create NADPH with H+ ions and NADP (reduced NADP). These are the light-dependent photosynthetic reactions in chloroplasts. In the light-independent reactions, the NADPH and ATP are created. A pile of thylakoids is known as granum.
The light-independent processes take happen in the stroma. This is the site of carbon fixation; CO2 reacts with RUBP to generate GP (glycerate-3-phosphate) which is catalyzed by the enzyme RUBISCO (the most abundant enzyme in the world) (the most abundant enzyme in the world). The NADPH and ATP from the light-dependent processes convert GP to GALP (glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate). Two out of every 12 GALP molecules produced are used to synthesize glucose that can be employed either in breathing or in cellulose-forming condensation polymerization to add extra strength to the planted cell wall. The other GALP molecules are returned to RUBP.