<span>in
eukaryote cells DNA is found in the nucleus of the cell, the form the
DNA (e.g. chromosomes vs. chromatin) is in depends on what stage of the
cell cycle you are talking about. In cells that have mitochondria, DNA
is found there as well. Mitochondrial DNA is distinct from nuclear DNA
and doesn't code for the same things. In prokaryotic cells DNA is found
in the cytoplasm. Don't forget that other entities may also contain DNA
such as viruses.
Although DNA is technically confined to the places outlined above, the
reality is cells are dying all the time and spilling their contents
including their DNA. As a result DNA is all over us and everything we
touch, and the same goes for other organisms.
Bacterial cells DON'T typically have a nucleus. They are called
prokaryotic because of that (prokaryotic means "before nucleus" where as
eukaryotic means "true nucleus"). Their DNA is typically in the
cytoplasm usually as a single circular shaped chromosome. The also
sometimes have smaller peices of circular DNA called plasmids that are
also in their cytoplasm which they can exchange with each other.. </span>
There are choices for this question namely:
<span>A) genetic bottleneck.
B) sexual selection.
C) habitat differentiation.
D) founder effect.
</span>
The correct answer is founder effect. The definition of founder effect is the loss of genetic variation when a new population is established in a small number of individuals from a larger population. The larger population in the context is the ecosystem in Hawaii before it rose from the sea surface. After it rose above the sea surface, most organisms will not be able to survive in land but there will be a small population that can evolve from there.
The population will be less as some will die or there are chances of equal also if no one died... Most chances are of 1st one. But it also must be the same or less. Depending on if population growth means just how much it got bigger of if it can be negative (like -8% means it got smaller by 8% and being considered "growth").
Hope this helps!
Yes some coral reefs are found in deep water they are called deep-sea coral reefs.
Explanation:
it shrinks due to the low moisture content