One of the characteristics you're looking for is whether the organism is a vertebrate (with a backbone) or an invertebrate (without a backbone).
Answer:
Force, mass and acceleration
Explanation:
I'm assuming that you meant three blanks in a row
Perlemoen is reasonably
easy to take available of the ocean and do not really required huge and
expensive equipment. The poachers take out millions of rands worth of Perlemoen
with relatively simple and cheap equipment such as wet suites, googles and
flippers. The most expensive equipment they use are their boats and vehicles. In
comparison with the lucrative industry the costs of poaching are low. Perlemoen
are often the smaller, younger abalone of the species that are taken because
they are quite simply and easier to harvest.
1.
The younger perlemoen are found closer to the
shoreline and often bunched together and they can get a whole whack of them at
one spot.
2.
The strandlopers harvested the perlemoen from
the rocks during low tide without the need for diving.
<span />
<span>Reptiles and birds excrete waste as an insoluble white solid that is called uric acid. This means that these wastes are made of very little amount of water. This helps them to maintain internal homeostasis in hot climates since the presence of water allows them to cool easily.</span>
Answer:
Single-cell organisms
Explanation:
In 1735, Linnaeus introduced a classification system with only two kingdoms: animals and plants. Linnaeus published this system for naming, ranking, and classifying organisms in the book "Systema Naturae". In the epoch that Linnaeus created this system, single-cell organisms such as bacteria and protists were almost unknown. In 1866, E. Haeckel added a category including both bacteria and protozoa, thereby adding a category formed by single-cell organisms (different from animals and plants). During the 1900-1920 period, bacteria were classified as a separated kingdom named 'prokaryotes'. The current three-domain classification system was introduced by C. Woese in 1990. In this system, all forms of life are divided into three different domains: archaea, bacteria, and eukaryote domains (this last composed of protists, fungi, plants and animals).