Answer:
there asking
How the climatic zones of the planet influence rhythmic and seasonal changes
Explanation:
The Earth is tilted 23.5 degrees on its axis, which affects the distribution of the sun’s energy across the surface of the planet. As the Earth orbits the sun every 365 ¼ days, the axis is always pointing in the same direction into space, with the North Pole toward Polaris, the North Star. Around June 22, the northern hemisphere is angled towards the sun, and receives the most direct radiation and the most energy. This is the start of astronomical summer in the northern hemisphere and winter in the southern hemisphere.
Answer:
I think that the answer is B
Answer:
Active Transport
Explanation:
The process by which a carrier protein transfers a solute molecule across the lipid bilayer resembles an enzyme-substrate reaction, and in many ways carriers behave like enzymes. In contrast to ordinary enzyme-substrate reactions, however, the transported solute is not covalently modified by the carrier protein, but instead is delivered unchanged to the other side of the membrane.
Each type of carrier protein has one or more specific binding sites for its solute (substrate). It transfers the solute across the lipid bilayer by undergoing reversible conformational changes that alternately expose the solute-binding site first on one side of the membrane and then on the other.
Easy peasy ^-^
The correct answer is the option B) It does not allow for the accumulation of glycogen and, therefore, limits the organism's mobility.
Explanation:
In cellulose and chitin the arrangement of glycogen in in alternate arrangement that provides the support to the plants that makes it strong and the limits its mobility.
If plants lac their special arrangement of the glycogen in chitin and cellulose the water will flow in and it will not be stand upright.
Thus, the correct answer is option B) It does not allow for the accumulation of glycogen and, therefore, limits the organism's mobility.
Answer: Tree
Explanation: Trees produce sap, nuts and fruits.