Well, there are two kinds of organisms: osmoregulators, that can regulate the level of salt and the salinity does not affect them (an example is salmon: for salmon this sentence is true. Generally, for most fish this sentence is true)
However, for some species, such shark - osmoconformers - this is false: they are affected by the salinity. in general I would conclude that This is false: the marine salinity DOES affect the fish (and other organisms) living there.
Albedo (al-bee<span>-doh) is a measure of how much light that hits a surface is reflected without being absorbed. Something that appears white reflects most of the light that hits it and has a high albedo, while something that looks dark absorbs most of the light that hits it, indicating a low albedo.</span>
Cuz they loved each other.
Anuria is the medical term which means an absence of urine production
Explanation:
One DNA molecule wound around molecules of protein make up a <u>Chromosome</u>
All the genetic information within the eukaryotic cell is preserved as helical DNA within the nucleus. This DNA is tightly wrapped around histones as chromosomes.
Further Explanation:
DNA sequences make up genes which may have various forms called alleles. DNA, which constitutes the genotype, is transcribed into mRNA and later translated into amino acids that are linked together by rRNA to form proteins that make up an organism's phenotype. Mutations in the DNA sequences affect the respective mRNA and thus the encoded protein
Spontaneous changes within the genome can occur during the phase of cell division, called mutations. These errors occur as copies of the DNA are produced within the cell; mutations may range from small modifications, called single nucleotide polymorphisms, to large-scale deletions and multi-gene additions.
Learn more about mutations at brainly.com/question/4602376
Learn more about DNA and RNA at brainly.com/question/2416343?source=aid8411316
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