Answer:
animal cells: They do not have a cell wall, and have multiple vacuoles.
pplant cells: They have a cell wall, chloroplast, and can perform photosynthesis, and also contains a single large vacuole which is used for storage.
Explanation:
Answer:
1.A tissue is a collection of similar cells that work together to perform a specific job.
An organ is a collection of different tissues that work together to perform a specific job. The function of a part of an organism is what it actually does (it's job)
2.The structure of the alveoli as a web of blood vessels surrounding an air sac allows blood cells take in oxygen and bring it into the lungs (organ)
Through a cut or an injury where any skin has been broken.
An infection through an animal's bite or sting.(Like the West Nile Virus which spreads though mosquito bite, or Rabies though an infected mammal's bite).
Can be inhaled or consumed and go from the lungs into the other organs causing harm internally.
Actively dividing eukaryote cells pass through a series of stages known collectively as the cell cycle: two gap phases (G1 and G2); an S (for synthesis) phase, in which the genetic material is duplicated; and an M phase, in which mitosis partitions the genetic material and the cell divides.
<span><span>
G1 phase. Metabolic changes prepare the cell for division. At a certain point - the restriction point - the cell is committed to division and moves into the S phase.</span><span>
S phase. DNA synthesis replicates the genetic material. Each chromosome now consists of two sister chromatids.</span><span>
G2 phase. Metabolic changes assemble the cytoplasmic materials necessary for mitosis and cytokinesis.</span><span>
M phase. A nuclear division (mitosis) followed by a cell division (cytokinesis).</span></span>
The period between mitotic divisions - that is, G1, S and G2 - is known as interphase.
<span>Mitosis is a form of eukaryotic cell division that produces two daughter cells with the same genetic component as the parent cell. Chromosomes replicated during the S phase are divided in such a way as to ensure that each daughter cell receives a copy of every chromosome. In actively dividing animal cells, the whole process takes about one hour.</span>