Answer: A primary caregiver
Explanation:
It is very important that an infant have a primary caregiver as they develop in their early childhood. This is because it will be easier for the infant to bond with the person and begin to trust them for their safety.
This will ensure that their brains develop much more effectively especially in the areas responsible for emotional and social interaction and attachment.
C) Sexual reproduction involves one parent organism, while asexual involves two parent organisms.
Answer:
They have genetic material.
Explanation:
All three domains and viruses have genetic material. They have to, otherwise they couldn't reproduce, whether sexual or asexual. In viruses, it can be RNA or DNA; obviously in eukarya it tends to be DNA, remembering that humans are eukaryotes; and in the other two domains a similar pattern is followed.
Why not the other options?
They are composed of cells
- Viruses technically don't have "cells," and even to say cells plural can be a misnomer for some of the more simple forms of life that are unicellular.
They are living things.
- All three domains are alive (bacteria, archaea, eukarya) but viruses are technically not considered to be alive.
They have organelles.
- Eukarya and prokarya technically both have organelles (think of prokaryotic ribosomes), but not all groups that you mentioned have organelles. Remember that organelles ("little organs") are specific groups of cells performing a function, and they usually have names.
Explanation:The main functions of polysaccharides in plants are the protection and energy. If you look carefully, plant cell walls are made up of cellulose and hemicellulose. These two are the major plant polysaccharides that provide rigidity and physical strength the cell wall and the whole plant. :)
Answer:
The correct answer is A.
Explanation:
A seed is a small embryonic plant bounded in a casing called the seed coat. It is often enclosed with some food as well. The seed is comprised of the embryo and the tissue from the mother-plant, which is the plant the seed stems from. The mother-plant can also sprout a funnel around the seed in coniferous plants. The ripened ovule of gymnosperm and angiosperm plants is what matures into the seed. This ensues after fertilization. The seed is produced in the fruits of the plants. The process of seed formation starts with double fertilization in the angiosperm. It requires the fusion of the egg and sperm to produce a zygote. Next, the fusion of the nuclei with a second sperm cell nucleus occurs and forms a primary endosperm. The zygote produced at the beginning of the process through fertilization remains inactive whereas the primary endosperm goes onto divide at a rapid rate to form the endosperm tissue. This tissue will then be used as food for the new plant and will be used until after germination, which is when the roots will have sprouted. Alternatively, it can also develop into a hard seed coat. The formation of the actual seed happens right at the end of the process of reproduction, after the growth of the flowers and pollination develops.