Do u have choices? if one of the choices are 92 thats correct
The correct order of expression of the genes listed below in the determination of segmentation in Drosophila is "Hox genes > Gap genes > Pair rule genes > Segment polarity genes"
<u>Order: </u>2 > 3 > 4 > 1
<u>Explanation:</u>
The master regulator genes are that guide the creation of specific body segments or structures known as "Homeotic genes". Since these genes are active in segment patterning, the gap genes, pair-rule genes and segment polarity genes are designated as segmentation genes.
- Many animal homotic genes express transcription factor proteins that include a region called the homeodomain or Hox gene.
- The maternal impact genes express transcription factors which regulate the gap gene expression. The distance genes subdivide the embryo approximately along the anterior / posterior axis.
- The gap genes encode transcription factors which control the pair-rule expression of genes. The pair-regulated genes split the embryo into segment pairs.
- The pair-rule genes encode transcription factors which control the function of the polarity genes in the segment. The polarity genes in the segment determined each segment's anterior or posterior axis.
2+2=4. duh. IDK if this is a joke or what, but this is not high school.
As stated many terrestrial animals can suffer from lack of land or water loss which can make it hard for them to live in there climate .
A phylogeny of the same taxa based only on morphological traits:
Some highly conserved genetic sequences can result in unrelated species appearing closely related in a molecular phylogeny, and not reflect the same pattern as the morphologic phylogeny.
Gene sequence changes may not result in morphological changes.
Gene sequences always provide more data than morphological traits.
Morphological analyses always provide more data because each morphological trait is the result of the expression of many genes.
The molecular data may be based on the analysis of introns, which aren't expressed and don't contribute to the evolutionary history of a group of taxa.
Why is molecular data more accurate?
Phylogenetic trees reconstructed from molecular sequences are often considered more reliable than those reconstructed from morphological characters, in part because convergent evolution, which confounds phylogenetic reconstruction, is believed to be rarer for molecular sequences than for morphologies
Learn more about molecular data :
brainly.com/question/16044878
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