Answer:
C- it helps develop scientific consensus by making sure new ideas are critically evaluated.
EcosystemTropical Savanna is found between sections of tropical rain forest and deserts. They have 2 seasons; wet (constant humidity) and dry (long periods of dry spells and drought that may cause fires).
Both savanna buffalo and forest buffalo live close to water. The buffalo are found throughout the northern and southern savanna as well
as the lowland rain forest.
<span>How might this population suddenly increase? How might this affect the ecosystem? If there was an increase in population; grasslands during the wet season will be gone, more predators will flock for an abundance of buffalo.
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<span>What might happen to the ecosystem if this population was removed? If you remove the buffalo from the savanna ecosystem, it can cause a ripple effect such as populations of small mammal (mouse) will double, which will attract more snakes (venomous), it can cause the flea and tick population to increase, and the increase in tick/fleas can cause the risk of transmission of flea/tick borne pathogens.</span>
The answer is pyruvate. In the absence of oxygen in
anaerobic respiration, the pyruvate is converted to lactic acid in animals and
ethanol in plants. However, in the presence of oxygen, the pyruvate enters the Krebs
cycle after being converted to Acetyl CoA. Pyruvate is an intermediate product
of glycolysis.
Answer:
Blood flow!
Explanation:
Blood flow is the volume of blood flowing through any given vessel, or through the circulatory system as a whole, per minute. This is also called cardiac output, and it's determined by the blood volume pumped during one beat and the number of beats per minute.
Hope this helps! :3
Answer and explanation:
Among the main evidences of the theory of continental drift, we can mention the fit of the lines of the coasts of several continents, In addition to the similarity between several relief structures and rocks in different continents (such as mountain ranges found in South America and on the east coast of Africa).
There are also records of fossils of identical extinct plants, found on the African continent and also in countries like Australia, India and Brazil, for example.
Identical reptile fossils have also been found in Africa and South America, in addition to several correlations in the distribution of aquatic dinosaur fossils that lived in common areas of the ancient supercontinent.