Answer:
Sorry, I'm confused there has to be more to it if there is not then there is no true way for anyone to fill in the blanks. <3
<h2>(A) is the correct option </h2>
Explanation:
- An organism is part of a community is correct,where species interaction occurs between different organisms
- A community is part of population is the incorrect statement because a community includes group of population of two or more different species
- An ecosystem is made up of only organisms is the incorrect statement because ecosystem is the community of both living and non living components of the environment and how they interact with each other
- A biome is the biotic part of an ecosystem is incorrect because biome includes the community of both plants and animals occupying a large habitat
Answer:
The correct answer would be C) It increases survival for cuckoos, but decreases survival of the other birds.
The host chicks often face lots of competition from the cuckoo chicks in terms of food as well as space. It makes it difficult for the host chicks to survive.
It has also been found that cuckoo chicks beg to be fed more intensely due to which host chick die due to starvation.
In addition, in some species of cuckoo, cuckoo chicks remove host eggs from the nest within few days of hatching.
Evolution occurs when<span>these heritable differences become more common or rare in a population, either non-randomly through natural selection or randomly through genetic drift
</span>
Answer:
on a tyrosine residue
bind to insulin
Explanation:
The insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS1) is a signaling protein that can be phosphorylated on multiple tyrosine and serine/threonine residues. IRS1 contains several conserved domains including a pleckstrin (PH) domain and a PTB domain involved in protein phosphorylation and ligand binding. In the first place, IRS1 is phosphorylated on a tyrosine residue, and then IRS1 binds to insulin or the insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1), thereby activating transduction pathways such as, for example, MAPK/ERK. Moreover, RS1 is also phosphorylated on serine residues, thereby triggering opposite effects in insulin-associated signaling.