Primary Succession Gradual growth of organisms in an area that was previously bare, such as rock. (For example lichens, mosses, and ferns will first appear on bare rock). The Following Steps: Secondary Succesion It is the series of community changes which take place on a previously colonized, but disturbed or damaged habitat, (examples include areas which have been cleared of existing vegetaion such as a tree-felling in a woodland). Primary succession occurs following an opening of a pristine habitat, for example, a lava flow, an area left from retreated glacier, or abandoned strip mine.
In contrast, secondary succession is a response to a disturbance, for example, forest fire, tsunami, flood, or an abandoned field. Compare && Contrast Primary Succession starts at bare rock. Secondary Succession starts with soil and dirt already there. Secondary Succession takes 100 +(plus) years to develop. Primary Succession takes thousands of years to develop.
Answer – C. If the seed shape did not have a clearly dominant form
In doing his research on inheritance, Mendel studied seven different traits in peas, namely – height, flower color, seed color, and seed shape. Actually in Mendel’s study, seed shape had a very clear dominant form; having a smooth seed was a dominant trait and having a wrinkled seed was a recessive trait. If this clear dominant form could not be established, then Mendel’s experiment would have ceased to progress. Option B is not the answer because rate of reproduction was not one of the features that Mendel studied in the research. Options A and D are not the answers because they were the actual findings of the study.
Facilitated diffusion. It is a passive transport mechanism in which carrier proteins shuttle molecules across the cell membrane without using the cell’s energy supplies. Instead, the energy is provide by the concentration gradient, which means that molecules are transported from higher to lower concentrations, into or out of the cell. The carrier proteins bind to glucose, which causes them to change shape and translocate the glucose from one side of the membrane to the other. Red blood cells use facilitated diffusion to absorb glucose.
Answer:
Yes
Explanation:
If both of the parents have a recessive trait that decides fur color, then there is a 25% chance that the offspring will receive the recessive traits from each parent and will not receive either of the dominant traits.