Hello, I figured your question was missing its answers so I went online to find them. Here they are:
No visible cytoplasmic granules are present in ________.
A) basophils
B) monocytes
C) eosinophils
D) neutrophils
Answer:
The correct answer is: B) monocytes.
Explanation:
<u>White blood cells can be divided into granular and agranular.</u> Granular leukocytes (WBC) have granules that contain enzymes in their cytoplasm (the enzymes are used in the immune and inflammatory responses). <u>Agranular leukocytes</u><u> do not have cytoplasmic granules</u>.
<u>The granular leukocytes are 3: basophils, eosinophils, and neutrophils</u>.
<u>The</u><u> agranular</u><u> leukocytes are: </u><u>monocytes</u><u> and lymphocytes</u>.
Monocytes are very large cells with the important function of phagocytosis: this makes them capable of eating pathogens and old blood cells. When arriving at a tissue outside of the blood, they differentiate to macrophages with special features to perform in that tissue. They make up <u>2 to 8 percent of all leukocytes</u>. Monocytes and macrophages are also antigen-presenting cells (APCs): when needed, they can present antigens to other white blood cells in order to mediate the immune response.
This looks like a Desert Biome to me. You can see a scarcity of plants. Spiky, cactus-like plants are also visible. You can also see the colour of the dirt. There is also no visible water source.
Complete question:
In a population of flowers growing in a meadow, C1 and C2 are autosomal codominant alleles that control flower color. The alleles are polymorphic in the population, with f (C1) = 0.7 and f (C2) = 0.3. Flowers that are C1C1 are yellow, orange flowers are C1C2, and C2C2 flowers are red. A storm blows a new species of hungry insects into the meadow, and they begin to eat yellow and orange flowers but not red flowers. The predation exerts strong natural selection on the flower population, resulting in relative fitness values of C1C1 = 0.30, C1C2 = 0.60, and C2C2 = 1.0. Assuming the population begins in H−W equilibrium, what is C1 allele frequency after one generation of natural selection? Express your answer using three decimal places.
Answer:
The C1 allele frequency after one generation of natural selection equals 0.559
Explanation:
Due to technical problems, you will find the complete answer and explanation in the attached file.
Solution:
In phylogenetic inference, an evolutionary novelty (or derived character) is referred to as Plesiomorphy
Relating to or denoting the process by which different kinds of living organisms are believed to have developed from earlier forms during the history of the earth.
Thus this is the required answer.