It is the serous membrane
b. protozoa
One of the four species of protozoan in the genus Plasmodium is responsible for the acute or subacute infectious disease known as malaria.
<h3>A virus or a bacteria causes malaria?</h3>
- A virus or bacteria cannot cause malaria.
- Plasmodium, a parasite that often spreads through infected mosquitoes, is what causes malaria.
- A mosquito consumes Plasmodia that are present in blood when it feeds on an infected human.
<h3>How do protozoa cause malaria?</h3>
- The female anopheles mosquito bite is the primary method of transmission of malaria, a protozoan infection of the red blood cells.
- The Plasmodium genus of protozoa is what causes malaria.
- Four different types of malaria parasites can infect people: Plasmodium malariae, vivax, ovale, and falciparum
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Answer:
If the specific sequence of nitrogenous bases in DNA is changed, this will in turn change the sequence of nitrogenous bases in the mRNA (after transcription). During the process of translation, different amino acids will be incorporated in a different sequence due to the different mRNA codons in the mRNA strand. This would most likely result in a non-functional protein or a different protein with other chemical properties than the one specified in the original DNA sequence.
Answer;
A Both make it possible for the conditions in the interior to be different from the conditions outside.
Explanation;
Groups of molecules called microspheres may have preceded the living cells of today. Microspheres are tiny bubbles filled with groups of large organic molecules; they can form under very specific conditions. These microspheres may be a lot like the vesicles formed from the organic compounds taken off of the modern meteorites. Microspheres are not cells, but they do share some characteristics with cells.
These bundles of molecules are able to maintain an internal environment different from the surroundings outside the bubble. They also have a simple way of storing and releasing energy. They expand by absorbing additional molecules until they reach an unstable size, and then they split into smaller microspheres. This division is not true reproduction or cell division, but it may be a precursor to it.