Mouth. Food starts to move through your GI tract when you eat. When you swallow, your tongue pushes the food into your throat. A small flap of tissue, called the epiglottis, folds over your windpipe to prevent choking and the food passes into your esophagus.
Esophagus. Once you begin swallowing, the process becomes automatic. Your brain signals the muscles of the esophagus and peristalsis begins.
Lower esophageal sphincter. When food reaches the end of your esophagus, a ringlike muscle—called the lower esophageal sphincter —relaxes and lets food pass into your stomach. This sphincter usually stays closed to keep what’s in your stomach from flowing back into your esophagus.
Stomach. After food enters your stomach, the stomach muscles mix the food and liquid with digestive juices. The stomach slowly empties its contents, called chyme, into your small intestine.
Small intestine. The muscles of the small intestine mix food with digestive juices from the pancreas, liver, and intestine, and push the mixture forward for further digestion. The walls of the small intestine absorb water and the digested nutrients into your bloodstream. As peristalsis continues, the waste products of the digestive process move into the large intestine.
Large intestine. Waste products from the digestive process include undigested parts of food, fluid, and older cells from the lining of your GI tract. The large intestine absorbs water and changes the waste from liquid into stool. Peristalsis helps move the stool into your rectum.
Rectum. The lower end of your large intestine, the rectum, stores stool until it pushes stool out of your anus during a bowel movement
The answer to this question is choice A, cell structure.
The answer is Genetic information.
ok this one is easy. the measurments are dividing by 2
2,1,.5,.25
so it would be
C: 0.2 meter.
A trade of chromosome segments among non-sister homologous chromatids happens and is referred to as crossing over.
Crossover happens while chromosomes, usually homologous times of the equal chromosome, spoil after which reconnect however to the specific quit piece. If they spoil on the equal location or locus withinside the collection of base pairs, the end result is an trade of genes, referred to as genetic recombination.
<h3>What are homologous chromosome?</h3>
Homologous chromosomes are made from chromosome pairs of about the equal length, centromere position, and marking pattern, for genes with the equal corresponding loci.
Thus it s well expalined.
To leran more about the segments refer to link ;
brainly.com/question/795778