1. Their large ears help dissipate excess body heat on hot days in the desert.
2. The fennec fox seems to be the only carnivore living in the Sahara Desert able to survive without free water. Their kidneys are adapted to restrict water loss, their extensive burrowing may cause the formation of dew, which can then be consumed, and they will receive moisture from the food that they eat.
3. Their burrowing and nocturnal lifestyle helps restrict water loss.
4. Their thick fur helps insulate them from the cold desert nights.
5. Their sandy fur helps to reflect heat, and also provides excellent camouflage.
6. Fennec foxes also have thick fur on the soles of their feet, which insulate against the hot sand of the desert. This extra fur on the soles of their feet also affords them excellent traction in the loose sand.
Answer:
No, you need both mass and volume to determine its desity to see if it can float.
Explanation:
Density is the only thing affecting whether something floats or sinks. If an object has a higher density than the fluid it is in (fluid can mean liquid or gas), it will sink. If it has a lower density, it will float. Density is determined by an object's mass and volume.
In parthenogenetic reproduction, the egg cell develops into a new or ganism without fertilization. It is clear that the most essential feature of parthenogenesis, absence of fertilization, causes important alterations of basic nature in cytological, as well as in genetic, respects.
Answer:
No
Explanation:
During cyclic photophosphorylation, electrons are cycled continuously out of and back into the reaction center of PSI. It does not involve PSII and plastoquinone. During non cyclic photophosphorylation, the reaction center of plant photosystem II passes electrons to plastoquinone. The reduced plastoquinone carries electrons to the cytochrome b6f complex. Since PSII and plastoquinones are not included in cyclic photophosphorylation, dichlorophenyldimethylurea would not affect the process.