Why are the seminal vesicles important for human reproduction?
This might help:
The seminal vesicles (Latin: glandulae vesiculosae), vesicular glands, or seminal glands, are a pair of simple tubular glands posteroinferior to the urinary bladder of some male mammals. Seminal vesicles are located within the pelvis. They secrete fluid that partly composes the semen.
They pass through the prostate, and open into the urethra at the seminal colliculus. During ejaculation, semen passes through the prostate gland, enters the urethra and exits the body via the urinary meatus.
I believe that the answer is:
A.
They allow the sperm to travel to the urethra to be released.
The right answer is E.
Uracil is a nitrogenous base (pyrimidine) specific for RNA. The nucleoide of uracil is called uridine and nucleotide is called uridine monophosphate or uridylate. In the DNA, there is thymine instead of uracil.
So if we mark the uracils, only the RNA will be marked. The DNA will not be given that there is no uracil in it.
A chemical bond to form in a compound must be formed my two or more atoms attracted to each other.
Hope it helped!
Well depending on what the environmental change is the organisms will have to adapt, or move. if they don't they may not survive.
comment if you want an example or 2