Answer:
The correct answer is option B. lobe-finned fish.
Explanation:
Lobe finned fishes or the Sarcopterygii is a group or clad of fish that contain the coelacanths, tetrapods, lungfish, and other fossil relatives. ray-finned fishes and lob finned fishes are the are sister groups.
The major characteristic feature of this fish is the presence of lobe in their fins. The ancestral records explained that the land-dwelling tetrapods are evolved from the lobe-finned fishes around four four hundred million years ago.
Thus, the correct answer is option B. lobe-finned fish.
The correct answer is option 4, that is, GCGATT.
Complementary strand refers to either of the two chains, which forms a double helix of DNA, with corresponding positions on the two chains comprising of a pair of complementary bases. It is a section of one nucleic acid, which is bonded to another by an alignment of base pairs.
In nature, complementarity refers to the base principle of DNA transcription and replication as it is a characteristic shared between the two RNA or DNA sequences, such that when they are arranged antiparallel to each other, the nucleotide bases at each position in the sequences will be complementary.
Answer: Gut microbiome degrade the ingested milk sugars through a biochemical pathway, producing ATP required for the energy needs of infant.
Explanation:
The human breast milk fed on by infants contains a high concentration of indigestible oligosaccharides which include lacto-N-tetraose and lacto-N-fucopentaose.
These milk sugars are utilized by microbes in the gut of infants, yielding lactate as the final product of metabolism and releasing several molecules of ATP as useful energy for use by the infant.
Thus, the presence of these gut microbes at birth, and the feeding of infant with breast milk is vital to fulfilling their energy needs