Answer: Plants, from their roots, suck up nitrogen compounds. These compounds are obtained by animals as they consume plants. The nitrogen compounds in the organic matter re-enter the soil when plants and animals die or when animals excrete waste, where they are broken down by microorganisms, called decomposers.
Unicellular prokaryotes are called bacteria.
3: Trees are very eco friendly and they are what help us breathe natural air. They have a impact in a pro and con way. Pro, they build more stores, homes, and things we need in those spaces. Con: They are killing our fresh air and we don’t need that. The world is already going through disasters, and we are getting animals extinct.
Answer: B.
Explanation:
cant be 'A' cause carbon 14 is found in any living organism and mammals are not the only living organism on this planet
cant be 'C' cause ancient plants still replenish carbon 14 molecules and it'd be impossible to now its age when its still alive
couldnt be 'D' cause yeah while alive organisms do absorb carbon 14 that still defeats the purpose of dating with the carbon 14 method cause its still also taking in carbon dioxide, so the carbon-14 molecules will just keep filling until the organism dies. the whole point of dating with carbon 14 is to measure its deplenish (dying) not continual replenish (living)
dont know if that makes any sense to you but yeah 'B' is the answer, if it isnt im stoopid but im not
Site-specific recombination systems all of the choices are correct i.e.
A. do not depend on extensive nucleotide sequence homology.
B. depend on enzymes that are often specific for sequences within the host.
C. are features of some viruses.
- An exchange between two specified sequences (target sites), either on the same DNA molecule or on two separate DNA molecules, is known as site-specific recombination.
- DNA sequences may be integrated, excised, or inverted as a result of the exchange.
- A site-specific recombinase that can work by itself or with the aid of additional components or enzymes shapes the DNA target during recombination.
- The recombinase is chemically bonded to the ends of the intermediate DNA after DNA breakage at the recombination site; when this process is reversed, the intermediate DNA is resealed to form the recombinant and the recombinase is released.
- During this recombination process, neither replication nor repair are necessary.
learn more about Site-specific recombination here: brainly.com/question/11458760
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