<span>Mitochondriom is the awnser
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The effects<span> of </span>heart failure<span> on the </span>body<span> depend on which side of the </span>heart is affected<span>.</span>
Looks like the question is asking how evolution of a specific species affects humans negatively.
<span>Think of co-evolution examples such as predator-prey and host-parasite relationships.
</span>One example that comes to mind is <span>the use of pesticides in agriculture. It has driven the evolution of resistant insects, requiring the use of harsher chemicals in greater quantity to kill them. This can have a harmful effect on agriculture and in turn affect humans negatively. Does that makes sense?</span>
Answer:
Greatly affect the population.
Explanation:
Environment and weather of a country greatly affect the population and people of a region because good environment with all resources and suitable weather attract people of other regions toward itself. If the location has plenty of water, vegetation, flat geography and food etc, the people settled in this location and increase occur in population whereas if the area doesn't have any natural resources so people migrate from that area.
It's false, in eukaryotes DNA replication proceeds in two directions along the DNA molecule.