Answer:
1.) heterozygous 2.) hairy 3.) hh 4.) heterozygous 5.) no fur | as for 5, 6, and 7 i need more information because you can't see the guinea pig. number 6 could either be "HH" or "hh" depending on what it looks like, since it's heterozygous. The punnet square on the bottom right goes as follows, (from left to right) HH, Hh, hH, hh.
Answer:
Time taken by space shuttle = 714.28 m/s
Explanation:
Given:
Distance cover by space shuttle = 500,000 meter
Speed of space shuttle = 700 m/s
Find:
Time taken by space shuttle
Computation:
Time taken = Distance / Speed
Time taken by space shuttle = Distance cover by space shuttle / Speed of space shuttle
Time taken by space shuttle = 500,000 / 700
Time taken by space shuttle = 714.28 m/s
Answer:
Chlorophyll "a"
Explanation:
The reaction centers of the photosystem have chlorophyll "a" molecules. The chlorophyll "a" that functions as a reaction center for the photosystem II has absorption maxima at 680 nm and therefore, it is called P680. The reaction center of photosystem I also have chlorophyll "a" molecules that have the absorption peak at 700 nm. The chlorophyll "a" molecules serving as reaction centers transfer the photoexcited electrons to a primary acceptor during the light-dependent phase of photosynthesis.
Answer:
By the numbers, humans produce a lot of food—enough to provide every person on Earth 2,750 calories per day, exceeding almost all dietary recommendations.
There’s one glaring problem, however: Humans aren’t producing enough of the right food.
When researchers at the University of Guelph in Canada broke those calories down into different food groups, they found a shortage in production of the most important foods. In the long run, with the global population expected to balloon to about 10 billion people by mid-century, this could cause some serious problems.
Explanation:
Removes carbon from air: photosynthesis by plants and algae
Release of carbon into atmosphere: respiration (animals exhale CO2), factory emissions, eruption of volcanoes, hydrothermal vents, and breakdown of organic matter
Release of carbon into the soil: Shells of marine organisms form limestone, and some carbon from decomposing organisms is stored in the soil
*This isn’t every possible pathway but hopefully this will help get you started. I’m going to attach a picture of the carbon cycle (not mine) to help you visualize the process.