Biology, 26.07.2020 02:01 estermartinez
Two plants that are pure bred are crossed. One is short and one is tall, Tall is dominant. If two of their offspring are crossed, what are the
expected phenotypes for the next generation of offspring (F2 generation)?
A. 50% tall, 50% short
B. 100% tall
C. 75% tall, 25% short
D. 100% short
Answers: 1
Biology, 21.06.2019 14:30, stormserena
Acar traveld with an average speed of 60 miles per hour for 2 hours. how far did it travel
Answers: 1
Biology, 21.06.2019 20:00, vannia
!if we removed the wolf, snake, and hawk from this food web, what best explains the impact it would have? a) the number of producers would increase. b)the number of decomposers would increase. c)the number of primary consumers would increase. d)the numbers of primary consumers would decrease.
Answers: 1
Biology, 21.06.2019 22:00, DWASS
Ry was studying two populations of the same species of lizards. one population lived on an island and the other lived on the mainland. both populations were affected by a hurricane that hit the island and the mainland with equal force. a year later, henry was testing the gene frequency and saw a decrease in genetic variation in the island species, but not in the mainland species. which best describes a conclusion he might have reached? gene flow greatly affects small populations, but large populations can recover. genetic drift greatly affects small populations, but large populations can recover. gene flow greatly affects large populations, but small populations can recover. genetic drift greatly affects large populations, but small populations can recover.
Answers: 2
Biology, 22.06.2019 02:30, EMQPWE
Actinobacteria sp. are fermenting organisms (which do you use oxygen to breathe) referred to as chemoorganohetereotrophs this means they break down organic material and convert it to inorganic material. which part of the carbon cycle does this describe
Answers: 1
Two plants that are pure bred are crossed. One is short and one is tall, Tall is dominant. If two of...
Biology, 27.07.2019 11:00
Social Studies, 27.07.2019 11:00