true or false Organisms with odd ploidy (e.g. 3) typically produce aneuploid offspring because of nondisjunction events.
Which of the following is the most important determinant of genome size in eukaryotes? Check the best answer.
a. number of chromosomes
b. number of genes
c amount of repetitive dna
true or false Organisms with odd ploidy (e.g. 3) typically produce aneuploid offspring because of nondisjunction...
can you please answer all the questions
Gene therapy can best be described as the OA. repair of a defect (mutation) in a gene B. insertion of normal genes to act in place of mutant genes Oc. insertion of human genes into other organisms D. cloning of genes to produce and purify therapeutically useful proteins E. mapping of all human genetic information Donot Selection Transmission genetics A. uses recombinant DNA technology to identify, isolate, and produce millions of copies of...
Please answer all questions. Oftentimes, unsaturated fatty acids are found in a fluid state at room temperature (e.g., olive oil). This is because unsaturated fatty acids contain a large number of ___________________. a. Hydrogen bonds b. Carbon-Carbon single bonds c. Carbon-Carbon double bonds d. Sulfide bonds e. Radioactive bonds Which of the following stages of aerobic cellular respiration generates the most ATP? a. Glycolysis b. Pyruvate breakdown c. Citric Acid Cycle (aka. Krebs Cycle) d. Oxidative phosphorylation e. Calvin Cycle...
Which of the following is TRUE of incomplete penetrance? Select one: a. Epistatic interactions can result in incomplete penetrance in some cases. b. Environmental factors do not influence penetrance. c. Incomplete penetrance implies that some individuals will experience less severe forms of disease, such as cancer or Alzheimer's. d. Incomplete penetrance is never observed with Huntington's disease e. Incomplete penetrance refers to cases in which individuals developing a particular disease (e.g., cancer or Alzheimer's) lack the typical genotype for this...
According to Robert Trivers, why are men generally larger and more physically aggressive than women? Because women are more reproductively “valuable” than men, hence competition for mates is fiercer among men Because men invest more heavily in reproduction than women Because men secrete more testosterone Trivers’ theory does not speculate on the origin of the sex difference in size and physical aggression Although some women are interested in casual sex (short-term mating), research has suggested that there are differences in...
2. A dominant allele H reduces the number of body bristles that Drosophila flies have, giving rise to a “hairless” phenotype. In the homozygous condition, H is lethal. An independently assorting dominant allele S has no effect on bristle number except in the presence of H, in which case a single dose of S suppresses the hairless phenotype, thus restoring the "hairy" phenotype. However, S also is lethal in the homozygous (S/S) condition. What ratio of hairy to hairless flies...
can
u tell me if these answers are correct please!??!!!
Choose the best answer for the following questions. Place your answer on the line. If your answer is not on the line.it does not count 1 Mender's discovery that characteristics are inherited due to the transmission of hereditary factors resulted from his (1) dissections to determine how fertilization occurs in pea plants (2analysis of the offspring produced from many pea plant crosses (3) careful microscopic examinations of genes and chromosomes...
Unit 3 Study Resource Meiosis • Process by which diploid cells create haploid cells NOT part of the cell cycle > only some cells ever undergo meiosis During meiosis I, homologous chromosomes line up to allow them to be separated into two new cells o They can become "tangled" during this phase, which leads to crossing-over (rearranging the alleles) O Result of meiosis I is two non-identical haploid cells Meiosis Il looks very similar to mitosis, in that sister chromatids...
10. Write a one-page summary of the attached paper? INTRODUCTION Many problems can develop in activated sludge operation that adversely affect effluent quality with origins in the engineering, hydraulic and microbiological components of the process. The real "heart" of the activated sludge system is the development and maintenance of a mixed microbial culture (activated sludge) that treats wastewater and which can be managed. One definition of a wastewater treatment plant operator is a "bug farmer", one who controls the aeration...