<span>1. </span><span>Two ways that man can reduce the global
warming is by reducing carbon dioxide (a greenhouse gas) emissions. One way is
by planting more trees. Forests are reservoirs for carbon since their remove
carbon dioxide from the atmosphere in the process of photosynthesis. Second is
by reducing the use of fossil fuels to produce energy. Fossil fuels are the biggest emitter
of carbon dioxide in their combustion</span>
<span>2. </span>Greenhouse<span> gases permit infrared rays from the sun
to pass through them but do not allow heat to escape into the atmosphere. When infrared hits the earth's surface
it turns to the heat wave that has much longer wavelengths. This causes the earth’s atmosphere to retain more heat hence
increased global temperatures.</span>
<span>3. </span><span>When greenhouse gases especially carbon dioxide are reduced in the
atmosphere, the earth is able to radiate more sunlight back into space due to the reduced greenhouse effect. This
enables the global temperatures to remain low. At the poles where temperatures are cold remains
even colder hence the waters in these regions turn to glaciers. The ice continents increase in size and hence a big characteristic
of ice ages. </span>
<span>4. </span><span>Humans are not responsible for global warming even though they contribute but in minimal proportions
as compared to the natural process. This is because
it is estimated that termites produce even more carbon dioxide than humans. Ice
ages and global warming are therefore natural
cycles governed by the sun. However,
human activity aggravates global warming. </span>
D. Estuaries
Estuaries are a place where fresh and salt water mix.
Hello! Autotrophs make their own food (plants) and heterotrophs consume other organisms for energy (consumers.) Autotrophs use the process of photosynthesis to produce the oxygen as one of its products. Heterotrophs use the oxygen produced by the autotrophs to perform cellular respiration, which releases carbon dioxide that plants use; it's a balanced cycle. Hope this helps!
A star is a fusion reactor. Under enormous pressure, resulting from gravity, light nuclei of gases such as hydrogen merge to form helium, and since this process releases energy, the start begins to radiate the excess energy. Later on, helium fusion produces heavier elements, and so on.