<span>A) Leg of a horse and the leg of a dog.
The rest of the choices are examples of convergent evolution because they are similar in structures that evolved in separate places in the animal kingdom.
>Bats are mammals and birds are not, yet they both evolved a similar appendage</span><span>
Choices to this question are:
A)
the leg of a horse and the leg of a dog
B)
the wing of a bat and the wing of a bird
C)
the fin of a dolphin and the fin of a shark
D)
the beak of a bird and the beak of a turtle</span>
About the question:
You will find the chart in the attached files
Answer:
The strat codon is AUG
Explanation:
Genetic information for the aminoacids assembly during the protein synthesis is stored in short sequences of three nucleotides named <em>codons </em>in the mRNA. Each of the codons represents one of the 20 amino acids used to build the protein. The total number of possible codons is 64, from which 61 codify amino acids -more than one codon codify for the same amino acid-. One of these amino acids is also the start point of protein synthesis. And the left three codons are stopping translation points.
The codons indicating the initiation or stop points during the translation process are:
- The start codon AUG is the most common sequence used by eukaryotic cells and places near the 5´extreme of the molecule. However, other codons might be used as well. Prokaryote cells might use the codons GUG or UUG.
- The end codons are UAA, UAG, UGA.
The new better species can eat all of their food, take up all of their space, and be more physically dominant so that they are not challenged by the disappearing species. the newer species would have to reproduce really fast and be in its ideal habitat in order to do so and dominant the area or at least the food source for both the species
Answer:
A polymer is a substance that has a molecular structure consisting chiefly or entirely of a large number of similar units bonded together
Synthetic Polymers: nylon, polyethylene, polyester, Teflon, and epoxy.
Natural Polymers: silk, wool, DNA, cellulose and proteins