Complete Question:
Which Kingdom of living things consists entirely of multi-celled, heterotrophic organisms?
A) Animal
B) Fungi
C) Plant
D) Protist
<u>Correct Option:</u>
<u>Animal</u> Kingdom of living things consists entirely of multi-celled, heterotrophic organisms.
Option: A
<u>Explanation:</u>
The system of scientific classification in biological science is categorized into seven main groups: kingdom > phylum > class > order > family > genus > species. Here the kingdom is the largest group while smallest is the species. The term phylum is being used in the Kingdom of Animals, and is the second largest group.
The Kingdom of Animals is made up of multi-cellular, heterotrophic species which feed on other entities to survive. Some of the animal properties in this kingdom are able to establish, function independently, and reproduce during their existence.
Answer:
The natural resource distribution depends on many physical factors such as land, atmosphere, and altitude. Asset distribution is unequal because these factors differ on this planet from place to place.
True. Because its staying still
Blade
Thin, flattened section of a plant leaf that collects sunlight
Petiole
Thin stalk by which a leaf blade is attached to a stem
Mesophyll
Specialized ground tissue that makes up the bulk of most leaves; performs most of a plant's photosynthesis
Palisade Mesophyll
Layer of tall, column-shaped mesophyll cells just under the upper epidermis of a leaf
Spongy Mesophyll
Loose tissue beneath the palisade layer of a leaf
Stoma
Opening in the underside of a leaf that allows carbon dioxide and oxygen to diffuse into and out of the leaf
Guard Cell
Specialized cell in the epidermis of plants that controls the opening and closing of stomata by responding to changes in water pressure
Transpiration
Loss of water from a plant through its leaves
(Got this from my textbook so here)
A wall located outside the cell membrane provides the cell support, and protection against mechanical stress or damage from osmotic rupture and lysis. The major component of the bacterial cell wall is peptidoglycan or murein. This rigid structure of peptidoglycan, specific only to prokaryotes, gives the cell shape and surrounds the cytoplasmic membrane.