False.
All sources of pollution do not come from human activities.
<h3>What are the causes of pollution?</h3>
There are some natural causes of pollution. When dangerous pollutants enter the air as gases, liquids, or solids, air pollution is formed. Although there are some natural processes that can produce air pollution, such as sulfur and chlorine gases from volcanic activity, smoke and ash from wildfires, dust storms, and biological degradation, manmade sources account for the majority of pollution in the atmosphere.
Burning fossil fuels for transportation, energy, and industry produces the majority of air pollution that is caused by humans. Carbon dioxide, nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide, volatile organic compounds (VOCs), and particulates are typical pollutants released by fossil fuel-burning engines. In addition to particles, carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide are produced by stoves, incinerators, and open burning.
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The main 'job' of the endocrine system in most animals is to moderate and send out chemicals that affect other organs, tissues, and organ systems of the body.
A 3-base deletion in the AAUAAA sequence in the 3' untranslated region of an mRNA that eliminates the AAU, thereby preventing RNA polymerase from polyadenylation the mRNA would have the effect of; decreasing the number copies of the polyeptide that would be translated from this mRNA. A deletion is a mutation in which a part of a chromosome or a sequence of DNA is lost during DNA replication.
A. If the prey isn’t getting killed, they will continue to increase the population until they hit their max (due to resources).
Answer: option B) Sympatric speciation is best described as a random event that disrupts the allele frequencies in a population
Explanation:
Sympatric speciation is an event/situation whereby organisms of the same species:
- live in the same territory or nearby territories ( i.e do not live in geographical isolation)
- DO NOT interbreed, but select a sexual mate from a much diverse territory to yield new species or offsprings.
This sexual selection then results in generations of offsprings that are genetically different from the rest of the same species due to uneven gene flow or disruption of alleles among the population of same species.
Thus, only option B is true.