WW and ww would make D. All wrinkled seeds, no smooth seeds.
Answer options are
✅Homogeneous housing -
✅Familiarity with the breed
✅Business efficiency
✅Standardized food supply
Lack of training ❌
Time demands❌
✅Personal preference
Reasons
I’m using beef cattle to determine these answers.
I chose the ✅ answers because of the following
✅ Homogenous housing. If you live in extremely cold or hot climates, you want livestock that can withstand cold temperatures for housing reasons. Hereford and Angus are hearty and survive cold temps, Brahman are warm weather cattle.
✅Being familiar with the breed makes raising that breed easier. For example if you know Angus beef cattle and not Chalais dairy cows, you won’t know the Chalais’s unique characteristics.
✅Business efficiency - having one brand or one breed in this instance will save in time, management, food supply, medicines, etc. Different breeds will require different nutrients and feed, different housing requirements, for example.
✅ Standardized food supply. Again, different breeds require different nutrients. Having just one breed will keep food supply simple.
✅ personal preference. Although this might not be a sound business practice, people tend to stick with things they know and like.
I’m not sure what your class studied but I live on a farm and these are my answers
1. Contraction of the iliacus and psoas major produces flexion of the hip joint
2. quadriceps femoris muscle group
3. A combination of gluteal and thigh muscles also adduct, abduct, and rotate the thigh and lower leg. The tensor fascia latae is a thick, squarish muscle in the superior aspect of the lateral thigh. It acts as a synergist of the gluteus medius and iliopsoas in flexing and abducting the thigh.
4. triceps brachii
5. The major muscle that laterally flexes and rotates the head is the sternocleidomastoid
6. Rectus abdominis
7. The external obliques are the outermost abdominal muscles. They are also key participants in spinal flexion and the compression of the viscera. Individually, they act alongside the internal obliques in lateral flexion and spinal rotation.
8. abdominal external oblique muscle
9. external intercostal muscles