<span>They are misleading, because dominant alleles do not dominate or prevent recessive alleles from doing a job. Also, one allele can be considered dominant in one regard and recessive in another. It just depends on what you are trying to do with it.</span>
I hope this helps
The compatibility of a person’s temperament with his surrounding environment is referred to as “goodness of fit.”
Some temperaments and environments seem to naturally fit together, while others do not.
There are two types of “Goodness of Fit:”
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how that trait interacts with the environment
how it interacts with the people in that environment.
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Any trait in and of itself is not a problem; rather, it is the interaction that determines the “acceptability” of that trait.
Answer:
Well the most common is habittat destruction. With the number of humans only growing, more land is needed and habitat desturctions occur. Lack of food is also a problem, as some crops don’t grow as much so the bee’s food source is smaller which leaves thousands dead. Also if the food source doesn’t run out, there are pesticides sprayed and the bees will die if eaten one which the chemical properties in a pesticide will kill. Also if not used, littering, if you dump it into a water source, the water gets contaminated and the bees could die from that, or the water spreads ano the flower would receive this chemical property, which could kill the Bee’s food source, or the flower doesn’t die but when the bees consume it, the bee will die.
Continuous cell lines differ from primary cell lines in that <span>continuous cell lines are derived from primary cell lines.</span>
I believe it's Preganglionic Neurons
because in parasympathetic the pre-ganglionic neurons begin in the brain stem, and secretes Aceytolcholine as a neurotransmitter. ;)
I'm taking A&P2 this spring so I know haha