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Biology - September 2006

[Selected]: All categories Science & Mathematics Biology

how can an animal be heterothermic when it is already an ectotherm?

2006-09-11 05:12:31 · 2 answers · asked by squirrelgirl 1

2006-09-11 05:10:17 · 12 answers · asked by Darth Jhon 3

I know its internal and external changes but I have a table that says:
Complete the table of sense receptors
Stimulus Receptor Example
| |
| |
I know (or think) that the receptors are ears, eyes, skin, nose and tongue... does that make the stimulus the sense?
If so then it would be like:
Stimulus - hearing receptor - ears example - hearing music
???

only answer if you know
feel free to research!!

2006-09-11 05:01:35 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-09-11 04:52:49 · 14 answers · asked by daniela456 1

in the answer i will like to get significance in plants and animals with the structure of compound in which the metal is present and its ionic state in he compound and its functions as well

2006-09-11 04:12:03 · 4 answers · asked by rex1254 1

2006-09-11 04:01:22 · 12 answers · asked by sim 2

Doesn't that make evolution a religon?

2006-09-11 03:50:44 · 14 answers · asked by Brian W 2

2006-09-11 03:41:07 · 4 answers · asked by akua b 1

it took many many years to evolve from microscopic to our present selves. i coulnd't imagine an eyeball evolving over only a couple hundred generations? when our bodies first started developing eyeballs, i can't see them working for these first generations. why would our body keep evolving them over a long period of time. i can't see our body knowing that it would become an eye after a 1000 years. wouldn't our body have started to spit it out if it didn't work after a couple of generations?

2006-09-11 03:36:40 · 10 answers · asked by shotgunsherriffs 3

Do organisms not lose genetic make up in natural selection, While they would have to gain genetic make up to evolve?

2006-09-11 03:25:49 · 9 answers · asked by Brian W 2

2006-09-11 03:17:17 · 3 answers · asked by Chhavi_remix 1

2006-09-11 03:08:08 · 6 answers · asked by Brian W 2

2006-09-11 02:36:26 · 35 answers · asked by yacks 1

what would be our life without plants and animals

2006-09-11 02:26:33 · 16 answers · asked by brain_hacker17 2

how does a mosquito grow , like wriglers

2006-09-11 01:59:06 · 4 answers · asked by angie 3 1

2006-09-11 01:58:08 · 12 answers · asked by ♀guardian of angels♀ 3

2006-09-11 01:50:39 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-09-11 01:48:25 · 5 answers · asked by emmy31fph 1

Animals can't really talk to each other in the sense that humans can, but they can communicate danger, happiness, hunger etc. with different noises.

So, the question is: do donkeys and horses have the same 'language'? If not, are mules (offspring of a male donkey and female horse) bilingual?

2006-09-11 01:31:15 · 15 answers · asked by Steve-Bob 4

2006-09-11 01:06:02 · 9 answers · asked by marcelluswallace 2

The coagulation of protein in flour, egg white and skim milk is what I'm really wondering about..

2006-09-11 00:33:58 · 5 answers · asked by haru1290 2

2006-09-10 23:58:22 · 23 answers · asked by jolab 1

I intend to collect blood samples from large number of mice for my experiment. I want to preserve these samples for several months because I may will need later to check the level of several protiens in it (by western blot or ELISA). What is the best way to preserve it? Freezing? Whole blood or serum or plasma? -80 degree or liquied nitrogen?
Thanks.

2006-09-10 23:57:30 · 3 answers · asked by haggobti 3

if it does, any ideas how, the more detailed the better!!!!!!!!

2006-09-10 23:35:07 · 10 answers · asked by queenb 1

2006-09-10 23:03:14 · 15 answers · asked by samuel c 1

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