Sinyeta
Member
do u have photographic memoryMy answers:
1) a
2) c
3) a
4) D
5) a
6) b
7) a
8) c
9) c
10) a
11) b
12) (no idea at all really, but picked b)
13) c
14) a (didnt know)
15) b
16) c
17) c
18) c
19) a
20) d
do u have photographic memoryMy answers:
1) a
2) c
3) a
4) D
5) a
6) b
7) a
8) c
9) c
10) a
11) b
12) (no idea at all really, but picked b)
13) c
14) a (didnt know)
15) b
16) c
17) c
18) c
19) a
20) d
Ahh yeh that's right. I put D, the deep roots... I have that in my notesQ3 was what plant adaptation minimises water loss
Sadly no But I have an exam XDdo u have photographic memory
Our supervisor didn't let us take our exam out :/Sadly no But I have an exam XD
I didnt really like that question because it's all kind of relative... because technically for the plant having extensive roots doesnt minimise water loss but rather increases water gathering ability, and I figured since water is lost through transpiration in the stomata in the leaves having smaller leaves would reduce loss. But its a bit of a dodge questionAhh yeh that's right. I put D, the deep roots... I have that in my notes
I agree with you there I actually initially put A which was the smaller leaves... not sure thoughI didnt really like that question because it's all kind of relative... because technically for the plant having extensive roots doesnt minimise water loss but rather increases water gathering ability, and I figured since water is lost through transpiration in the stomata in the leaves having smaller leaves would reduce loss. But its a bit of a dodge question
I was having doubts as well when I was answering that 5 marker, but it is right I spoke with my bio teacher after. He said that the ovum acts as the sperm carrying the other 23 chromosomes required to fertilise and since all the DNA belongs to the orignal female, then it must be a clone
everything you mentioned is what i love! i couldve written an 8 marker on selevtive breeding or cloning hahaWhat do you mean the genetics was literally the easiest they could make it. No cloning, selective breeding, barely anything on gene expression, nothing on HOX genes and the like. It was a pleasant paper
I put A (smaller leaves) as well.I didnt really like that question because it's all kind of relative... because technically for the plant having extensive roots doesnt minimise water loss but rather increases water gathering ability, and I figured since water is lost through transpiration in the stomata in the leaves having smaller leaves would reduce loss. But its a bit of a dodge question
AGREED! yay! (I think).wtf how was it a clone
"use your understanding of genetics"
- crossing over = variation. therefore not a clone
- possibility of mutation = variation. therefore not a clone
- random segregation = variation. therefore not a clone.
- fertilisation of egg = variation. therefore not a clone.
Well well well. Let the arguments startwtf how was it a clone
"use your understanding of genetics"
- crossing over = variation. therefore not a clone
- possibility of mutation = variation. therefore not a clone
- random segregation = variation. therefore not a clone.
- fertilisation of egg = variation. therefore not a clone.
My reasoning as wellI wrote that it would not be a clone; here is my understanding of the Q:
Due to independent assortment, each egg would be unique. For example, assume brown eyes (B) are dominant to blue (b). A person with heterozygous brown eye colour would have a genotype Bb. This person may have two eggs with the chromosome carrying the 'b' allele (remembering the number of chromosomes is halved during meiosis). Thus, these two eggs would form a 'bb' offspring with blue eyes - which isn't a clone.
Assuming it was a human, for it to be an EXACT clone, all chromosomes would need to match up exactly, which is a 1/(2^23) chance. Disregarding crossing over, this would be highly unlikely.