getting the best out of bos for everyone <33love u (no homo)
Nondisjunction occurs during anaphase I and can result in aneuploidy or polyploidy."Identify and describe an example of nondisjunction" (3) --idk I made this question up but it seems reasonable
Trisomy 21 (Down Syndrome)
- nondisjunction occurs during meosis, forming a gamete with an extra chromosomes than what is normal
**idk how to structure this - where does nondisjunction usually occur???
and aneuploidy is less than expected whereas polyploidy is more than expected (e.g., trisomy 21)?Nondisjunction occurs during anaphase I and can result in aneuploidy or polyploidy.
Aneuploidy is a condition in which a diploid cell contains either one extra (n+1) or one less (n-1) chromosome. When this cell fuses with a normal gamete (n), this can result in trisomy (2n+1) or monosomy (2n-1).and aneuploidy is less than expected whereas polyploidy is more than expected (e.g., trisomy 21)?
tysmAneuploidy is a condition in which a diploid cell contains either one extra (n+1) or one less (n-1) chromosome. When this cell fuses with a normal gamete (n), this can result in trisomy (2n+1) or monosomy (2n-1).
Polyploidy is a condition in which a cell with 3 sets of chromosomes is produced. This will result in a triploid cell (3n) being formed.
eucalyptus send those hormones to its roots to strengthen its walls LISO SOMETHING lignin it was lignin, it stimulates hormones to produce more lignin to strengthen its cellular walls to structurally guard against pathogens in soilDescribe ONE response of a named Australian plant to a named pathogen (3)
-from james ruse paper --can someone help me with this?? I dont think ive learnt this
bump lol this is still I thing that I forgot aboutTHE ORIGINAL POSTS HAVE BEEN UPDATED
THIS IS NOT A CLOSED THREAD
IF ANYONE HAS ANY OTHER USEFUL EXAMPLES PLEASE ADD AND ALSO PROVIDE FEEDBACK AND SUGGESTIONS
bump lol this is still I thing that I forgot about
lmao just saw you liking this thread so I just repostedcan we continue this
OKAY HERE ARE MY NOTES FOR THIS STUFF (mod 8 plants)can someone explain the plants stuff in mod 8 my booklet's so confusing like wtf are xerophytes
actually a better q what are plants
why.is.it.so.muchOKAY HERE ARE MY NOTES FOR THIS STUFF (mod 8 plants)
NEGATIVE FEEDBACK: stimulus >> receptor >> control centre >> effector >> response
Cohesion Tension Adhesion
Transpiration - movement of water up a plant to allow it to evaporate at the stomata of the leaves
As water evaporates from leaves, water is lifted up from roots to the leaves via a transpiration stream
As this occurs, the plant cools down
Xerophytes: plants that live in dry arid hot climates (e.g., cacti) — need a fine balance between cooling, transpiration, and the exchange of gases — adaptations include stem, leaves, fruit, stomata — drought tolerant
Hydrophytes: plants that live in a very watery environment — don’t need water adaptations
Mesophytes: plants that live in land where water is not an issue (lots of water present) — stomata on the underside of leaves — not drought tolerant
ADAPTATIONS:
Reducing internal temperature + transpiration stream
— leaves have a thick waxy cuticles to make them waterproof
— hairs on leaves catch water to keep them cool
— pale colour of leaves to reflect sunlight
Reducing exposure to sun
— changing the orientation of their leaves (e.g., Eucalyptus — have the shorter thinner edge facing the sun)
— small thin leaves
— cladode — no leaves, chloro-synthetic cells in the stem
— shedding leaves if too much sun
— tiny flowers in Aus
Stomata — opening that allows gases to be exchanged and for water to come out
— sunken stomata in their own microclimate (minimises water loss)
— on a hot day, stomata close to maintain a balance
— humidity can affect a stomata
Water storage — e.g, succulents
— fleshy leaves with lots of water
Fruits — come from a flower
— dry and woody to conserve water (unlike European fruits)
ngl all you asked about waswhy.is.it.so.much
flashbacks from yr11 bio mod 2
wtf is flaccid turgid idk i can hear my teacher's voice echo saying themngl all you asked about was
Xerophytes: plants that live in dry arid hot climates (e.g., cacti) — need a fine balance between cooling, transpiration, and the exchange of gases — adaptations include stem, leaves, fruit, stomata — drought tolerant
bro it's a really bad way of thinking about it but I think of it like an normal/erect d-wtf is flaccid turgid idk i can hear my teacher's voice echo saying them
im this close to dropping out of schoolbro it's a really bad way of thinking about it but I think of it like an normal/erect d-
flaccid: no water in it so it's all droopy and sad and saggy
turgid: full of water so it's hard and swollen
look just... imagine that and you won't forget what flaccid or turgid is!im this close to dropping out of school