<p>i put how old they are and cell structures.</p>
<p>also i think its the yolk, cause in the answer it said the yolk provides food or something</p>
<p>i put how old they are and cell structures.</p>
<p>also i think its the yolk, cause in the answer it said the yolk provides food or something</p>
<p>but ive never heard “species x is a member of the animal kingdom because its x years old.” its about heterotrophic and autotrophic, i thought?</p>
<p>I put cell structures as well (choice A, I believe).</p>
<p>And I put that ovaries can’t get transferred during pollinations (for the flower question I asked earlier). Seems like a lot of people put that one down, so hopefully that’s right. And to someone who also asked-- I didn’t get one of the experiment in M either. :(</p>
<p>yeah i might of been confused with bi nomenclature or w/e</p>
<p>The last question on Bio M… wasn’t it the 9:3:3:1 ratio? So was the answer the one about how the parents are homozygous?</p>
<p>no that wasn’t the answer. forgot what it was though.</p>
<p>heterozygous.</p>
<p>What was the question to the last one on M?</p>
<p>yeah that was it :] ans = heterozygous</p>
<p>what was the one about the eagles or whatever animals they were liking the narrow/wide or high/low cliffs?</p>
<p>i think i put something about how competition made them spread out. was that a correct answer?</p>
<p>I thought it was mutualism or something? They’re not affecting each other if one lives in the high cliffs and the other in the lower ones.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>it was about genetics, right? what was the question again.</p>
<p>Yeah, competition made them spread out. </p>
<p>Wait, what was the last question asking for? Was it asking for the genotype of the F1 or the parental generation?</p>
<p>those ledge questions killed me. i hope they remove them :</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>yeah, exactly. they moved far apart so they could each use different resources. mutualistic things live with each other.</p>
<p>What was the last question asking for? Was it asking for the genotype of the F1 or the parental generation?</p>
<p>But then there wouldn’t be competition…</p>
<p>Also, that question about how only one species of insects can pollinate flowers. Was it coevolution?</p>
<p>they competed, so they had to move apart.</p>
<p>like, if me and you both really liked tomatos, and we lived in a house together with only one tomato garden, we would compete. we would both try to eat a lot of tomatos out of the garden. eventually, someone would triumph, and then the other person would move to a new house and plant a new tomato garden.</p>
<p>stupid analogy, i know.</p>
<p>But wouldn’t your previous tomato garden and your new one be the same? The birds on the ledge ended up using different heights/widths of ledges at the end.</p>
<p>thats because thats all that was available.</p>
<p>if your tomato garden was short and wide, and i moved to a house with a long and narrow tomato garden, thats just what i would have to deal with. the eagles couldnt change the cliffs.</p>