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i belive that an embryological relationship involves comparing the embryo with other animals that share the same habitat (i.e deserts, oceans, forests) to help taxonomists classify organisms
More often than not, children share blood types with their parents. However, blood type is determined by two parts of a gene: one from each parent. So while two parents who are both type A blood have mostly type A children, they can also have children with type O blood.
By definition two children born to the same mother at the same time would be twins. It would be possible that they would not be twins if they were only half brothers, meaning that they shared a father but were born to two different mothers at the same time, or where they shared the same mother and father, but one was carried and born to a surrogate, or both by two separate surrogates and just happened to look very simmilar, though they would share different DNA. If they did share the exact same DNA and also were not twins one would have to be the 'clone' or the other, meaning that a single embryo was 'conceived' from one sperm and one egg, which was cloned, and each embryo was implanted into a different woman's womb, and were born at the exact same time. They could just be dogs or another animal that is born in a liter. They're brothers and look exactly the same, but aren't neccesarily twins.
The blood (circulatory system) carries oxygen to your lungs (respiratory system). Oxygen binds to the hemoglobin molecule in your blood and is carried back to the heart, then pumped out to the other parts of the body.
Hepatitis is a blood-born pathogen, so the answer to this depends on how well the whole blood or blood components are stored (excluding gammoglobulin, which doesn't transmit Hep C). If the blood is properly stored, the lifespan is, as with most if not all blood born pathogens, very long indeed. If the Hep C entirely dessicates, it dies, as it does if heated or exposed to bleach or other disinfectants (outside the body of course). It does however survive quite well during the time it takes to share needles (one modality of contagion). When dealing with the risk of Hep C transmission, one uses blood born pathogen protocols.
Baby gets food and oxygen through the umbilical cord. This umbilical cord is attached to the placenta. This placenta is attached to the uterus. In the placenta blood of the mother comes close to the blood of the fetus. There is transfer of food and oxygen to the blood of fetus from the blood of mother. Carbon bi oxide and waste products of metabolism are transferred to the blood of mother from the blood of fetus.
No. The placenta produces and cleanses the blood for the fetus.
The baby and the mother share the same blood stream, Whatever drug the mother smoke, snort, swallow, drink or inject gets into her blood, and from there over to the baby.
Cousins.
No the fetal pig and the mother pig's blood never mix. This is the same with humans and many other placental mammals such as horses and cows.
agnate sibling: are the one that share the same father but not the same mother uterine sibling: are the one that share the same mother but not the same father i think that agnate slibling are far part brother nd sister blood b/c they dont share the same mother cause if you share the same mother then you close brother nd sister but dont share same father. uterine slibling are close blood brother nd sister b/c they share the same mother not the same father if you dont share the same mother but the same father then that not close brother nd sister.. so the best half sibling are the uterine sibling sharing same mother not the same father. by. Johnny Garcia
Yes. You both share the same blood, even if you have a different mother or father.
You have no blood line relation, You don't share DNA whatsoever. In this scenario putting an example; you and your half-sister share, let's say, the same father but not the same mother and your half-sister's half-sister share the same mother but not the same father. There is no shared DNA between you and your half-sister's half-sister.
You both share blood as the people that are in your family.Example- Your Aunt would share blood with your Gran and so would Mum and you would share blood with your Mum so it all connects realy.
Technically, there is no relationship. You do not share a common ancestor. However, you may share common descendants.
Sebastian Bach's 20 children did not share the same birth mother.
because the baby is in the mother not the father