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Protists are in the Kingdom Protista and can be known as unicellular, eukaryotic organisms. Animal like protists are called protozoa.
No living creature of any kind has been sent to Mars, not even microbes (all components of a spacecraft that will land on another body are sterilized before assembly).
It is the Leedsichthys. It is over 90 ft.
All animals, including Homo sapiens, did and do.
The structure of an unspecialized plant cell is more square in shape. It has a cell wall to protect it and chloroplast which gives it chlorophyll that makes it visible as green, a cell membrane, a nucleus, The structure of an unspecialized animal cell, however, has all the structure except a cell wall and chloroplast.
neat diagram
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The ruminant's microbes essentially come from what the animal eats as well as the reproductive activity that goes on in the rumen when like microbes interact to produce new offspring before they die.
Microbes actually do quite a few good things but their most important job is breaking down dead animals and plants. Microbes actually consume dead plant and animal matter.
Decomposers
What about microbes and viruses? If you mean like land animal, I think it's the black widow
(horse(horse&animal)animal)
No, they would not be required to be labeled. No foods that contain GMOs are required to be labeled as such.
First, you will need a picture of the animal you choose to diagram. Then, label the most important, easily seen parts of the animal.
No, meat is parts of dead animal flesh. Microbes are living single celled organisms. What you may be thinking of is contamination with microbes. Yes, in that case raw meat is often (but not always) contaminated with microbes (often disease causing microbes that can make you very sick or even kill you). This is why meat should always be cooked before being served: to kill these microbes (even harmless ones).
One can view an animal cell diagram in literature from their local libraries. This information can also be found on information sites such as Wikipedia and National Geographic.
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