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what's the most significant difference between the holdovers" and animals in all other classes. what's the answer.
Dead animals have flies all of them, slaughtered animals usually have cuts in them somewhere on their body.
Oviparous animals (all birds, some reptiles and some mammals) lay eggs. Viviparous animals 'give birth' to pre-formed babies.
The type of body cavity shared by all mollusks is pseudocoelom is a false statement. The correct answer is coelom.
Excludability
having no backbone
A free rider problem
A free-rider problem.
A nail or hoof or claw are common to all mammals and are a shared evolutionary trait.
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A trait shared by at least two and perhaps more taxa and devolving on common ancestry is synapomorphy. A homologous trait is quite similar. The forelimbs of all tetrapods are devolved from common ancestry and would be traits shared by many taxa and homologous traits. Cladists use the word synapomorphy more to show closer relationships. Pliesiomorphy is the word cladists use to show more ancient relationships.
it slaughtered all of their animals , took away their land & they all shared a profit at the end of the year
What is a defining trait of all minerals?
they are all multicellular eukaryotic embryonic chemoorganoheterotrophs that are capable of motility for at least for part of their life cycle.
Classifying all animals that swim in the same phylum is overly broad as swimming is a behavior rather than a specific shared evolutionary trait. Animals that swim can belong to different phyla based on their anatomical and genetic characteristics. Grouping them solely based on swimming behavior would lead to an inaccurate and misleading classification system.
The general location of electrons in a covalent bond is that electrons are shared in pairs between 2 atoms. If 2 electrons pairs are shared, 4 electrons are shared in all. They lie between the two nuclei of the bonding atoms. The shared electrons are typically near the middle of the bond between the 2 atoms, in a covalent bond. They may be slightly closer to 1 atom or the other, due to small differences in electronegativity.