P.Biol. is short for "Professional Biologist" and represents someone who is a member of the Alberta Society of Professional Biologists. This is society defined by Alberta (Canada) legislation and can only be used by someone who is in good standing as a member of the society. It provides an assurance the the individual is appropriately qualified and compliant with its code of ethics.
Similar to this is the R.P.Bio or "Registered Professional Biologist", which is a similar designation used by British Columbia professional biologist. As of Oct 2010, these are the only two legally defined professional biological societies in Canada
"Biometer" is not a widely recognized term. It could potentially refer to a device used in biology or biometrics to measure certain variables, but without more context it is difficult to provide a specific definition.
You can find information about the woodland and shrubland biome in biology textbooks, scientific journals, online databases, and websites of organizations such as the World Wildlife Fund or the National Geographic. These sources provide detailed information on the characteristics, flora, fauna, climate, and conservation status of this biome.
I believe, as a biol. student, that chloroplasts contain their own genetic material (DNA and RNA) and ribosomes which has lead biologists to assume that chloroplasts evolved from ancient prokaryotic cells.yes they doYes, plants also contain ribosomes.yes they areYes.
It takes about 2 min at 37 C in E. coli. Reference: - Lindahl, L. 1975. Intermediates and time kinetics of the in vitro assembly of Escherichia coli ribosomes. J. Mol. Biol. 92:15-37. - Schlessinger, D. 1974. Ribosome formation in Escherichia coli, p. 393-416. In M. Nomura (ed.), Ribosomes. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, NY.
According to Hong et al (2006), the average size of an intron is 3479 base pairs. However, the average is skewed by some very large introns. A better picture comes from the median size, which is 1334 base pairs. Reference: Hong X, Scofield DG, Lynch M (2006) Intron size, abundance, and distribution within untranslated regions of genes. Mol. Biol. Evol. 23:2392-404
BIOL
If you Google Biol 452 Amphibian Crossword you will see the lab notes under week 7, crossword and key.
100'C or 212'F
There is no specific term "Sand Biol." It may be a typo or a contraction of terms. Sand biology typically refers to the study of organisms that live in or interact with sandy environments, such as beaches or dunes.
No, it is usually called boiling pot or kettle.
The Webster's dictionary says: Analogous (biol.) similar in function though differing in structure
ummm... hot water and hot water boil at the same rate...
Irish Gaelic: fidléir Scottish Gaelic: fidhlear Manx Gaelic: biol-chloieder, fidleyr, groudle, kialgeyr
No, it is not. Example is when you biol the egg. Once boiled it cant be "unboiled". Classic example of permanently denaturated protein.
If you look at the Biology 220 course description in the catalog (which you can probably view online) it will indicate at the end of the description any prerequisites required. If the Biology 110 is indicated as a prerequisite then you cannot take them concurrently. If it indicates the Biology 110 as a corequisite or not indicated at all, then you can. OK, I looked it up for you. The Biol 110 is a prerequisite for the Biol 220. Thus, you cannot take them together.
ji han bilkul ka saktee hain magar haftee main eik dafa
carbohydrates breaks down to polysachorides->mono...-sugar> energy for the body to run => fuel of energy biol.242