Fragmentation is a type of asexual reproduction that involves an organism starting to grow out of the parent organism that may or may not remain attached to the parent organism.
Borneo
Depends. If you mean like seeing from eyes its impossible. But if you mean science it would depend on the living thing. For example a humans average life span would be near the late 80's. It is really rare to live to be 100. But it is possible. So litterally a life span would not look like anything.
Cell division of course baby ;)
A biosynthetic pathway is a series of enzyme-catalyzed reactions that convert starting compounds into specific end products. It is a highly regulated process that involves multiple steps and intermediates to produce complex molecules essential for the organism's growth and survival.
The solenoid is attached to the starter. Replace the starter.
The starter solenoid is attached to the starter.
An out-group is the organism in a cladogram that is the starting point and usually does not have any common characteristics with the other organisms in the cladogram.
The first move in chess that involves the keyword "pawn" is moving the pawn two squares forward from its starting position.
Replica: # an exact copy of something # an exact copy of artwork. Replicate: # do something again: to make an identical version of something repeatedly and exactly # be done again: to undergo a repetition or reproduction # copy cellular or genetic material: to reproduce exactly an organism, genetic material, or a cell Reproduce: # to make a duplicate of something # to repeat something.
Top-down
Cell - Tissue - Organ - Organ System - Organism - Population - Community - Ecosystem - Biome - Biosphere
Yes, we can!We have been successful in making sequences like primers (up to 60 nucleotides long)The process involves starting with a first nucleotide attached to a bead and throwing in the next nucleotide in ample quantity, hoping some will bind.... followed by washing, and then again next nucleotideMost of this is robotic, but possible!It takes a few cents per nucleotide :)