Yes. The biological explanations are Mutation and Adaption.
For example, humans don't descend from the apes you can visit in the zoo, but humans and apes rahter descend from an ape-like lifeform that lived some thousand yeras ago.
Three examples of living things are dogs, trees, and bacteria.
No, prokaryotic cells are not the oldest living things. The oldest living things on Earth are believed to be bacteria-like organisms that existed billions of years ago, before more complex life forms evolved. These early organisms were likely similar to present-day prokaryotic cells in structure and function.
Yes.
No...may be as a contaminant from living things such as bacteria, fungi etc.
animalia, plantae, fungi, protista, eubacteria, and archaebacteria. most bacteria come from the eubacteria group.
I believe it is called genetic engineering.
changing, evolving, and mutating
Bacteria were the first living things on the planet Earth.
the three domains of living things are bacteria, archea, and eukarya the three domains of living things are bacteria, archea, and eukarya
the three domains of living things are bacteria, archea, and eukarya the three domains of living things are bacteria, archea, and eukarya
bacteria also a living things!
the three domains of living things are bacteria, archea, and eukarya the three domains of living things are bacteria, archea, and eukarya
Three examples of living things are dogs, trees, and bacteria.
bacteria?
bacteria
No, not all living things have noses. What about coral or bacteria? Or trees and plants? They are living too.
No, prokaryotic cells are not the oldest living things. The oldest living things on Earth are believed to be bacteria-like organisms that existed billions of years ago, before more complex life forms evolved. These early organisms were likely similar to present-day prokaryotic cells in structure and function.