The term used to describe organisms composed of identical and unspecialized cells is "colonial organisms." These organisms consist of groups of genetically identical cells that work together, yet they do not exhibit specialization like multicellular organisms. Examples include certain types of algae and some marine invertebrates.
The term used to describe organisms composed of identical and unspecialized cells is "clonal." Clonal organisms arise from a single ancestor cell through processes such as asexual reproduction, resulting in genetically identical cells. Examples include certain types of bacteria, yeast, and some plants that reproduce vegetatively.
colonial
The term used to describe organisms that consistently pass the same form of a trait to their offspring is "homozygous." Homozygous organisms have two identical alleles for a particular gene, meaning they express the same trait consistently. This contrasts with "heterozygous" organisms, which have two different alleles for a gene and may express a mix of traits.
The term used to describe organisms that consistently exhibit the same form of a trait over many generations is "homozygous." This refers to individuals that have two identical alleles for a specific gene, resulting in uniform expression of that trait. When such organisms reproduce, they tend to pass on the same trait to their offspring, maintaining its consistency through generations.
The term used to describe organisms composed of identical and unspecialized cells is "colonial organisms." These organisms consist of groups of genetically identical cells that work together, yet they do not exhibit specialization like multicellular organisms. Examples include certain types of algae and some marine invertebrates.
The term used to describe organisms composed of identical and unspecialized cells is "clonal." Clonal organisms arise from a single ancestor cell through processes such as asexual reproduction, resulting in genetically identical cells. Examples include certain types of bacteria, yeast, and some plants that reproduce vegetatively.
colonial
colonial
The term used to describe organisms that consistently pass the same form of a trait to their offspring is "homozygous." Homozygous organisms have two identical alleles for a particular gene, meaning they express the same trait consistently. This contrasts with "heterozygous" organisms, which have two different alleles for a gene and may express a mix of traits.
The term used to describe the multiplication of organisms in tissue is "proliferation."
The term used to describe organisms that consistently exhibit the same form of a trait over many generations is "homozygous." This refers to individuals that have two identical alleles for a specific gene, resulting in uniform expression of that trait. When such organisms reproduce, they tend to pass on the same trait to their offspring, maintaining its consistency through generations.
These organisms are called Pathogenes.
Consumers.
A mixture.
Consumers.
Pathogens