<p>Xemiry, the water moves into the bag. The one about releasing a hormone for metabolism was thyroid. The chicken and lizard were the most closely related as they are closest together in regards to phylogeny. The farmer was cheated. Huntington’s was 50%</p>
<p>wasnt the hungtions one 100 percent.?
andd wasnt the fire decidious hardous trees.</p>
<p>anddd also, the bull one.
wasnt it like d.
the bull was heterozygous and the cow was homozygous reccessive.
?</p>
<p>Yeah, the bull was heterozygous. I left the fire one blank. The huntington’s one was 50%…im pretty sure. This question was asked last yr or smthg and the general consensus was 50.</p>
<p>didnt it say what would be the chance of a son getting hungitions if the dad had it.</p>
<p>what was the question and answer for the 50,000 genes?</p>
<p>I put 50000 diff strands of mRNA</p>
<p>For Huntington’s, it’s a rare dominant disorder - meaning everybody else has recessive genes. The Punnett Square would look like (dad on top):</p>
<p><strong><em>H</em></strong><strong><em>h
h</em></strong><strong>Hh</strong>_<strong><em>hh
h</em></strong><strong>Hh</strong>_____hh</p>
<p>So it’s 50% chance.</p>
<p>how do u know if the dad was hetero or homo</p>
<p>What about the first question? The one that was how proteins were conncted/formed or something like that?</p>
<p>Does anyone remember M section questions?</p>
<p>For the dad to be homozygous, both his parents had to have Huntington’s.<br>
This is next to impossible.</p>
<p>I think that was dehydration synthesis</p>
<p>@l0issangel</p>
<p>He married a woman and had a son. I think he’s hetero.</p>
<p>Hesse and I totally forgot this one: spermatogenesis creates…?
Please tell me 4 haploid cells T.T</p>
<p>Yes, it creates 4 haploid cells</p>
<p>what were the questions and answers involving the picture of the nephron and the bacteria and cow questions?</p>
<p>Those were two different ones.</p>
<p>The nephron question was the one with like proteins and urea and stuff, and what is present in the glomerular filtrate, the urine, the renal arteries, and the renal veins.</p>
<p>The bacteria and cow questions were about beef being left outside and bacteria crawling all over it. Incidentally, what was the answer to that one? I think I wrote that more bacteria would result in a higher chance of it getting a virus, because that was the only one that had ANYTHING to do with numbers.</p>
<p>I put all three cause bacteria to form on the ground beef. And the nitrgenous wastes diffuse easily into urine or smthg like that.</p>
<p>The beef and cow question was…WHY do we care whether bacteria grows on the beef? I said cause bacteria secrete toxins harmful to human health</p>
<p>i put that also… and do you guys remember all the answers to first matching ones involving the enzymes and organs?</p>
<p>Yup, it was pancreas, thyroid, and ovary. Then, trypsin, lipase and pepsin (maybe amylase in between if it asked for digestion of carbs)</p>