<p>Remember the questions of the rats experiments?</p>
<p>YES MATHNERD THANKS. whew okay i got that right then…</p>
<p>okay so for the mammal thing was it milk? i put live young…</p>
<p>And yeah closest to primates are whales because both are mammals. Anyone remember the first question of the first diagram. Was answer 1 similar to 3 (diagram of a plant cell and animal cell)?</p>
<p>oh i put the same for 1 and 2… cause they were both the mitochondria i think</p>
<p>Oh dang. -1 right there.
Wait, why wasn’t the clumping one mating? I am pretty sure that is the right one. Look at the website i posted in the previous page.</p>
<p>oh and yeah i remmeber the rat questions, for the last one was it same litter? LOL</p>
<p>^Yes same litter.
What was the rat question? Was this Bio E. I did Bio M</p>
<p>goooood thank god. haha wait wasnt that the rat thing
or was it the rabbit thing</p>
<p>LOL MY BAD idr the rat thing… sorry</p>
<p>and @yale
i realllly wish it were mating then i would get 1 blank 1 wrong which is nice… but i think its the competition :(</p>
<p>[Species</a> distribution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia](<a href=“http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Species_distribution]Species”>Species distribution - Wikipedia)</p>
<p>Clumped distribution is the most common type of dispersion found in nature. In clumped distribution,the distance between neighboring individuals is minimized. This type of distribution is found in environments that is characterized by patchy resources. Clumped distribution is the most common type of dispersion found in nature because animals need certain resources to survive, and when these resources become rare during certain parts of the year animals tend to “clump” together around these crucial resources. Individuals might be clustered together in an area due to social factors such as selfish herds and family groups. Organisms that usually serve as prey form clumped distributions in areas where they can hide and detect predators easily.</p>
<p>I also agree with the mitochondria question that ifailatSAT’s is talking about</p>
<p>was competition even a choice? idr.</p>
<p>Dang now i have -2. ****. Would that still be 800?</p>
<p>DUDEEEE I GOT THE STUPID MAMMAL THING WRONG cause i put milk then changed it to live young the last 30 secs…aghhhhh
so i have -4 cause 2 wrong 1 blank…</p>
<p>yeah i’m pretty sure you’re fine if you took the E cause the curve is usually larger…</p>
<p>ALL 3 QUESTIONS I GOT WRONG WERE ON THE E. I feel so stupiddddd now, should’ve taken the M even though it has a smaller curve…</p>
<p>How does the Bio E/M test work? I’m taking IB Environmental Science and Societies, so I wouldn’t be so good at Bio in the molecular level. Does the test cover both E and M?</p>
<p>I think the last rat question fed the same food. If they are from the same litter there is no genetic diversity.</p>
<p>but you dont want genetic diversity cause it’s more controlled that way, so you know the survival probability isnt cause one rat is from some weird family, right?</p>
<p>^genetic diversity was out the of the scope of the experiment’s intent. If it were from the same litter, it would mean that that’s one less variable to consider in the experiment.</p>
<p>yessss I got the clumping one right! There was nothing about population distribution in PR, and I definitely didn’t learn about that in class.</p>
<p>For the rat thing, I put food. It’s impossible to have 120 rats in one litter, so that answer made no sense to me.</p>
<p>omg I feel so stupid! I screwed up on the question with the pictures of the animals. A whale is a mammal ffs. Such an idiot.</p>
<p>i put food also and what was the percent question for the rats?</p>
<p>It was 80 percent. 95/120</p>
<p>darn… so im lookin at maybe 3 wrong 1 blank…</p>