It is believed that cyanobacteria, also known as blue-green algae, evolved into the eukaryote chloroplast through a process called endosymbiosis. This process involved a cyanobacterium being engulfed by a eukaryotic cell and forming a symbiotic relationship, eventually leading to the development of the chloroplast organelle found in plant and algal cells.
Bacteria have short generation times, allowing for rapid accumulation of mutations. They also have high population sizes, increasing the likelihood of beneficial mutations emerging. Additionally, bacteria can acquire genetic material horizontally through processes like conjugation, transformation, and transduction, further increasing their genetic diversity and ability to evolve quickly.
Most animal phyla exhibit bilateral symmetry, where the body can be divided into two mirror-image halves along a single plane. This body plan is thought to have evolved for efficient movement and coordination in organisms.
"Kind information" may refer to information that is considerate, compassionate, or helpful. It could also imply that the information is presented in a gentle and positive way to benefit the recipient.
The scientific name for scud is Amphipoda.
Expository writing is a kind of prose writing in which the writer explains information, ideas, or concepts in a clear and concise manner, often providing examples or evidence to support their points.
bacteria
Eukaryote animals.
Eukaryotes have multiple cells
Spirogrya sp.
Mitochandria is an energy (ATP) making cell that lives inside eukaryotic cells that has its own DNA and is believed to be a prokaryotic bacteria that at one point was eaten by a eukaryote, but never digested, and now they live together.
The kind of cells that have chloroplast are plant cells.
bag
Chloroplast
A plant cell. (which usually has more than one chloroplast) (and also, plants are eukaryotes)
Prokaryotic bacteria.
The same gas that comes out of your moms but after we fack :)
Usually, prokaryotes are about 10X smaller than eukaryotic cells. Eukaryotes include plant, animals, protists, and fungi. The only kind of prokaryotes on Earth are bacteria. Bacteria have no nuclei; their DNA are scattered in their cytoplasm. Eurkaryotes have specifically defined nuclei, containing all the chromosomes of DNA.