Science, asked by aryangandhi87, 9 months ago

The
size of the cell of an organisms has ne resten
with is size of its body. Do you agree? Justiky​

Answers

Answered by nikhilpandey1221
1

yes I agree because the cells in the body of an elephant is not necessarily bigger than those in a rat, it is not true t hat bigger organisms have cells of bigger size in their body.

The size of the cell in an organism is related to the function it performs. For example, the nerve cells in both, the elephant and the rat are long and branched. They perform the same function, that of transferring messages

Answered by nishka2412
1

Answer:

Yes, I agree with the statement which states that the ‘size of the cells’ of an organism has ‘no relation’ with the size of its body. The size of the cell doesn't matter. It's always the number of cells. If the organism is unicellular, it is very microscopic.

Explanation:

The cells present in the organisms are of ‘different shapes’ and are involved in different functions. The common phenomenon is that a group of cell forms tissues, group of tissues forms the organs and group of organs forms the organ system and it in turn forms the entire body.

For example when we compare the RBC of human as well as elephant it remains in same shape as well as in same size. It is not big in elephant and not small in human.  

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