History, asked by mahandarverma, 15 days ago

What do you think living in India with it sich bezig of diversity"ards to you Jake ,​

Answers

Answered by gouravgupta65
2

Explanation:

this section, we examine two types of transport phenomena that, at first glance, may seem unrelated: the regulation of cell volume in both plant and animal cells, and the bulk flow of water (the movement of water containing dissolved solutes) across one or more layers of cells. In humans, for example, water moves from the blood filtrate that will form urine across a layer of epithelial cells lining the kidney tubules and into the blood, thus concentrating the urine. (If this did not happen, one would excrete several liters of urine a day!) In higher plants, water and minerals are absorbed by the roots and move up the plant through conducting tubes (the xylem); water is lost from the plant mainly by evaporation from the leaves. What these processes have in common is osmosis — the movement of water from a region of lower solute concentration to a region of higher solute concentration. We begin with a consideration of some basic facts about osmosis, and then show how they explain several physiological properties of animals and plants.

Answered by BrainlyBska
1

Answer:

The globe is heating up. Both land and oceans are warmer now than they were when record keeping began, in 1880, and temperatures are still ticking upward. This rise in heat is global warming, in a nutshell.

Here are the bare numbers, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA): Between 1880 and 1980, the global annual temperature increased at a rate of 0.13 degrees Fahrenheit (0.07 degrees Celsius) per decade, on average. Since 1981, the rate of increase has sped up, to 0.32 degrees F (0.18 degrees C) per decade. This has led to an overall 3.6 degrees F (2 degrees C) increase in global average temperature today compared to the preindustrial era. In 2019, the average global temperature over land and ocean was 1.75 degrees F (0.95 degrees C) above the 20th-century average. That made 2019 the second hottest year on record, trailing only 2016.

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