1. Why do cells divide after they reach a certain size? (LT#1) A. To be able to get rid of cell wastes easily. B. To ensure instructions can be copied from DNA quickly. C. To maintain a large surface area-to-volume ratio. D. All of the above are reasons.
1. Why do cells divide after they reach a certain size? (LT#1) A. To be able to get rid of cell wastes easily. B. To ensure instructions can be copied from DNA quickly. C. To maintain a large surface area-to-volume ratio. D. All of the above are reasons.
Human Anatomy & Physiology (11th Edition)
11th Edition
ISBN:9780134580999
Author:Elaine N. Marieb, Katja N. Hoehn
Publisher:Elaine N. Marieb, Katja N. Hoehn
Chapter1: The Human Body: An Orientation
Section: Chapter Questions
Problem 1RQ: The correct sequence of levels forming the structural hierarchy is A. (a) organ, organ system,...
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i need help on all of these if possible . i tried to do them but their to hard for me .

Transcribed Image Text:1. Why do cells divide after they reach a certain size? (LT#1)
A. To be able to get rid of cell wastes easily.
B. To ensure instructions can be copied from DNA quickly.
C. To maintain a large surface area-to-volume ratio.
D. All of the above are reasons.
2. DNA is coiled & condensed into chromosomes so it can
A. be packed into a small, organized space
B. be removed as waste
(LT#2)
C. leave the nucleus
D. take up more space
3. What type of cell undergoes this type of cell division? (LT#2)
(Hint: look at the DNA)
A. Animal cell
B. Eukaryotic cell C. Plant cell
D. Prokaryotic cell
4. The type of asexual reproduction, as shown above, when a cell divides into 2 equal pieces is
called
? (LT#2)
A. binary fission
B. budding
C. regeneration
D. spore formation
Expert Solution

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Since there are multiple question in this particular question, I will answer the first one for you. If the answers for the other questions are intended, please post the questions separately.
Cell is the structural and functional unit of life. Organisms can be single cellular as bacteria or multicellular as humans. in bacteria there is no need of cell to cell communication but in multicellular organisms like humans there is a requirement of cell to cell communication in which the information and substances from the cell moves to outside and vice versa. This process requires several criteria to be fulfilled in order to work systematically.
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