The cultivated forms of wheat, cotton, and tobacco plants are all what?
- Correct Answer: allopolyploids
- bales
- pores
- sporozoans
Explanation: The cultivated forms of wheat, cotton, and tobacco plants are all allopolyploids. Although polyploidy occurs occasionally in animals, it takes place most commonly in plants. (Animals with any of the types of chromosomal aberrations described here are unlikely to survive and produce normal offspring. ) Scientists have discovered more than half of all plant species studied relate back to a species evolved through polyploidy. With such a high rate of polyploidy in plants, some scientists hypothesize that this mechanism takes place more as an adaptation than as an error.
More Random Questions
Ans: acceleration
Ans: Diabetes mellitus
Ans: Kerala
Ans: thermochemistry
Ans: Article 124
Ans: acid rain
Ans: Carbuncle
Ans: Lower prices
Ans: Rajaraja I
Ans: active
Ans: Splenomegaly
Ans: Chikitsasthana
Ans: constant
Ans: hemoglobin
Ans: cell body
