TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 11952


Lysine is an essential amino acid for animals. If an animal did not consume lysine in its diet, you might expect that the animal

#Unit 7. System Physiology – Animal
  1. would make lysine from other amino acids

  2. could not effectively make many necessary proteins
  3. was a carnivore
  4. would be very healthy
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TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 10333

#Unit 6. System Physiology – Plant

Four elements, oxygen, carbon, and hydrogen and nitrogen are the major components of most organic compounds, which of the following elements are more abundant in plants ?

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 10334

#Unit 6. System Physiology – Plant

N2 combines with hydrogen to form ammonia under elevated temperature (about 200°C) and high pressure (about 200 atmospheres) and in the presence of a metal catalyst (usually iron). The extreme conditions are required to overcome the high activation energy of the reaction. This nitrogen fixation reaction, called

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 10335

#Unit 6. System Physiology – Plant

plants can store high levels of nitrate, and they can translocate it from tissue to tissue without deleterious effect. Yet if livestock or humans consume plant material that is high in nitrate, they may suffer with,

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 10335

#Unit 6. System Physiology – Plant

plants can store high levels of nitrate, and they can translocate it from tissue to tissue without deleterious effect. Yet if livestock or humans consume plant material that is high in nitrate, they may suffer with,

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 10337

#Unit 6. System Physiology – Plant

In biological nitrogen fixation, the process of nitrification by organism respective bacteria A--which convert the ammonia to nitrite and B--- further converted into nitrate in the soil by their respective A and B bacteria known as;

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 10338

#Unit 6. System Physiology – Plant

Nitrate from the soil solution actively absorb by Plant roots via several low- and high-affinity transporters known as