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matching 20 points scientists observe the traits of cells on four micro…

Question

matching 20 points scientists observe the traits of cells on four microscope slides and record their observation in identify the cell type for each microscope slide in the table.

slide 1slide 2slide 3slide 4
are single - celledreproduce through mitosishave a membrane - bound nucleushave mitochondria
have no nucleushave linear dnahave membrane - bound organellesare larger than 10 micrometers
have flagellahave endoplasmic reticulumare multicellularhave complex structure

slide 3 ______
slice 4 ______
slide 2 ______

Explanation:

Response

To solve this, we analyze each slide's traits:

Slide 1:
  • Single - celled, no nucleus, have flagella.

Prokaryotes (like bacteria) are single - celled, lack a nucleus, and some have flagella. So Slide 1: Prokaryote (Bacterial cell).

Slide 2:
  • Reproduce via mitosis, linear DNA, have endoplasmic reticulum.

Eukaryotic cells (animal/plant/fungal) reproduce by mitosis, have linear DNA, and have endoplasmic reticulum. So Slide 2: Eukaryotic cell (Animal/Plant - like).

Slide 3:
  • Membrane - bound nucleus, membrane - bound organelles, multicellular.

Eukaryotic cells (especially multicellular like plant/animal) have a nucleus, organelles, and can be multicellular. So Slide 3: Eukaryotic cell (Multicellular, e.g., Plant/Animal cell).

Slide 4:
  • Have mitochondria, >10 micrometers, complex structure.

Eukaryotic cells have mitochondria, are larger (often >10 μm), and have complex structure. So Slide 4: Eukaryotic cell (Animal/Plant - like).

(Note: If there are options for cell types like “Prokaryote (Bacteria)”, “Eukaryotic (Animal)”, “Eukaryotic (Plant)”, etc., match accordingly. For example, if options include these, Slide 1 → Prokaryote (Bacterial cell), Slide 2 → Eukaryotic (Animal/Plant), Slide 3 → Eukaryotic (Multicellular, e.g., Plant/Animal), Slide 4 → Eukaryotic (Animal/Plant).)

Since the problem is about cell type identification (Biology, a subfield of Natural Science), we use the above analysis to match. If it's a matching with options (not fully shown), the key is to link the traits to prokaryotic/eukaryotic cell characteristics.

For example, if the right - hand options are “Prokaryote”, “Eukaryotic (Animal)”, “Eukaryotic (Plant)”, “Eukaryotic (Fungal)”:

  • Slide 1: Prokaryote (matches single - celled, no nucleus, flagella).
  • Slide 2: Eukaryotic (Animal/Plant) (matches mitosis, linear DNA, ER).
  • Slide 3: Eukaryotic (Multicellular, e.g., Plant/Animal) (matches nucleus, organelles, multicellular).
  • Slide 4: Eukaryotic (Animal/Plant) (matches mitochondria, size, complex structure).

If you need to fill the table cells (the empty boxes above the traits):

  • Slide 1: Prokaryotic Cell (or Bacterial Cell)
  • Slide 2: Eukaryotic Cell (Animal/Plant - like)
  • Slide 3: Eukaryotic Cell (Multicellular, e.g., Plant/Animal)
  • Slide 4: Eukaryotic Cell (Animal/Plant - like)

The answer depends on the exact options, but the above is the cell type identification based on the traits.

Answer:

To solve this, we analyze each slide's traits:

Slide 1:
  • Single - celled, no nucleus, have flagella.

Prokaryotes (like bacteria) are single - celled, lack a nucleus, and some have flagella. So Slide 1: Prokaryote (Bacterial cell).

Slide 2:
  • Reproduce via mitosis, linear DNA, have endoplasmic reticulum.

Eukaryotic cells (animal/plant/fungal) reproduce by mitosis, have linear DNA, and have endoplasmic reticulum. So Slide 2: Eukaryotic cell (Animal/Plant - like).

Slide 3:
  • Membrane - bound nucleus, membrane - bound organelles, multicellular.

Eukaryotic cells (especially multicellular like plant/animal) have a nucleus, organelles, and can be multicellular. So Slide 3: Eukaryotic cell (Multicellular, e.g., Plant/Animal cell).

Slide 4:
  • Have mitochondria, >10 micrometers, complex structure.

Eukaryotic cells have mitochondria, are larger (often >10 μm), and have complex structure. So Slide 4: Eukaryotic cell (Animal/Plant - like).

(Note: If there are options for cell types like “Prokaryote (Bacteria)”, “Eukaryotic (Animal)”, “Eukaryotic (Plant)”, etc., match accordingly. For example, if options include these, Slide 1 → Prokaryote (Bacterial cell), Slide 2 → Eukaryotic (Animal/Plant), Slide 3 → Eukaryotic (Multicellular, e.g., Plant/Animal), Slide 4 → Eukaryotic (Animal/Plant).)

Since the problem is about cell type identification (Biology, a subfield of Natural Science), we use the above analysis to match. If it's a matching with options (not fully shown), the key is to link the traits to prokaryotic/eukaryotic cell characteristics.

For example, if the right - hand options are “Prokaryote”, “Eukaryotic (Animal)”, “Eukaryotic (Plant)”, “Eukaryotic (Fungal)”:

  • Slide 1: Prokaryote (matches single - celled, no nucleus, flagella).
  • Slide 2: Eukaryotic (Animal/Plant) (matches mitosis, linear DNA, ER).
  • Slide 3: Eukaryotic (Multicellular, e.g., Plant/Animal) (matches nucleus, organelles, multicellular).
  • Slide 4: Eukaryotic (Animal/Plant) (matches mitochondria, size, complex structure).

If you need to fill the table cells (the empty boxes above the traits):

  • Slide 1: Prokaryotic Cell (or Bacterial Cell)
  • Slide 2: Eukaryotic Cell (Animal/Plant - like)
  • Slide 3: Eukaryotic Cell (Multicellular, e.g., Plant/Animal)
  • Slide 4: Eukaryotic Cell (Animal/Plant - like)

The answer depends on the exact options, but the above is the cell type identification based on the traits.