Ecologists can deem heterogeneity and diversity as individual components. Further, redundancy and modularity are deemed to be important factors... View Article
Population pyramid depicts the age-sex distribution of a particular population. In this graphic profile of residents of a population, sex is... View Article
Biosafety level 1 has limited precautionary measures and BSL-1 labs are used to study infectious agents, which do not cause any diseases to... View Article
Biosafety level 4 is the highest level of biosafety. BSL-4 labs are used to study agents of life-threatening diseases, which are transmitted by... View Article
Biosafety regulation is the set of guidelines and standards to be followed by personnel working in labs and handling microbial agents such as... View Article
Biosafety is the prevention of large-scale incidents and any harmful effects on people and environment due to biological research. Bioethics aims... View Article
Projects conducted in laboratories are categorised based on biosafety levels. Biosafety levels (BSL) are the set of lab containment protocols... View Article
Biosafety refers to the best practices to be followed to avoid any harmful effects on human health and environment, whereas biosecurity aims to... View Article
Biosafety refers to maintaining the safe conditions for biological research to avoid any harmful incidents and hazardous effects on people and... View Article
Red-green colour blindness is the most common type of colour blindness. It is sex- linked recessive disorder. The genes for red-green colour... View Article
Males are more likely to be colour blind than females. Around 1 in 12 males and 1 in 200 females are colour blind in the world. This is because... View Article
Colour blindness is inherited from both parents. It is sex-linked recessive disorder. Genes for red-green colour blindness are present on X... View Article
Colour blind mother means she is homozygous for the defective genes and they are present on both the X-chromosomes. As the son gets his X... View Article
In red-green colour blindness, blue colour appears normal, but when a person has blue-yellow colour blindness then they find it difficult to... View Article
Yes, colour blindness is mostly inherited from parents and is due to defective genes. There is no cure and it is permanent. The acquired colour... View Article
Colour blindness is usually a genetic disorder. A colour blind person fails to discriminate between similar shades and colours. Red-green colour... View Article
Yes, colour blindness is usually caused by a gene defect and is inherited. It is a sex-linked recessive disorder. There is a decreased ability to... View Article
The life expectancy of a colour blind person is normal. There are no other abnormalities associated with the condition. Although there is no cure... View Article
Red-green colour blindness is the most common type of colour blindness and it is X-linked recessive genetic disorder. It is caused due to defects... View Article
Colour blindness is a genetic disorder and cannot be cured. Special glasses and contact lens may help a person perform daily activities.... View Article