Yes, plants use sunlight in photosynthesis, to produce energy to grow. Thus, more sunlight = more growth.
If those times are both in the same day, then the interval between them is 101/2 hours.
A leap year has 366 days; a day has 24 hours. Just multiply those two numbers.
If you want to add those, add the hours and the minutes separately. Then, if you have 60 or more minutes, convert that to hours and minutes - remembering that there are 60 minutes in an hour.
It depends on what type of student it is. If those are normal students it will take around 3-4 hours.
-100
The plants in soil with worms will grow taller than those without worms. The worm play an integral role in which they allow plants to absorb more water and nutrients and thereby growing taller.
Yes, because plants need sunlight to grow and live. The plant that has more sunlight has more time to absorb nutrients for them to make their food, so the plant with 8 hours of sunlight would've grown taller.
Yes
Competitive pressure. To get the energy that the sun provides, plants need to be able to "see" it. If another plant grows on top of the first plant, it will block the energy and the first plant will not grow as well. Natural selection would take care of the rest... those plants that can see the sun (those growing towards the sun and those that are taller) will prosper.
An ordered variable is one where you can put the data into order, but not give it an actual number. The height of plants compared to each other is an ordered variable, e.g the plants growing in the woodland are taller than those on the open field.
Plants and Protist
A veterinarian gets awards. those rewards are getting prommoted to more hours or more earnings
Those letters will spell the word taller.
Why are the parts of some plants very different from those of others
Not likely. Some people continue to grow (like the world's tallest man), but those instances are by far exceptions. Most people are done getting taller by the time they turn 18.
Why are the parts of some plants very different from those of others
Those plants that are about to become extinct.