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Post by kronks on Feb 10, 2018 23:32:37 GMT -5
The question is why they do not have phycoerythrin, phycocyanin or allophycocyanins. Lungs do not extra energy from light and hence are not relevant. Lungs require water, and mammals do not have water available in their lungs however plants do have green light available! The question is why they do not have phycoerythrin, phycocyanin or allophycocyanins.No it isn't. They are utilised in a marine environment where light is absorbed and is altered. On land they are unnecessary. Lungs require water and mammals do not have water in their lungs? You truly are an idiot. The technical term for fluid in the lungs is... Pulmonary Oedema As the lungs fill with fluid so breathing becomes increasingly difficult until the patient drowns... One reason why chlorine and mustard gas were used. They can be absorbed in a none marine environment. Why not use green when red and blue are used.
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Post by fretslider on Feb 11, 2018 4:42:22 GMT -5
The question is why they do not have phycoerythrin, phycocyanin or allophycocyanins.No it isn't. They are utilised in a marine environment where light is absorbed and is altered. On land they are unnecessary. Lungs require water and mammals do not have water in their lungs? You truly are an idiot. The technical term for fluid in the lungs is... Pulmonary Oedema As the lungs fill with fluid so breathing becomes increasingly difficult until the patient drowns... One reason why chlorine and mustard gas were used. They can be absorbed in a none marine environment. Why not use green when red and blue are used. WhyBeginning to sound like a three year old. Go back and read my posts. The answers are there. If you can't understand it, too bad.
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Post by kronks on Feb 12, 2018 2:43:34 GMT -5
They can be absorbed in a none marine environment. Why not use green when red and blue are used. WhyBeginning to sound like a three year old. Go back and read my posts. The answers are there. If you can't understand it, too bad. I do know the answer to the question I posed, it seems you do not, so not so smart after all! Seem few if any "scientists" know either! Several have a go at answering the question here. biology.stackexchange.com/questions/450/why-do-plants-have-green-leaves-and-not-redNone give what I know to be the right answer!
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Post by fretslider on Feb 12, 2018 4:06:33 GMT -5
WhyBeginning to sound like a three year old. Go back and read my posts. The answers are there. If you can't understand it, too bad. I do know the answer to the question I posed, it seems you do not, so not so smart after all! Seem few if any "scientists" know either! Several have a go at answering the question here. biology.stackexchange.com/questions/450/why-do-plants-have-green-leaves-and-not-redNone give what I know to be the right answer! Ah, a dodgy QA forum! Of course, this is still no explanation why leaves are not simply black — absorbing all light is surely even more effective, no? I don't know enough about organic chemistryJeez kronks, you really are scraping the barrel. Laughable stuff.
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