To some extent, plants may target dispersal of progeny toward favorable habitats. |
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The indicator was then parceled out to the progeny neurons as the injected cell underwent the cell divisions as the animal developed. |
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A progeny animal is one derived from sexual reproduction that has at least one cloned animal as a parent. |
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This study provides empirical support for the use of likelihood analysis to infer parentage of progeny with multiple compatible parent pairs. |
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The eye colour of all the female progeny was wild-type due to the dominance of such an allele, as can be expected. |
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Important contributions to their genetic dissection have been made by analyzing the progeny of intercrosses. |
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Affected progeny were also observed from a second outcross breeding using a clinically normal Irish wolfhound. |
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For linkage analysis, self-pollinated progeny of the two plants were UVB irradiated for F 4 progeny testing. |
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He has since made his presence felt by producing quality, easy calving progeny. |
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Gourds with many tendrils and pomegranates with many seeds were seen as signifying numerous progeny. |
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Differences in hot standard carcass weight showed a clear advantage to European types, with variable outcomes for the Angus and Wagyu progeny. |
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This allows progeny to be genotyped as pupae, since the guts of pupae carrying a green balancer fluoresce brightly. |
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The overall statistics include 157 progeny covered by North American stallions that were foaled outside the continent. |
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The overall statistics include 185 progeny sired by North American stallions that were foaled abroad. |
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That is, neither we, our forefathers, nor our progeny would have been or would be able to survive if one followed this rule. |
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During 1997, seedlings for additional Fraser fir progeny tests will be grown in the greenhouse. |
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The Charolais progeny were significantly heavier than others whereas both the Black and Red Wagyu were significantly lighter. |
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Four were direct progeny of the true parents and two were full sisters of the actual parent of the hybrid. |
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As a result, the progeny of a single queen make up a genetically diverse population. |
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Some parents refuse to acknowledge such sons as their progeny, and place adverts in newspapers proclaiming disavowal. |
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A review of over 11 studies in uranium miners attributed an observed increase in lung cancer to radon and its progeny and not to uranium. |
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How many fathers get thrown in jail for failing to ensure that their progeny attend school regularly? |
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Destruction falls on the good deeds, wealth, possessions, progeny and the cattle of the householder who fails to perform xenial duties. |
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A clustered mutation means that two or more progeny of a family inherit the same mutation. |
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These heifers guarantee high quality progeny that will grade well and will be sought after by the marketplace. |
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It's not at all uncommon to meet poor men who have left behind a winding trail of exes and their unanticipated progeny. |
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Clonal progeny may be produced by stolons, runners, rhizomes, tubers, buds on bulbs, corms and roots, layering of stems, and agamospermous seed. |
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The adults were removed and the growth of the progeny was monitored twice a day until the next generation of eggs appeared. |
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Males utilize bright mating colorations when displaying on the lek and contribute only genes to their progeny. |
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Plants for mutagenesis were the progeny of one pair of plants from this inbred population. |
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Both were direct progeny of that parent, and one of these inbreds had additional backcrossing to that parent in its pedigree. |
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Another result concerning handedness of the progeny of discordant monozygotic twins suggests that lefties are one gene apart from righties. |
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The Breed Societies and North Western Cattle Breeding Society at Sligo will supply breeding stock and their progeny to the venue. |
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The remaining 24 progeny were tested only at marker loci on chromosomes showing significant linkage to the tumor multiplicity phenotype. |
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By the third week, most females will be laying progeny that will enter diapause. |
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F 1 progeny were scored under a dissecting scope for suppression or enhancement of the KDN rough eye phenotype. |
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Of the embryos that reached the morula stage, 174 were transplanted into pseudopregnant females, and 27 developed into progeny. |
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In nature, house flies can readily establish colonies from the progeny of a single pair mating. |
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A large amount of the progeny phages were separated from the bacterial media by multiple steps of sedimentation and resuspension. |
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From each of the heterozygotes for nonlethal chromosomes, 40 selfed progeny were obtained. |
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The resulting progeny is a group of merciless blonde-haired kids who do mom's bidding, no matter how messy. |
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The different aneuploid types were then binned into the same genome content classes used for the progeny of the CCC and CWW triploids. |
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We may then suppose that the ancestral form was a monad with a theca which, in some progeny, assumed the form found in the Apusozoa. |
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Single-spore isolates were paired with their respective compatible mating types from the progenitor to establish progeny dikaryons. |
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The progeny are usually sold as registered lambs or yearlings of both sexes. |
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He is like an old Bolshevik, wringing his hands over the murderous policies of his Stalinist progeny. |
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It is clear that the measure of damages arises from the animal itself, not from its future progeny. |
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To Asser, Offa was an imperialistic bully whose progeny alone surpassed him in unsavoriness. |
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Mr Kelly said that of particular interest for the visitors to the farm were the first time calvers and their progeny. |
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Parentals exhibiting either the spotted or unspotted phenotype, along with F 1 progeny, were used in a series of 29 crosses. |
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Cubism and some of its progeny, suprematism, neoplasticism, constructivism, futurism, were its aesthetic foundation. |
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By avoiding stories that involve progeny, Weamys is better able to suggest that Sidney's voice is somehow speaking through her. |
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They will know that the progeny of these dogs is absolutely genuine and that there is no falsifying of records. |
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Plants resistant to the selective antibiotic were propagated and the progeny was selected twice. |
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When poor people lose any hope for their future, the only hope left will be invested in their progeny. |
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The T. turgidum nucleus is incompatible with the T. longissimum cytoplasm, producing nonviable progeny. |
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Chromosome counting was carried out on the 16 aberrant plants of the 1999 progeny. |
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Development consisted of the orderly assembly and expression of the gemmules transmitted via the parental germ cells to the progeny. |
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Haploid development results in production of male progeny in the haplodiploid Nasonia but is lethal in mosquitoes and Drosophila. |
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The alternative manner of providing a head of pheasants for a preserve is by hatching their eggs under fowls and rearing the progeny by hand. |
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Note that all related outbred progeny are related to these grandparents through their common sire. |
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Our genetic analysis detected some aberrations, such as the presence of four hexaploid offspring in the progeny study. |
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On a day-to-day basis, it regulates the number of stem cells and their progeny so that the number of cells born never outstrips the number lost. |
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The entire progeny issued from a cross on a petri dish was recovered on its lid. |
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In a monohybrid cross, a monohybrid individual is either selfed or crossed with a similar monohybrid to produce progeny. |
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If two or more physiologic forms make up or form a single aecium, then, there is no limit to the number of physiologic forms of stem rust that may be identified in the progeny of a single aecium. |
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Today, hatch is a married father of one adopted son, but he longs to connect with his progeny. |
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The seeds were the progeny of plants reared in a common greenhouse environment from the original seed collections, thus minimizing any possible maternal effects. |
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Early fruit abortion is a major mortality factor to the yucca moth's progeny, and the female can increase retention by providing high-quality pollinations. |
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Two lines were unusual in that mutant males regularly produced mosaic progeny that had large patches of somatic tissue lacking the paternal fourth chromosome. |
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Those parents are wrong, because they are responsible for both riding herd on their progeny and making amends when they don't fulfill that mission. |
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The methodology is applicable to the investigation of parentage for all progeny developed from parental mating without subsequent generations of inbreeding. |
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I exist merely as meat for the hungry wolf, an incubator for his progeny and a servant to his needs. |
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He researched the breed and was a frequent visitor to France where he visited shows, sales and farms, following up bloodlines, pedigrees and progeny. |
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Downstairs, a band called Def Generation, composed mostly of Neville progeny, is killing the hour before the brothers come on. |
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What fate befell their progeny in the flood remains to be seen. |
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For Gainsbourg, the progeny of two superstars, being cool is the last thing she needs to try to be. |
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In all, the germline chimeras derived from these five cell lines sired 326 progeny in matings to B6 females, but no deletion-bearing offspring were observed. |
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Females not exposed to paloverde seeds during egg maturation produce progeny that are very much less capable of developing on seeds of Texas ebony. |
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Once the new bacteriophage is packaged, the now-virulent viruses lyse the host cell and escape into the surrounding medium to infect other hosts, producing further progeny. |
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Similarly, in polygamous societies, the operation of sexual selection would have increased the differential advantage of the most viable in finding mates and having progeny. |
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According to a story recorded by the missionary George Turner, Funafuti was first inhabited by the porcupine fish whose progeny became men and women. |
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Fourteen progeny plants were cross-pollinated in all combinations. |
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Therefore, the Titans and their progeny, the giants, represent a primal generation put down and suppressed by a more competitive, semi-urban, modern culture. |
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The owner can also look forward to years of income from stud fees, at least until it is discovered whether the progeny can run as well as the father. |
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In many species with gametes of different sizes, sexual crosses typically produce progeny with mitochondrial DNA inherited from the larger gamete. |
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The law of segregation stated that, when these hybrids were allowed to self-fertilize, three quarters of the progeny would be yellow and one quarter green. |
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If miscegenous marriages can be prohibited because of tensions suffered by the progeny, mixed religious unions could be prohibited on the same ground. |
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I treasure this five-generation photograph of my great-great grandmother and her progeny. |
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Lactational dietary fat levels and sources influence milk composition and performance of sows and their progeny. |
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The Mummy belongs in a chapter devoted to one-shots as its progeny are different breeds rather than direct sequels. |
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This preference may enhance the fitness of progeny by reducing inbreeding depression. |
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Later, the Mysorean rockets were upgraded versions of Mughal rockets used during the Siege of Jinji by the progeny of the Nawab of Arcot. |
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The progeny of backcrosses and intercrosses will form some incrosses and some matings of other types. |
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Crossbreed programs have the advantage of creating heterosis in their progeny. |
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Disorganization in tilacoidal membranes, poorly developed chloroplasts, and rupture of the nuclear membrane, were verified in this progeny. |
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Socialism is not the father of Canada's success, but its progeny. |
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Is there anything more banal than the expostulations of Derrida, Foucault, and their countless epigones and progeny? |
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Following the preselective amplification step, 26 primer combinations were selected for genotyping the parents and 80 progeny. |
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However, the Colombian Rainbow boa, Epicrates maurus can also reproduce by facultative parthenogenesis resulting in production of WW female progeny. |
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When will they realise that the notion that you can find a good match for your progeny by considering candidates' biodata and their caste and religion is deeply flawed? |
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Scholars from Owen Chadwick to John Reed have tended to focus on the devotionalism and ritualism of the Tractarians and their Anglo-Catholic progeny. |
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Neuronal accumulation of silver in brains of progeny from argyric rats. |
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Hundreds of the composite progeny are daily crossing the color line and carrying as much of the despised blood as an albicant skin can conceal without betrayal. |
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Agrobacterium mediated high frequency transformation of an elite Indica rice variety Pusa Basmati 1 and transmission of the transgenes to R2 progeny. |
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This runs counter to the play, where Grandpa is always benignly indulgent of all his zany progeny and their equally zany spouses, and is even somewhat zany himself. |
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His dissertation is his most important intellectual progeny to date. |
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Treachery rears its peruked head in the form of Nevers' cousin Gonzague who, next in line to inherit the Nevers fortune, looks to off the duke and his progeny. |
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For Bacon, this reformation would lead to a great advancement in science and a progeny of new inventions that would relieve mankind's miseries and needs. |
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We've come a long way since then. The progeny of that nail have been bent and twisted into what we all know and love as roll overs, kickbacks, and thumper-bumpers. |
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Progeny plants were scored for pigmentation phenotype and analyzed for genotype using SSR markers. |
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Progeny phage that produced clear plaques in the presence of IPTG and X-gal were analyzed by a differential oligonucleotide hybridization technique, as reported. |
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Progeny tests employing molecular markers allow the identification of individuals originated by sexual means among the offspring of a facultative apomict. |
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