However, the genes may be evolutionarily related, and the two developmental pathways may therefore have ancestrally shared common components. |
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This evolutionarily maintained mechanism has been detected from yeast to mammalian cells. |
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Moreover, since the expression pattern is similar in a gymnosperm and in an angiosperm this function appears to be evolutionarily conserved. |
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It is unclear why the chiasmatic systems in other Coleoptera are evolutionarily less stable than the achiasmatic system in tiger beetles. |
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Thus, the resultant planktonic cephalopods are probably trapped, either evolutionarily or ontogenetically. |
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The evolutionarily primitive aspect of emotion helps to explain its power to disrupt thinking. |
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If ornaments appeared in subfamilies or tribes that were phylogenetically separated, these were counted as evolutionarily independent events. |
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And as a need, it also evolutionarily makes its own functioning possible to satisfy itself. |
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The hagfish, together with lampreys, are living representatives of the jawless vertebrates and are considered to be the most evolutionarily ancient vertebrates. |
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Primates, it seems, are evolutionarily prepared to fear, detect, and respond to snakes. |
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Cave animals converge evolutionarily on a suite of troglomorphic traits, the best known of which are eyelessness and depigmentation. |
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In the 1960s, scientists found that when an evolutionarily ancient structure called the pons was removed in cats, all REM sleep stopped. |
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It suggests that people's approaches to co-operation with their fellows are, indeed, evolutionarily stable. |
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Indeed, once you can no longer reproduce you are, evolutionarily speaking, dead anyway. |
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No, I won't be able to breastfeed, which is evolutionarily their only function. |
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And therefore, the basic need of caregiving is what justifies that a specific function appears evolutionarily in order to satisfy this need. |
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At the same time less and less adequate, in the face of new challenges, are the evolutionarily created mechanisms of overcoming stress. |
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In certain cases, the combination of a helicase and a topoisomerase provides a unique biological function and the interaction between the two is evolutionarily conserved. |
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Also known as cyanobacteria, blue-green algae are the most prosperous microorganisms on earth, evolutionarily speaking. |
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The fossil palaelodids can be considered evolutionarily, and ecologically, intermediate between flamingos and grebes. |
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Most evolutionarily important traits affecting fitness are complex or quantitative traits, whose genetic bases are elusive. |
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Strategic frameworks are important for countries and regions with geographically and evolutionarily isolated ecosystems and other vulnerable ecosystems. |
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In fact, game theory has scored some of its greatest successes in zoology, most notably by developing the idea of an evolutionarily stable strategy. |
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But I would like to stress immediately that according to this view that when we gain novel competences, for instance by acquiring reading, we may also lose some evolutionarily older ones. |
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These results implicate an evolutionarily conserved pathway integrating metabolic information with bioamine signaling affecting feeding behavior. |
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An evolutionarily stable strategy is a strategy that does well against copies of itself. |
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To be an evolutionarily stable strategy, remember, a strategy must not be invadable, when it is common, by a rare mutant strategy. |
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A feature of diatoms is the urea cycle, which links them evolutionarily to animals. |
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Within its family, the Fagaceae, recent research has suggested that Fagus is the evolutionarily most basal group. |
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Most members of a category of crustaceans called hyperiid amphipods are evolutionarily specialized for jellyfish riding. |
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The viroids are evolutionarily escaped archaeal group I introns which have retrotransposition and self splicing qualities. |
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Two evolutionarily related, aquaculturally-relevant fish species are under investigation as part of Pleurogene: the cold-water Atlantic halibut and the Mediterranean Senegal sole. |
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The blastema, made up of cells that look very much alike despite their often diverse origins, made its first appearance evolutionarily in flatworms and is encountered in the regenerative processes of all higher animals. |
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Since evolutionarily stable states are naturally able to describe polymorphic or monomorphic populations, there is no difficulty with introducing population-oriented interpretations of mixed strategies. |
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If we wish to avoid the interpretive challenge of a mixed solution ESS, there is an alternative analytic solution concept that we can employ: the evolutionarily stable state. |
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We are evolutionarily pretty well adapted to eat just about anything. |
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This study suggests that it may be fruitful to work with the idea that human behaviour, too, can sometimes be governed by evolutionarily stable strategies. In this section Games people play Moon river? |
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In the species sepsid fly species themira biloba there are evolutionarily novel appendages on the males that may be linked to their reproductive success. |
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A phylogenetic or cladistic species is an evolutionarily divergent lineage, one that has maintained its hereditary integrity through time and space. |
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