In a highly inbred or apomictic group, every individual would be a species according to the biological species concept. |
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Plants for mutagenesis were the progeny of one pair of plants from this inbred population. |
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And in the absence of contrarian perspectives, the faith tends to become inbred and stagnant. |
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But then, one hardly expects a bunch of inbred, bone-headed knuckle-draggers like them to grapple with significant theological issues. |
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Recombinant inbred lines were generated from a cross between SRN39, an African caudatum genotype, and SQR, a Chinese kaoliang line. |
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Most dog breeds are highly inbred and therefore the level of homogeneity is greater in purebred dogs than in mutts. |
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Now, though, country defines its influences so narrowly it almost seems inbred. |
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We screened several hundred inbred and exotic maize lines for their tolerance to anoxia. |
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Previous studies suggest inbred green-veined-orchid embryos are twice as likely to abort as those arising from cross-fertilized flowers. |
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These differences between the two inbred lines may reflect differences in their origin. |
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The offspring of these three populations were tested for fusibility against both inbred lines by colony assays. |
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By using different, elite genetic lines of queens sequentially, bee breeders can avoid inbred colonies. |
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However, in all other cases, inbred lines have to be produced before outcrossing them. |
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For example, in inbred populations there may be very few heterozygotes but several different homozygotes. |
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Inspired by the intrepid babushka, I overcame the inbred fear of Russian salesmen and requested that my order be warmed as well. |
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When you have an inbred arrogance, you are undoubtedly going to appear overbearing and rude. |
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This is because inbred individuals are more likely to express deleterious alleles as homozygotes than are outbreds. |
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Local units began developing inbred parental lines and breeding stock that the seed trade would use to create proprietary varieties. |
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Offspring from smaller populations were on average more inbred, so inbreeding depression in clonal fitness was higher in small populations. |
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The small, inbred population is more susceptible to decline via disease and natural disaster. |
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It seems only fair that if the foxes can be hunted by a load of chinless, inbred yahoos with roughly the same IQ as them, they should be allowed to fight back. |
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The double set of chromosomes otherwise protects us from this risk, to a great extent in a population that is not too inbred. |
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Pee-wee Herman Is an inbred Prince Paul Reubens is great as Pee-wee Herman. |
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The companies' management teams, meanwhile, were becoming inbred and sycophantic. |
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A survey of 13 domestic breeds and 3 inbred strains was carried out. |
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And then she realised that the real-life prince she'd been oohing and aahing over all episode is a hideous inbred fug sporting a nose you could cut wood with. |
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Many of these kittens are inbred and born with deformities and disease. |
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This is especially true for F 2 populations derived from original intercrosses of inbred lines that exhibit linkage disequilibrium upon which QTL studies depend. |
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We assume that the parents that initiate the cross are pure inbred lines. |
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Boston is a complex city with a fascinating set of inbred politics and social convention. |
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The resulting animals were therefore more inbred than usual but the increased homozygosity of their genes made them a more uniform group. |
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However, it is quite possible to weed out genetic faults in even the most inbred lines. |
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Farmed tigers are therefore inbred, and worse, lack the very traits that allow tigers to survive in the wild. |
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This is why inbred individuals are more susceptible to infectious diseases. |
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The Grammomys are relatively more difficult to protect by irradiated sporozoite immunization as compared to inbred mice strains. |
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Asian local native peoples have inbred native dog breeds without any crossbreeding with other dogs to maintain their pedigree and their specific physical characteristics. |
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One theory is that harmful mutations accumulate in inbred lines, but are hidden by crossbreeding. |
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The constant slathering praise directed at the likes of them is the critical equivalent of a one-eyed chinless inbred mutant winning a beauty contest. |
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The development of large numbers of molecular markers and interval-mapping methods paved the way for QTL mapping using intercrosses of inbred experimental organisms. |
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I frequently send them to the nearby carpentry shop to ask questions so as to break down their sense of inferiority, their inbred timidity in front of adults in the outside world. |
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On the other hand, if you are interested in breeding, this is your book: you will learn what it means if a horse is inbred, linebred, or an outcross, and who the chefs-de-race are in the Roman dosage system. |
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Since we cannot tell the likeliness of foundation cats for certain recessives, we might have to produce many, many inbred litters to find out more about a new line. |
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He lovingly paints his homeland as a backward, racist, women-hating, Jew-baiting domain filled with inbred idiots and trashy prostitutes. |
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Looking back at some of the history involving royalty, it was demonstrated that when they intermarried it was unhealthy to have that inbred nature thrust upon society. |
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There is a very high level of genetic similarity in all but the most rapidly evolving parts of the cheetah's genome, which makes all of today's individuals appear highly inbred. |
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Inbred animals will experience some degree of inbreeding depression for certain traits, which basically means that their performance for those traits will be reduced because they are inbred. |
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Now it could be the case that the Cornish Rexes in our population are inbred to a greater extent than what is really necessary, only because the breeders are separated in smaller groups, breeding the cats in different lines. |
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With a good pedigree program, some patience and the will to research back to foundation, you'll learn how outcrossed or inbred the cats are that you are dealing with. |
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One might think that foetuses with gene systems very like their mothers, i.e. for example those that are heavily inbred, would benefit from their genetic likeness to the mother. |
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The seed shall have sufficient varietal identity and varietal purity or, in the case of seed of an inbred line, sufficient identity and purity as regards its characteristics. |
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If such an animal were compared to an animal whose background is only known for a few generations, it would appear as if this animal were much less inbred. |
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Measures should therefore be adopted in order to ensure effective withdrawal from the market of seeds from inbred lines and hybrids derived from SYN-EV176-9 maize. |
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Theoretically speaking, the genetic variation amongst full-sisters would be half of the genetic variation of the whole population when both parents are not inbred. |
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If a breed or a population is already so inbred that clear signs of inbreeding depression have shown up, for instance a high rate of early cancer or infections, what to do then? |
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This is especially important for the new breeder who is supplied with 5-generation pedigree and, because all of the cattery names are different, assumes that this cat is not inbred. |
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Many of the older families in the area are inbred. |
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Ballybin Stud 648 b Dubawi-Stage Manner Tom Beary bred this colt, who is inbred to the influential mare Sunbittern. |
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His cold experience tempers all his heat, And inbred worth doth boasting valour slight. |
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However, one of them, the Damaraland mole-rat, doesn't seem particularly inbred at all, says Tamsin Burland of the University of London. |
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Only the terrorisers aren't inbred hillbillies, they're teenage hoodies. |
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Isolated local populations of asocial or subsocial spiders will become inbred through genetic drift, which could then promote the evolution of cooperative behaviors. |
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