That is the stone-cold harsh reality of genetically mediated weight and shape regulation. |
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Are they just experimenting with genetically modified wheat or are darker deeds going on behind the heavily fortified walls? |
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Red junglefowl have been mostly genetically interbred with domestic and feral chickens, as a survey of 745 museum specimens has shown. |
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Most religions tend to proselytize and to accept or encourage marriages with converts, resulting in quite large, genetically diverse populations. |
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The division of a cell into a pair of genetically identical daughters depends on accurate chromosome duplication and segregation. |
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If the child is genetically female then a Barr body should be evident in approximately 10-20 percent of the cells. |
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In addition, they tested a genetically engineered virus to deliver two proteins directly to the brain. |
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For example, Pinker attributes opposition to genetically modified foods to innate and intuitive essentialism. |
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The scientists have genetically engineered the animals to produce a green fluorescent protein in cells throughout the abdomen. |
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Could people who inherit athletic ability also be somehow genetically prone to the disease? |
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The really fascinating thing about apples, though, is that each apple is genetically identical to other apples of the same variety. |
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Only 50 of these genetically distinct creatures survive in the region, comprising the northernmost population. |
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A consumer backlash against genetically modified food helped nip investor enthusiasm in the bioengineered bud. |
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Several green fluorescence protein probes that could genetically be distributed throughout the tissue might be useful in this regard. |
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Living chimps have diverged genetically from that common ancestor about as far as people have, the researchers add. |
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New users may include women genetically or otherwise predisposed to venous thrombosis, whereas long term users have shown tolerance to the drug. |
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In October, the microbiologist dispatched a graduate student to Mexico to conduct workshops about the coming of genetically modified corn. |
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As sea levels rose and the northern Channel Islands separated, each fox population became genetically distinct. |
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And if it weren't for genetically implanted migrational instincts I doubt any moose kids would go up there. |
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Only certain plants were creatable in his time, and most were so genetically engineered that they looked unnaturally symmetrical and linear. |
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This suggests that these traits are genetically controlled depending on the growth stages of leaves. |
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In fact IQ is a great example of a trait that is highly heritable but not genetically determined. |
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And being a sailor, I am discovering, is not a genetically transferable skill. |
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Using genetically engineered animals, they will explore the cellular mechanisms by which variations in the genes lead to deficits. |
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Genetically modified maize, the prevailing genetically modified plant cultivated in Bulgaria, is not on the list. |
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Is it when the genetically engineered crop is delivered to the biotech manufacturing facility? |
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The same can be said about a new survey of attitudes to biotechnology and genetically modified foods. |
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I use synthetic human insulin, produced not by people but by genetically engineered bacteria. |
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The biggest threat is the presence of test sites for genetically modified plants in Scotland from which genetic pollution is inevitable. |
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The Japanese have genetically modified onions that suppress the enzyme which causes weeping. |
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Toni Lyn Morelli, one of Wright's graduate students, has been sampling blood of these sifakas and analyzing it genetically. |
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Another issue raised is that the blastomere and resulting stem cells would not genetically match the patient receiving the cell transplant. |
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The discovery that unapproved genetically modified seeds had been planted in a trial site in the UK should not really cause much surprise. |
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The technology we are talking about here is the genetically modified plants or organisms. |
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They also worry that genetically altered plants could escape into wild strains or breed new diseases with disastrous environmental effects. |
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Instead, species that differ in timing of gamete release tend to constitute genetically distinct clades. |
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They genetically engineered and purified protein in the virus, which they then injected into uninfected mice. |
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Researchers are developing genetically modified poppies producing artificially high thebaine levels. |
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The U.S. Food and Drug Administration considers genetically modified foods equivalent to unmodified foods. |
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Although it is known to be a genetically determined disease, the natural history is variable. |
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And the nutritional content of a genetically engineered plant may be diminished. |
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An application seeking approval of genetically engineered fish has been pending for nearly six years. |
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Many people have unwittingly consumed genetically modified crops without any health problems. |
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Selective elimination of genetically flawed newborns is necessary if we are to prevent their inferior genes from entering the gene pool. |
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It seems that genetically modified fruit and vegetables are engineered to last longer on the shelf. |
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It suggested that immunizing humans against smallpox might protect them against genetically engineered variola as well. |
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Besides GM cotton, genetically altered maize, soya and oilseed rape are grown. |
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Common genetically altered foods are soybean, corn, canola and dairy products. |
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Fruits and vegetables have also been genetically engineered so that they do not bruise as easily, or so that they have a longer shelf life. |
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He has never released a genetically engineered plant of any kind into the environment. |
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The new sprouts are not genetically modified in the sense of having artificial genes introduced from other species. |
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The biologist said the rare type of red squirrel was important because more genetically diverse species were less likely to die out. |
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Soon, we have witnessed a compact summary of the scientist's obsessive quest to develop a genetically modified human being. |
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As a result, the progeny of a single queen make up a genetically diverse population. |
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They are genetically unrelated to non-intestinal spirochetes, such as Treponema pallidum. |
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Smoking is much more dangerous than eating genetically modified organisms, therefore they must just be doing it to spite the Americans. |
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The test was based on genetically modified viruses that infect only the tuberculosis bacteria. |
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These soybeans are genetically modified to tolerate spraying with the non-selective herbicide. |
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Yes some women, heart broken by being jilted, will respond by genetically engineering sons who are more likely to be monogamous. |
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The issue of labelling genetically modified foods is likely to come before the World Trade Organisation in the near future. |
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In Australia, this cotton is the first cab off the rank in this category of genetically modified plants. |
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This is likely to be a useful tool for the characterization of genetically modified plants. |
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The medical community is also beginning to take a stand against genetically modified foods. |
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It is said that genetically modified foods will ensure that the entire world can be fed adequately and nutritiously. |
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Or perhaps you got gypped genetically, and earning prize-winning abs has been a losing battle. |
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It is not impossible for organic and genetically modified agriculture to coexist. |
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The Swiss company, Bayer, had an application approved to grow genetically modified canola earlier this year. |
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Approval would allow the genetically modified oilseed to be grown in Britain. |
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We don't think that would be a problem as sterile fish are not genetically manipulated. |
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Added to this is the routine addition of antibiotic resistant genes to genetically modified plants by corporations. |
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Meanwhile, some companies are seeking approval to market genetically engineered fish. |
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The research team found that the nene and two extinct species of Hawaiian geese were all closely related to one other genetically. |
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In a similar case in the U.S., an appeal court struck down a massive award against a farmer for saving seed from genetically modified soybeans. |
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This genetically modified hormone was designed to increase milk production in dairy cows. |
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Pollen from genetically altered crops can spread to heirloom crops, threatening their biological integrity. |
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Only a few epiphyte ferns, orchids and bromeliads have been studied genetically. |
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Fowler and a team of researchers are genetically engineering harmless bacteria that can thrive in natural cloth fibers. |
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Leaf disks are made of the target species the plant species that will be altered, genetically modified, or transformed. |
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Pusztai reported that the rats that were fed genetically modified potato suffered stunted growth, damaged organs and impaired immune systems. |
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In the end, local people were so outraged that they pulled up the genetically engineered crop themselves. |
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This genetic marker might help identify subpopulations of individuals genetically prone to insulin resistance, autoimmunity, and heart disease. |
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Evidence has been accumulating that this species is composed of subunits that are genetically distinct. |
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The researchers studied mice genetically engineered to overproduce a protein in the wall of the aorta, the body's primary artery. |
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Researchers have dramatically increased the life spans of mice by genetically engineering them to overproduce a protein called klotho. |
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That's in contrast to the nuclear energy and genetically modified organism industries, which are hobbled by bad public relations, she adds. |
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So while the mother sharks are homing to the same nursing grounds, roving males ensure that the population remains genetically diverse. |
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Farmers and food packagers everywhere will have to maintain paper trails on genetically altered food products. |
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I'm beginning to think they're some sort of breed of genetically enhanced superhuman, or actually manic workaholic robots. |
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Bonobos and chimps, though genetically almost identical, have quite different social behaviours. |
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Suggestions that the testing or using of genetically engineered plants may lead to production of super weeds are similarly unfounded. |
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People opposed to genetically modified organisms say we're going to have super weeds taking over the world. |
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Luckily, although these varieties are genetically identical, they are not palatably identical once transformed into alcohol. |
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Then Panama disease, a soil fungus, attacked banana plantations and the genetically enfeebled Gros Michel banana was virtually wiped out. |
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The number of muscle cells is largely genetically determined by the parental genotype. |
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The protocol establishes a biosafety clearing house for information about genetically modified organisms. |
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Later, three juveniles from this clutch were banded and genetically sampled. |
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It's a blood disease that is genetically inherited, which explains his chronic fatigue, muscle aches, and abdominal pain. |
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Collins said that disease is not genetically inherited but develops in each patient. |
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This gives the basis for following genetically inherited traits, ranging from predisposition to certain diseases to conformation characteristics. |
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In the next generation, her daughter is genetically an indigobird but imprints on her Melba Finch foster parents and learns their songs. |
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Potatoes genetically improved to prevent Colorado beetle destroying the crop have already been consumed in North America for years. |
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They are also all made without genetically modified ingredients, hydrogenated oils, artificial flavourings, colourings or preservatives. |
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The public dialogue reported general unease and little support for early commercialization of genetically modified crops. |
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Biotechnology companies say that genetically modified crops could be a way to produce certain pharmaceuticals inexpensively. |
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However, in populations where specialist pierid butterflies are the main herbivore, genetically determined glucosinolate levels are quite low. |
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All Baltic people are genetically very close to Estonians and they spoke Finno-Ugric before they switched to Indo-European languages. |
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Could the answer for dental plaque be a transplant, not of teeth but of genetically engineered bacteria? |
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This finding confirms a general result observed in studies that have examined first-generation genetically engineered foods. |
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Until recently, the only genetically engineered products available on the U.S. market were first-generation genetically engineered products. |
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The transgene contamination is certain to fuel the contentious debate over the use of genetically modified crops. |
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What will happen when genetically heterogeneous plant populations are pollinated by new pollinators? |
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As a result, snake predators are genetically predisposed to avoid coral snakes, which thus affords mimics' protection, he explained. |
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Dormancy is a genetically complex trait controlled by polygenes with effects modified by the genetic background and environmental factors. |
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Had the screening been performed properly, a single sperm from the man would have been isolated and genetically altered to correct the defect. |
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Either the genes for making silk could be genetically engineered into microorganisms or something similar could be done with cotton plant genes. |
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The cowpox virus, which infects a range of animals including humans, has been genetically altered in a similar way. |
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This is the credo by which I am genetically and irreversibly bound to live. |
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Right now, about three million hectares of Canadian farmland are growing crops of plants that have been genetically modified by biotechnology. |
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People have been genetically modifying plants and animals for centuries by cross-breeding animals and plants that can naturally breed together. |
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One great potential danger was genetically modified wild plants gaining resistance to insect pests by cross-pollination. |
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It's been more than 20 years since researchers first genetically engineered an insect, the laboratory fruit fly. |
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Either laid back or ignorant, Americans did not react to issues of genetically modified foods or cloning with the fury of Europeans. |
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If you want to get an earful of vegan philosophy, just ask this author what she thinks of genetically engineered foods. |
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But who can help but feel differently about an athlete who is genetically preordained for success? |
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Ordinary kids, the type most of us have cluttering up our living rooms, are just not genetically programmed to be presentable. |
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Identical twins are genetically identical, whereas fraternal twins share half their genes in common. |
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The experiment was not a test of the safety of genetically modified organisms. |
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He was genetically creating fast-growing poplar trees for a monoculture plantation. |
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Benign lymphoepithelial cysts of the parotid appear to be determined genetically. |
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Do environmental factors affect the aging process and thus the genetically predicted age? |
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Many researchers believe that some attributes of leadership are genetically influenced. |
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Agency officials learned it was impossible to genetically distinguish a Florida panther from another cougar subspecies. |
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The genetically modified poem is critic-ready, designed for the sanitized fields of modern mass production. |
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Basic rocks genetically connected with titaniferous magnetites appear to be of the same age. |
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The issue of contact among genetically related languages is a crucial problem for historical linguistics. |
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It avoids some of the pitfalls of more genetically inspired linguistic models. |
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You've been an outspoken critic of genetically modified foods and genetic engineering. |
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I want to allay any fears that the wheat to be donated is genetically modified. |
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The use of genetically modified organisms is prohibited, but not all farms are organic. |
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He is equally emphatic in his opposition to genetically modified food which he thinks is being propelled by the multinationals. |
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Now that the genome is known, scientists hope to accelerate the rate of evolution creating a range of genetically modified birds. |
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When the soyabeans are genetically modified they can lead to a host of health problems that have now been well documented. |
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Whether such genetically modified vines can retain the same variety name remains to be legally tested. |
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The organism is genetically modified and is likely to directly or indirectly enter the human food chain. |
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The human race could find its existence threatened if we genetically engineered some predator species to be as smart as we are. |
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Gene flow is the transfer of recombinant DNA incorporated in genetically modified plants into wild populations. |
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Researchers say that wolves in the coastal region are much more genetically variable than wolves elsewhere in North America. |
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Radiation is a known cause of the disease which genetically alters white blood cells. |
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Some of the comics I read because I have been genetically encoded to do so. |
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The increasing number of genetically encoded indicators provides elegant tools for monitoring activity. |
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Second, the notion that people will be genetically designed is widely regarded with suspicion rather than anticipation. |
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Non-identical twins are only as genetically alike as any brother or sister. |
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Remarkably, almost all of these traits map genetically to the X chromosome. |
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They were recognized for their development of an animal model to predict the allergenicity of genetically modified food. |
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The rice has been genetically engineered to produce the human proteins lactoferrin and lysozyme for use in drugs. |
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Their attempts to genetically engineer spider silk relied on the use of bacterial, yeast, or plant cells. |
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In order to get patents, it has to be proved that genetically engineered species are completely new, novel, and alien organisms. |
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In one, Japanese researchers fed genetically diabetic mice a diet containing 20-percent whole maitake powder for eight weeks. |
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State hatcheries churn out millions of genetically superior largemouths and redfish fingerlings annually. |
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Farmers who grow genetically modified varieties cannot replant or trade them without paying royalties. |
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If a behavior is innate then some day it will become genetically reprogrammable. |
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It is genetically linked to an Italian variety called Primotivo, and possibly the first Zinfandel grapes were a mutation of this old world wine. |
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The researchers observed more beetles in genetically modified, rather than conventional, maize crops. |
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Could it be that we are genetically programed to create a form of religion in order to answer our searching questions? |
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Will crops that have been genetically manipulated to be resistant to herbicides result in greater use of herbicides? |
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Less resistant strains tend to be killed off by antibiotics, while those which are genetically tougher survive. |
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Chinese farmers planted this field with genetically modified rice engineered to resist two insect pests, the stem borer and the leaf roller. |
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Not all of this glyphosate is detoxified or broken down by the genetically modified soybean. |
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Svendsen and his team approached the problem using a genetically engineered viral structure known as a lentivirus. |
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Futuristic nightmare scenarios abound about made-to-order designer babies or genetically enhanced super-warriors. |
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There might be a role for use of genetically engineered animals in the interpretation of critical genes in toxic responses. |
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What are the names of the genetically identical cells produced in mitosis? Twin cells. Son cells. Daughter cells. |
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Corn produced this summer could undergo the same rigorous testing we are currently seeing for this genetically engineered trait. |
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These experiments provided the first example of genetically engineered plants with the ability to synthesize betaine at appreciable levels. |
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People typically think of the brain as a genetically fixed source of intelligence, aptitudes and personality. |
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The bacteria were genetically engineered to produce a fluorescent jellyfish protein, so they glowed as they grew. |
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Worst off of all of them is Australia's genetically distinct loggerhead turtle. |
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Otto and Silhavy then genetically engineered bacteria to lack the genes in question. |
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Tomorrow we continue our series of special reports on genetically modified foods. |
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Sometimes DNA is artificially synthesized for the production of genetically modified food. |
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To experimentally measure this distribution requires either an asexual organism or a sexual line that is genetically homogeneous. |
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Thus the three seed components, embryo, endosperm and seed coat, are genetically distinct. |
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As a result, high-elevation populations will tend to be genetically depauperate. |
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Some scientists are researching ways to genetically modify alfalfa to decrease the autotoxic effects. |
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Compared to nine previously analyzed woody mints, however, M. alba is genetically depauperate. |
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But have you ever sympathised with road protesters, anti-nuclear demonstrators or those who tear up genetically modified crops? |
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The catch is that the oil is extracted from cotton laden with toxic pesticides and fertilizers, and grown with genetically modified organisms. |
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We feel strongly that a child does not have to be genetically ours for us to be able to love them. |
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The morphological differences are genetically determined and it is thus possible that the turlough population is a distinct ecotype adapted to this unusual habitat. |
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Three East Yorkshire fields where genetically modified oilseed rape has been growing have been contaminated with illegal antibiotic genes, it emerged today. |
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As commonly interpreted, Darwinian evolution is a process by which the individuals less fit to survive the challenges of the environment are genetically weeded out. |
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The lemurs of Madagascar are the surviving members of a lineage that has been genetically isolated from the rest of the primate family for at least 65 million years. |
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There exists a sense of psychosis projected through his paintings, as if genetically passed down from his late grandfather. |
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David Johnson, a neuropsychologist with the Royal Hospital for Sick Children in Edinburgh, believes sperm can be genetically damaged by organophosphates. |
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If chromosomes 1 and 2 are genetically more identical, as are chromosomes 3 and 4, there are three different combinations for the bivalent chromosome pairing. |
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This silence, discernibly due to information poverty, points to the urgency for an informed and sustained debate about the issue of genetically manipulating food products. |
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His genetically defective double thumbs would give him away. |
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This might be the result of genetically different populations or the populations that have emerged from different geohistorical periods depending on deglaciation processes. |
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The first strategy, used largely with maternal lines that are genetically lean, is to increase the gilt's body fat content during the prebreeding period. |
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Those with the disease have some cells that are genetically normal and some with the mutation. |
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Definitions take on a meaning only when genetically developed. |
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Despite controlling for genetic admixture within families, if a study sample is genetically heterogeneous, the ability to detect genetic associations can be limited. |
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Here could be the makings of an authoritarian system of rule distinct from, but genetically related to, the nation's previous experience of plebiscitary power. |
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The lead character changed physically, reinforcing his point that no matter what physical changes we can undergo we're all just genetically programmed robots here. |
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Despite the growing organic food business and protests of anti-G.M. food groups, Americans already eat lots of genetically modified food, mostly soybeans and corn. |
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Will it some day be possible to genetically engineer violent psychopaths? |
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The cultivation of genetically modified crops is increasing at an explosive rate, now covering a global area more than two times the size of the United Kingdom. |
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It's a fact that men are genetically unable to replace toilet roll, notice that the milk is running low, or cook a meal without using every utensil in the kitchen. |
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Polymyalgia rheumatica and temporal arteritis are closely related inflammatory conditions that affect different cellular targets in genetically predisposed persons. |
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Other officers are involved in specialist work on matters such as ornithology, marine and freshwater ecology, palaeontology and genetically modified organisms. |
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The resulting monocultured crops are genetically limited and far more susceptible to insects, blights, diseases, and bad weather than are diverse crops. |
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Cute labels saying products haven't been genetically modified are designed to profit off of fear, not protect you with science. |
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The guppy is sexually dichromatic, with males being genetically polymorphic for color patches that vary in hue, chroma, reflectivity, size, number, and location on their body. |
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The trade group has fought mandatory labeling of genetically modified foods. |
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Her daughter, genetically an indigobird, imprinted on her Melba Finch foster parents and then mated with a male paradise whydah mimicking Melba Finch song. |
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Most would rather do without agrochemicals or genetically modified crops. |
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It is true in theory that any given small farm might employ toxic agrochemicals, genetically modified seeds, or other techniques typical of industrial agriculture. |
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A recent television program on Siamese twins demonstrated how a pair of joined, genetically identical humans had different preferences and quite distinct wills and spirits. |
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Giant doses of a genetically modified measles vaccine cured two of blood cancer at the Mayo Clinic this week. |
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That culture rejects highly processed foods, genetically modified foods, and the whole industrial approach to food production. |
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It has been genetically modified to be sweeter, to have a longer shelf life, and to keep its sweetness throughout its longer life. |
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The public might panic over accepting new and untested technologies that bring us closer to the singularity, like cloning and genetically engineered foods. |
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Part of taste in humans is genetically controlled and it is a well-known phenomena to find individuals who are unable to taste phenylthiocarbamide. |
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The Supreme Court on Friday restrained the Centre from granting any fresh approval for field trials of genetically modified organisms in the country until further orders. |
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They theorize, however, that it may bring out the disease's symptoms early in young people who are genetically predisposed to it. |
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They have announced a precautionary principle with regard to genetically modified foods, which is very difficult to reconcile with the WTO's sanitary and phytosanitary rules. |
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Y chromosomes are genetically degenerate in most organisms studied. |
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In one live, attenuated vaccine approach, scientists genetically modify the TB bacterium in the laboratory, thereby reducing its ability to cause disease. |
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However, the error rate in a genetically modified or cloned conceptus is potentially so high that such applications should never be approved by any science ethics committee. |
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Faculty and staff in the institute will conduct science-based and socially relevant research on the risks and benefits of genetically modified plant and animal products. |
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He created his own crowd-funding platform for genetically modified organisms, which has yet to be launched. |
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In Canada, the register lists the first evidence of genetic contamination of a wild relative as a result of commercial growing of a genetically modified crop. |
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Thus, even if a curious farmer were to plant some genetically modified grain received as food aid, its continued presence in the field is unlikely. |
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In contrast to ciliates, Opalina combined large cell size and the need for fast growth by evolving numerous genetically equivalent nuclei per cell. |
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Nearly 5 million small farmers in China, India, South Africa, Brazil and Mexico now grow cotton genetically modified to protect it against the boll weevil. |
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These studies demonstrated that performance and preference of host-plant use may be genetically associated by linkage or pleiotropy, and evolve as correlated traits. |
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Now even tofu is likely to be tainted with genetically modified organisms, and your favorite natural tabouli mix may contain irradiated herbs and spices. |
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The arguments for genetically modified organisms that have been dinned into us for 15 years are based on an almost sublime misreading of the world's food problems. |
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The development of molecular biology and embryology since World War II have greatly enhanced the possibilities of genetically engineering future populations. |
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If this is true, then it indicates that caviomorphs are not closely related genetically to the myomorphs and should be recognized as a different order. |
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Organisms exhibiting genetic polymorphism often also exhibit true alternative life-history strategies in which behavioral tactics are genetically fixed. |
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The company claims the tree is a genetically engineered plant that combines the best qualities of balsa, bamboo, and aspen, but the USDA has never heard of such a Frankenwood. |
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Ian Somerhalder wasn't the only genetically gifted celeb to speak out on Marius' behalf. |
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Both fluorescent proteins are genetically encodable, their emission spectra are well separated and mRFP1 is monomeric, reducing the possibility of protein function inhibition. |
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If you've seen BladeRunner, you know the short soliloquy at the end by one of the android replicants, Roy, as he's about to expire from a genetically programmed early death. |
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Using chemotaxis and thermotaxis as behavioral paradigms, neural plasticity including learning and memory can be studied genetically in C. elegans. |
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At one extreme, imagine genetically engineered minds devoid of conscience or empathy and at the same time highly calculating and ruthless in the pursuit of their own desires. |
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Two teams of scientists have found the weeds are cross-breeding with genetically modified crops, making them nearly impossible to kill with pesticides. |
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Their findings offer scientists and herders a virtual history book describing how cattle, crucial to so many Africans, came to be so genetically diverse. |
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If the government wanted more reasons not to embrace commercial cultivation of genetically modified crops then it need look no further than yesterday's findings. |
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It was only discovered in 2002 that genetically modified maize had been coming into the country in unmilled food aid, unannounced, for several years. |
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The Angolan government has hit back at critics of its move last month to ban unmilled genetically modified seed in donations meant for the hungry. |
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My understanding, from farming sources, is that growing genetically modified crops does not cost all that much less than growing unmodified crops. |
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Since there is no fusion of two different cells, the daughter cells produced by asexual reproduction are genetically identical to the parent cell. |
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The potential number of muscle cells present at maturity is largely established genetically at conception, with their number completed by the time of birth. |
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People genetically act for the sake of propagation of their own genes. |
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Two rice strains were genetically altered to resist two insects, rice stem borers and leaf rollers, which sometimes require heavy use of pesticides to control. |
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With this technique, known as micropropagation, forest-product companies can restock plantations with millions of genetically identical tree plantlets. |
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The test uses a genetically modified mircroorganism that emits light when exposed to a genotoxin. |
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You could be one of those genetically gifted individuals who has the potential to show off an eight-pack instead of a six. |
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He was a Greenpeace member until the group opposed genetically modified organisms. |
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However, it is probable that fewer genetically unique mare lines existed than Lowe identified. |
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The country is the primary developer and grower of genetically modified food, representing half of the world's biotech crops. |
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Efforts have been undertaken to genetically modify cyanobacterial hydrogenases to efficiently synthesize H2 gas even in the presence of oxygen. |
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Efforts have also been undertaken with genetically modified alga in a bioreactor. |
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Traditionally, subspecies are seen as geographically isolated and genetically differentiated populations. |
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Although both males and females disperse locally, they move outside the range where genetically related individuals are likely to be encountered. |
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Not only should your food be organic, but it should be nonprocessed, genetically unaltered and locally grown as well. |
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The three major, genetically distinct populations occur in the Atlantic, eastern Pacific, and western Pacific Oceans. |
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These turtles are proposed to form a separate, genetically distinct Indian Ocean subpopulation. |
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A genetic species as defined by Robert Baker and Robert Bradley is a set of genetically isolated interbreeding populations. |
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Each population is genetically distinct, with its own set of nesting and feeding grounds within the population's known range. |
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The specific routes may be genetically programmed or learned to varying degrees. |
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However, northern and southern populations become genetically separated over time. |
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Outside of Italy, according to one study, Greeks from Crete, Laconia, and Peloponese are genetically closest to Sicilians. |
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All subsequent migrations did leave an impact, genetically and culturally, but the main population source of the Portuguese is still Paleolithic. |
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Biodiversity can be defined genetically as the diversity of alleles, genes and organisms. |
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In 2005, the Rhodian fallow deer was found to be genetically distinct from all other populations and to be of urgent conservation concern. |
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It was found that the more genetically dissimilar male had a higher paternity share than the less related male. |
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Different cultivars vary in their propensity to brown after slicing and the genetically engineered Arctic Apples do not brown. |
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We examined the fate of blood-borne HSCs using genetically marked parabiotic mice, which are surgically conjoined and share a common circulation. |
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These sporangiospores allow the fungus to rapidly disperse and germinate into new genetically identical haploid fungal mycelia. |
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The skeleton was found to be 13,000 years old, and it is considered the oldest genetically intact human skeleton ever found in the Americas. |
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They are geographically, genetically, and culturally distinct from indigenous peoples of the mainland continents of the Americas. |
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There is a genetically distinct polar bear population associated with the Barents Sea. |
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However, there are several cases where vegetatively propagated plants are not genetically identical. |
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Thornless blackberry is a chimera, with the epidermal layers genetically thornless but the tissue beneath it genetically thorny. |
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The procedure is used when a woman with genetically defective mitochondria wishes to procreate and produce offspring with healthy mitochondria. |
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These groups branched off early in human history and have remained relatively genetically isolated since then. |
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Two randomly chosen Koreans may be genetically as different as a Korean and an Italian. |
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Current genetic research has demonstrated that humans on the African continent are the most genetically diverse. |
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In 2008, Sir Martin Doughty, the Chairman of Natural England, warned the Prime Minister of the potential danger of genetically modified crops. |
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In 1994, Calgene introduced a genetically modified tomato called the FlavrSavr, which could be vine ripened without compromising shelf life. |
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Flavr Savr was the first commercially grown genetically engineered food licensed for human consumption. |
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Recent mainstream technological developments include genetically modified food. |
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Thus Finns from different parts of the country are more remote from each other genetically compared to many European peoples between themselves. |
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Vaccinia is in the same family as cowpox and variola, but is genetically distinct from both. |
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Geographically and genetically isolated, Tasmania is known for its unique flora and fauna. |
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The progenote model sees organisms as genetically communal and the community as evolving as a whole, not the individual cell lines therein. |
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Another relative native to this region, Solanum bulbocastanum, has been used to genetically engineer the potato to resist potato blight. |
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