There are successful stories of producing floriferous plants with an unusual mixture of colours by hybridisation techniques. |
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The hybridisation is typically trilingual in the northern Italian macaronic poets involving Latin, Italian, and Po Valley dialects. |
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He carried out experimental work on the hybridisation of zebras and horses. |
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The diversity of rice may be damaged and undesirable hybridisation could result in wild rice producing herbicide-resistance genes. |
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A major success in the investigation of causes of congenital heart disease comes from molecular cytogenetics and the use of chromosome fluorescent in situ hybridisation. |
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Sited at the confluence of the Saone and Rhone rivers in Lyons, the futuristic megastructure is conceived as a hybridisation of museum and urban leisure space. |
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But times have changed and thanks to skilful hybridisation, cymbidiums have become popular houseplants. |
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Such hybridisation is very rare in the wild, and typically only occurs where European minks are declining. |
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Whereas the effects of hybridisation could be forecast, creolisation is unpredictable. |
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In most of the Mediterranean, one or both species occur, with some degree of hybridisation. |
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The University of Edinburgh found that, in Scotland, there has been extensive hybridisation with the closely related sika deer. |
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Temperature induced range expansion can cause novel range overlap between formerly allopatric species and can lead to extensive hybridisation in these new sympatric areas. |
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For example, with hybridisation, in a species complex of hundreds of similar microspecies, or in a ring species, the boundaries between closely related species become unclear. |
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Natural hybridisation presents a challenge to the concept of a reproductively isolated species, as fertile hybrids permit gene flow between two populations. |
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The wildcat is a very capable survivor and prefers to breed with other wildcats, but it's so outnumbered by domestic cats that hybridisation is inevitable. |
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Its eastern limit in Russia is hard to define, due to extensive hybridisation and intergradation with the Siberian spruce, but is usually given as the Ural Mountains. |
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Early cultivars must have emerged from hybridisation in gardens from wild collected plants, which were then favoured, possibly due to flower size or growth vigour. |
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Natural hybridisation and amphidiploidy in the genus Tragopogon. |
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Hybridisation between species of gull occurs quite frequently, although to varying degrees depending on the species involved. |
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Hybridisation may however have played a part in the evolution of some species in the genus. |
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