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taxonomy uses genes
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Angiosperm Phylogeny Group
This selection of genes from cell organelles is significant; zoological taxonomy similarly uses genes of mitochondria. -
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Rodent
The above taxonomy uses the shape of the lower jaw (sciurognath or hystricognath) as the primary character. ... Molecular phylogeny and divergence time estimates for major rodent groups: Evidence from multiple genes. -
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Virus
Once called "jumping genes", these are examples of mobile genetic elements and could be the origin of some viruses. ... "Emerging issues in virus taxonomy". -
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Sibley-Ahlquist taxonomy
Today, no major ornithological organization uses the Sibley-Ahlquist taxonomy anymore. ... The Early History of Modern Birds Inferred from DNA Sequences of Nuclear and Mitochondrial Ribosomal Genes, by Marcel van Tuinen, Charles G. Sibley, and S. Blair Hedges -
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Genetics
Although genes contain all the information an organism uses to function, the environment plays an important role in determining the ultimate phenotype—a dichotomy often referred to as "nature vs. nurture." ... Anatomy · Astrobiology · Biochemistry · Bioinformatics · Biostatistics · Botany · Cell biology · Chronobiology · Conservation Biology · Developmental biology · Ecology · Epidemiology · Evolutionary biology · Genetics · Genomics · Human biology · Immunology · Marine biology · Microbiology · Molecular biology · Neuroscience · Nutrition · Origin of life · Paleontology · Parasitology · Pathology · Physiology · Systems biology · Taxonomy · Zoology -
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Plant evolutionary developmental biology
At the genetic level, developmental studies have shown that repression of the KNOX genes is required for initiation of the leaf primordium. ... Plant taxonomy -
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Biology
Physiological adaptation to an organism's environment cannot be coded into its genes and cannot be inherited by its offspring (see Lamarckism). ... Taxonomy -
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Taxonomy of wheat
Although relatively few genes control domestication, and wild and domesticated forms are interfertile, wild and domesticated wheats occupy entirely separate habitats. ... Taxonomy -
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Evolution
For example, the human eye uses four genes to make structures that sense light: three for color vision and one for night vision; all four arose from a single ancestral gene. -
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Race (classification of human beings)
With the advent of the modern synthesis in the early 20th century, many biologists sought to use evolutionary models and populations genetics in an attempt to formalise taxonomy. ... The number of genes used.
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taxonomy uses genes