linkedin post 2016-10-23 06:36:05

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MONARCH CHRYSALIS. "In the center portion of the gold crown area is a red heart, about 0.1 inches in diameter, surrounded by a yellowish substance. This heart pulsates at about 40 to 60 beats per minute. The thin outer chrysalis layer contains cells which later develop into the wings of the butterfly." https://www.icr.org/article/366/208 View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2016-10-25 04:38:17

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DIVERGENCE. "We find the pattern of duplicate gene retention following the Salicoid WGD in Populus broadly consistent with the predictions of the gene balance hypothesis. Approximately half of the Salicoid duplicate gene pairs showed patterns of divergence that suggest many whole genome duplicates are not subject to constraints for maintenance of redundancy." (WGD = whole genome duplication). https://lnkd.in/eHCDVhZ View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2016-10-23 06:31:17

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METAMORPHOSIS of the Monarch butterfly described. "The caterpillar enters the chrysalis stage without vision, because the head capsule was discarded with its six simple eyes, so it can now only distinguish light from darkness. The inside portion of the chrysalis, below the gold crown, turns to a jade green liquid within the first 16 hours, as the caterpillar's stomach, intestines, and most all of the other internal parts disintegrate." https://lnkd.in/eXsDT2s View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2016-10-25 04:31:59

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RETENTION OF CONNECTIONS. "More recent models of duplicate gene evolution suggest that rates of duplicate gene retention vary among protein functional groups. Observations of high retention rates among more connected proteins are consistent with the gene balance hypothesis, which predicts that the fate of duplicate genes largely depends on maintaining a stoichiometric balance among members of macromolecular complexes." https://lnkd.in/eHCDVhZ View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2016-10-23 06:26:53

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BUTTERFLY PUPAE WING SCALES (1896), histological examination. "It appeared that during early pupal life the wings are as transparent as glass, but that from five to ten days before emergence, they become opaque, and pure white. After this, a dull ochre-yellow or drab color suffuses the wings, tinging all parts except those that are destined to become the white spots of the mature wing, these always remains pure white." Brilliant Victoriana! https://lnkd.in/eRTtjTc View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2016-10-23 06:22:35

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FEMALE LOSS OF LIFE STYLE. "Yet despite the apparent virtues of holometaboly, some insects have minimised or even lost the holometabolous lifestyle, at least from some part of the life cycle. With respect to holometabolous insects that have entirely lost complete metamorphosis, this has only occurred in females, where it has been achieved via the deletion of the pupal and post-metamorphic stage (i.e. the ancestral ‘adult’), via a developmental process known as paedomorphosis." http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/een.12313/full View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2016-10-24 04:46:05

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NEW THINKING. "This hypothesis, known as the duplication-degeneration-complementation (DDC) process, posits that degenerative mutations may knock out independent subfunctions encoded by discrete regulatory elements in duplicate genes, thus requiring preservation of both copies in order to maintain the full complement of ancestral gene functions." https://lnkd.in/eHCDVhZ View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2016-10-24 04:41:19

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NEW TWIST. "Duplicate genes show evidence of purifying selection more consistent with buffering of the ancestral gene function than neofunctionalization reconciled Ohno's original theory with more recent observations by proposing subfunctionalization as a means of preserving duplicate genes in the presence of degenerative mutations targeting both members of a duplicate pair." https://lnkd.in/eHCDVhZ View in LinkedIn
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