…value for detecting species-level differences is small compared to the added cost. Moving backwards in evolutionary time, a neighbor joining tree constructed with 648 bp barcode sequences often groups genera…
JH Ausubel.
George C. Marshall Institute News
3 (4):
2001
…integrating and fragmenting. What roles does scientific cooperation play in reducing conflict when not only are new states joining in the East but also Scotland, Wales, Brittany, the Basque regions,…
…status. Of the species examined so far (I estimate about 1/3 of the 10,000 world birds), most demonstrate a similar patterning of limited mtDNA differences within species and relatively large…
…and power plants are causing the planet to heat up. Though Hansen predicted that the next 10 years will be the hottest in US history, he was encouraged that releases…
JH Ausubel.
Oceanography
12 (3):
4–5
1999
…official homepage of the COML is www.CoML.org. What did live in the oceans? What does live in the oceans? What will live in the oceans? These questions, compelling for society…
…as a means of species discovery (for more, see www.barcoding.si.edu; www.barcodinglife.org). In addition to helping identify what is already known, DNA analysis can reveal what would otherwise remain hidden. In…
We have posted the paper Resources and Environment in the 21st Century: Seeing Past the Phantoms….
The Program for the Human Environment goes online, with a simple web page hosted by an SGI Indy (www.rockefeller.edu/phe)….
We notice that the 1992 paper “Industrial Ecology: Reflections on a Colloquium” (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA) has been published online: https://www.pnas.org/cgi/reprint/89/3/879 We also have a copy on our server:…
…https://globedia.com/detectan-migraciones-especies-marinas-gracias-adn-medioambiental Revista Planeta, Brazil Arraia típica do Brasil está chegando perto da costa de Nova York https://www.revistaplaneta.com.br/arraia-tipica-do-brasil-esta-chegando-perto-da-costa-de-nova-york/ DIVE Magazine, UK DNA Traces Prove To Be Useful Tool in Understanding Fish…