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Pliocene and early pleistocene insectivore and rodent Faunas from DajushanQipanshan and Haimao in north China and the reconstruction of the faunal succession from the late miocene to middle pleistocene [PDF]
Chanzhu, Jin+2 more
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Transient transfection using 222 nm far UV-C irradiation. [PDF]
Nishimura M+9 more
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Cricetulus griseus (Chinese hamster) [PDF]
The long arm of the X may show a weak secondary constriction at the distal third. However, without autoradiography with tritiated thymidine, the X may be indistinguishable from chromosomes No. 4. The Y chromosome is morphologically unique.
Kurt Benirschke, T. C. Hsu
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Biology Bulletin, 2014
The karyotypes of C. barabensis (2n = 20, NF = 38) and C. pseudogriseus (2n = 24, NF = 38) from different geographic regions of Russia have been studied. Differences in the karyotype structure (chromosome morphology and distribution of heterochromatin) between the two species are described.
V. P. Korablev+3 more
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The karyotypes of C. barabensis (2n = 20, NF = 38) and C. pseudogriseus (2n = 24, NF = 38) from different geographic regions of Russia have been studied. Differences in the karyotype structure (chromosome morphology and distribution of heterochromatin) between the two species are described.
V. P. Korablev+3 more
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Cricetulus migratorius (Armenian hamster)
1971The morphology of the X chromosome and the Y chromosome is very similar, but the Y is usually more heteropycnotic in staining behavior.
Kurt Benirschke, T. C. Hsu
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Gene, 2016
Cricetulus migratorius is widely distributed in the northwestern arid regions of China. Here, the complete mitochondrial genome (mitogenome) of C. migratorius is reported, to our knowledge, for the first time. It was found to be 16,246bp in length, including 13 protein-coding genes (PCGs), 2 rRNA genes, 22 tRNA genes, and one control region, and showed
Li Ding, Wenjia Li, Jicheng Liao
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Cricetulus migratorius is widely distributed in the northwestern arid regions of China. Here, the complete mitochondrial genome (mitogenome) of C. migratorius is reported, to our knowledge, for the first time. It was found to be 16,246bp in length, including 13 protein-coding genes (PCGs), 2 rRNA genes, 22 tRNA genes, and one control region, and showed
Li Ding, Wenjia Li, Jicheng Liao
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Detecting Dynamics in Cricetulus Barabensis Populations
2009 International Workshop on Chaos-Fractals Theories and Applications, 2009Past rodent population dynamics studies by some ecologists are often limited to the analysis and prediction about linear system. In the process of long-term population dynamics study of the dominant rodent species in North China Plain, we found the density change is very complicated and often influenced by a series of ecological factors both intrinsic ...
Yuzhi Wang, Xiaoxia Rong
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Reproductive Senescence in the Chinese Hamster (Cricetulus griseus)
Journal of Gerontology, 1982The female Chinese (C.) hamster (Cricetulus griseus) exhibits a progressive decline in litter size after the third litter. The mean number of litters produced was 4.9 +/- .5 for 25 C. hamsters, and the mean age of the C. hamsters at the time of delivering the last litter was 16.4 +/- .5 months. Most aged C.
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Blastocyst implantation in the chinese hamster (Cricetulus griseus)
American Journal of Anatomy, 1990AbstractEmbryonic development of the Chinese hamster (Cricetulus griseus) was studied from the onset of implantation to the formation of the parietal yolk sac placenta. Implantation began on day 6 of pregnancy, when the embryo became fixed to the uterine luminal epithelium. At this time there was no zona pellucida, and microvilli of the trophoblast and
Thomas N. Blankenship+2 more
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Establishment of a SPF Population of Cricetulus griseus
1988In this study different nursing methods have been studied in developing SPF Cricetulus griseus.
J. Leuenberger, W. Rossbach, U. Märki
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