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A Reintroduction to Mendelian Genetics
Cancer Investigation, 1997The origin of modern genetics is often credited to Gregor Mendel (1865). The fact, if not the exact date, is as well known to every modern schoolchild as the Battle of Hastings. Mendel alone didn't get us to where we are today. Even our understanding of Mendelian inheritance is dependent on the contributions of those who discovered and defined genes ...
M. E. Hodes, Stephen R. Dlouhy
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1994
The recent surge of interest in the use of reintroduction, especially of captive-bred animals, as a conservation tool, has resulted in two recent reviews of the subject (Jones, 1990; Gipps, 1991) and the formation of a Re-introduction Specialist Group (RSG) of the Species Survival Commission (SSC) of the World Conservation Union (IUCN) and a ...
D. G. Kleiman +2 more
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The recent surge of interest in the use of reintroduction, especially of captive-bred animals, as a conservation tool, has resulted in two recent reviews of the subject (Jones, 1990; Gipps, 1991) and the formation of a Re-introduction Specialist Group (RSG) of the Species Survival Commission (SSC) of the World Conservation Union (IUCN) and a ...
D. G. Kleiman +2 more
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Julian's reintroduction of Milton's operation
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, 1992Four years after the first successful open heart operation in 1953, most cardiac surgeons were using bilateral anterior thoracotomy. This tedious, time-consuming, complication-prone, painful procedure was abandoned only after Julian and associates demonstrated the marked superiority of median sternotomy.
M L, Dalton, S R, Connally, W C, Sealy
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Are Reintroductions Necessary?
Journal of Chiropractic Humanities, 2004The Journal of Chiropractic Humanities was born in year 1991 and it is amazing how much can happen in just thirteen years. Originally named Philosophical Constructs for the Chiropractic Profession, this publication now bears the name Journal of Chiropractic Humanities.
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2017
This chapter explains the practice of reintroduction and rewilding. It discusses the process of reintroduction, which can be achieved through restoration, translocation, and captive breeding based on species-focused, site-focused, or human-focused motivations. Moreover, the chapter looks at regulatory frameworks and policies for reintroduction, such as
Anne E. Goodenough, Adam G. Hart
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This chapter explains the practice of reintroduction and rewilding. It discusses the process of reintroduction, which can be achieved through restoration, translocation, and captive breeding based on species-focused, site-focused, or human-focused motivations. Moreover, the chapter looks at regulatory frameworks and policies for reintroduction, such as
Anne E. Goodenough, Adam G. Hart
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2012
Contributors vii Memorium of Don Merton xi Foreword xix Preface xxiii 1. Animal Translocations: What Are They and Why DoWe Do Them? 1 Philip J. Seddon, W. Maartin Strauss and John Innes 2. A Tale of Two Islands: The Rescue and Recovery of Endemic Birds in New Zealand and Mauritius 33 Carl G. Jones and Don V. Merton 3.
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Contributors vii Memorium of Don Merton xi Foreword xix Preface xxiii 1. Animal Translocations: What Are They and Why DoWe Do Them? 1 Philip J. Seddon, W. Maartin Strauss and John Innes 2. A Tale of Two Islands: The Rescue and Recovery of Endemic Birds in New Zealand and Mauritius 33 Carl G. Jones and Don V. Merton 3.
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Bear reintroduction: lessons and challenges. ,
Ursus, 2001INVITED PAPER 13th International Conference on Bear Research and Management BEAR REINTRODUCTION: LESSONS AND CHALLENGES JOSEPH D. CLARK, U.S. Geological Survey, Biological Resources Division, Southern Appalachian Field Laboratory, 274 Ellington Plant Sciences Building, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996, USA, jclark1@utk.edu DJURO HUBER ...
Clark, D. Joseph +2 more
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2004
Wolf conservation initiatives have often generated conflicts with local populations. In Minnesota in the 1970s, ‘people choked Eastern timber wolves to death in snares to show their contempt for the animal’s designation as an endangered species’ (Lopez 1995: 139), and cattle ranchers in this same state reportedly ‘shoot, shovel, and shut up’ when they ...
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Wolf conservation initiatives have often generated conflicts with local populations. In Minnesota in the 1970s, ‘people choked Eastern timber wolves to death in snares to show their contempt for the animal’s designation as an endangered species’ (Lopez 1995: 139), and cattle ranchers in this same state reportedly ‘shoot, shovel, and shut up’ when they ...
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