Results 161 to 170 of about 4,117 (224)
Comprehensive review on environmental pollution caused by 6PPD-quinone and remediation strategies. [PDF]
Sivalingam S +4 more
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Publisher Correction: Robust discrimination between closely related species of salmon based on DNA fragments. [PDF]
Ellisor D, Gregg M, Folz A, Possolo A.
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Quantifying Depuration of Methylmercury from Fish Consumption by Travelers. [PDF]
Lepak RF +7 more
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Phosphoglucomutase polymorphism in sockeye salmon
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, 1970Abstract 1. 1. Phosphoglucomutase phenotypes of all but one of 633 sockeye salmon ( Oncorhynchus nerka ) consisted of one or both of two zones of activity resolved by starch gel electrophoresis. 2. 2. The common phenotypes could be explained by a hypothesis of two alleles at a single locus; the excpetional phenotype could be explained by ...
Fred M Utter, Harold O Hodgins
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Differences in Thermal Tolerance Among Sockeye Salmon Populations [PDF]
Environmental conditions encountered during migration shape cardiorespiratory physiology in sockeye salmon.
Erika J, Eliason +9 more
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Evolution of Sockeye Salmon Ecotypes
Science, 2001Rapid evolution of reproductive isolation is proposed by A. Hendry and colleagues to be the cause of the genetic differences between two adjacent populations of Washington State sockeye salmon (Reports, 20 Oct., p. [516][1]). These two populations or “ecotypes,” one living in a tributary (Cedar River) and the other along a beach (Pleasure Point) of ...
Richard G. Gustafson +3 more
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Examining Evidence of Reproductive Isolation in Sockeye Salmon
Science, 2001The study of speciation has recently undergone a revival, with much controversy centering on whether new species can originate quickly and within the geographic range of their ancestor. Hendry et al .
D J, Howard +3 more
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Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 2015
Sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) populations from Southeast Alaska through British Columbia to Washington State have experienced similar declines in productivity over the past two decades, leading to economic and ecosystem concerns. Because the declines have spanned a wide geographic area, the primary mechanisms driving them likely operate at a ...
Gregory T. Ruggerone, Brendan M. Connors
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Sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) populations from Southeast Alaska through British Columbia to Washington State have experienced similar declines in productivity over the past two decades, leading to economic and ecosystem concerns. Because the declines have spanned a wide geographic area, the primary mechanisms driving them likely operate at a ...
Gregory T. Ruggerone, Brendan M. Connors
openaire +1 more source
11-KETOTESTOSTERONE: AN ANDROGEN FOR SOCKEYE SALMON
Canadian Journal of Biochemistry and Physiology, 196111-Ketotesterone, a hormone in the blood of sockeye salmon, has been shown to have androgenic activity for this species. It influences skin thickness and coloration, flesh pigmentation, and spermatogenesis in the male. The effect of 11-ketotestosterone is not so pronounced in the female but it influences both skin thickness and coloration.
D. R. Idler +2 more
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