Search Results - "Millar, C D"
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Rates of Evolution in Ancient DNA from Adélie Penguins
Published in Science (American Association for the Advancement of Science) (22-03-2002)“…Well-preserved subfossil bones of Adélie penguins, Pygoscelis adeliae, underlie existing and abandoned nesting colonies in Antarctica. These bones, dating back…”
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Is a Large-Scale DNA-Based Inventory of Ancient Life Possible?
Published in The Journal of heredity (01-05-2005)“…A complete DNA-based inventory of the Earth's present biota using large-scale high-throughput DNA sequencing of signature region(s) (DNA barcoding) is an…”
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Microevolution and Mega-Icebergs in the Antarctic
Published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS (15-11-2005)“…Microevolution is regarded as changes in the frequencies of genes in populations over time. Ancient DNA technology now provides an opportunity to demonstrate…”
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Nuclear DNA sequences detect species limits in ancient moa
Published in Nature (11-09-2003)“…Ancient DNA studies have typically used multi-copy mitochondrial DNA sequences. This is largely because single-locus nuclear genes have been difficult to…”
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Nuclear DNA sequences detect species limits in ancient moa
Published in Nature (London) (01-09-2003)Get full text
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Bucking the trend: genetic analysis reveals high diversity, large population size and low differentiation in a deep ocean cetacean
Published in Heredity (01-03-2016)“…Understanding the genetic structure of a population is essential to its conservation and management. We report the level of genetic diversity and determine the…”
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Ancient population genomics and the study of evolution
Published in Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological sciences (19-01-2015)“…Recently, the study of ancient DNA (aDNA) has been greatly enhanced by the development of second-generation DNA sequencing technologies and targeted enrichment…”
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Large-scale multivariate analysis reveals sexual dimorphism and geographic differences in the Gray's beaked whale
Published in Journal of zoology (1987) (01-09-2014)“…Gray's beaked whales (Mesoplodon grayi) are medium‐sized odontocete (toothed) cetaceans that are members of the family Ziphiidae. These animals inhabit deep…”
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Sex-specific foraging during parental care in a size-monomorphic seabird, the Australasian Gannet (Morus serrator)
Published in The Wilson journal of ornithology (01-03-2017)“…Sex differences in foraging behavior are typically studied in size-dimorphic taxa. Data on sex-specific behavior in monomorphic taxa are needed to test…”
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A novel restriction fragment length polymorphism for petrels or tube-nosed seabirds
Published in Molecular ecology (01-11-2000)Get full text
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Siblicidal brood reduction in South Polar Skuas
Published in New Zealand journal of zoology (2003)“…Siblicide in the South Polar Skua (Catharacta maccormicki) was studied at Cape Crozier, Ross Island, Antarctica during the 1993/94 austral summer. Sixty-six…”
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Single- and Multilocus DNA Fingerprinting of Communally Breeding Pukeko: Do Copulations or Dominance Ensure Reproductive Success?
Published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS (27-09-1994)“…In behavioral and ecological studies the "function" of dominance hierarchies is thought to be related to reproductive success. In particular, dominant males…”
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Molecular sexing of the communally breeding pukeko: an important ecological tool
Published in Molecular ecology (01-04-1996)“…A central biological parameter in the study of any animal population is the accurate assignment of sex. Indeed any ecological study of a population requires…”
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Ancient genetic variation in one of the world's rarest seabirds
Published in Heredity (01-12-2008)“…The Chatham Island Taiko (Tchaik, Pterodroma magentae) is one of the world's rarest seabirds. In the past there were millions of breeding pairs of Taiko and it…”
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Ancient DNA enables timing of the pleistocene origin and holocene expansion of two adélie penguin lineages in antarctica
Published in Molecular biology and evolution (01-02-2004)“…The timing of divergent events in history is one of the central goals of contemporary evolutionary biology. Such studies are however dependent on accurate…”
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Ancient DNA recovers the origins of Māori feather cloaks
Published in Molecular biology and evolution (01-10-2011)“…Feather cloaks ("kakahu"), particularly those adorned with kiwi feathers, are treasured items or "taonga" to the Māori people of "Aotearoa"/New Zealand. They…”
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Minisatellite DNA Detects Sex, Parentage, and Adoption in the South Polar Skua
Published in The Journal of heredity (01-05-1997)“…The south polar skua (Catharacta maccormicki) is a long-lived seabird. Adults of this species exhibit only a small degree of sexual dimorphism, while male and…”
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Is Helping Behavior a Consequence of Natural Selection?
Published in The American naturalist (01-07-1991)“…We disagree with Jamieson's (1989) claim that he has presented an alternative to the selectionist explanations of helping behaviour. His argument depends…”
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A DNA test to sex ratite birds
Published in Molecular ecology (01-04-2002)“…DNA‐based sex tests now exist for many avian species. However, none of these tests are widely applicable to ratites. We present DNA sequence data for a locus…”
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"Wife-Sharing" in the Tasmanian Native Hen (Gallinula mortierii): Is It Caused by a Male-Biased Sex Ratio?
Published in The Auk (01-04-1998)“…Goldizen et al present data on sex ratios and mating patterns from two populations of Tasmanian Native Hens to challenge the assumption that cooperative…”
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