Fishes, Embryology, And Genetics

About The Book

This book provides an overview of controversial concepts in genetics and embryology as they relate to the ear and touch organs that let us hear and adjust. It provides a special resource that connects systems at the atomic, cellular, and structural levels to support research into the development of the hearing and vestibular senses. Different representations are used to assist convey current ideas. This article describes genes and gene components associated with layer channels, atomic flagging falls, translation elements, and more. The authors discuss the importance of genes, subatomic particles, and cell associations to normal development as well as to human inner ear diseases including deafness and adjustment problem. New and long-resolved disclosures regarding practical and anatomical modifications during ontogeny are combined with the detonating measure of new data on formative sub-atomic systems. The interest in chromosome analysis in both critical (systematics and near genomics among fish and other vertebrate groups) and connected (aquaculture, preservation and response to poisons, entire genome sequencing of model fish species) research has increased as a result of recent advances in fish cytogenetics. Despite the fact that the genetic material, or chromosomes, are fundamentally the same in all living things, experience has clearly shown that fish chromosomes require special handling.

ISBN 9781778806915
Author Philips Shure
Publisher OXMAN PRESS
Publication Year 2023
Category Fisheries
Price $178.00

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Professor Philips Shure works in the neurobiology and anatomy division. He contributes articles to National Wildlife, Audubon, Natural History, and Science. He has been teaching, conducting research, and engaging in practice for more than 8 years. The Best Teacher and Researcher Award was given to him. Rowan Phelps is a specialist in genetics, embryology, and anatomy. He has authored more than 25 books and has published a number of research articles in journals across the nation and abroad. The National Institute of Biological and Genetic Sciences Media Award has been given to him. His current research examines cell signaling during the early patterning of the vertebrate embryo. He is the author of well over 79 articles.