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Paranoid plants, productive sheep, queen bees, wheat, barley, rice, bin chickens, flower and fruit yield

Paranoid plants, productive sheep, queen bees, wheat, barley, rice, bin chickens, flower and fruit yield
asiaresearchnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from asiaresearchnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Bin chickens; platypus threat; bilby poo; isolated koalas; sex changing fish

Bin chickens; platypus threat; bilby poo; isolated koalas; sex changing fish
asiaresearchnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from asiaresearchnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Black swan DNA could offer insight into how humans respond to bird flu

Black swan DNA could offer insight into how humans respond to bird flu May 6 2021 In a world-first, scientists from The University of Western Australia have assembled the entire DNA of the black swan, which could offer insight into how the bird, and even humans, respond to bird flu and other pandemics in the same family of viruses. Image Credit: The University of Western Australia The black swan, a species native to Western Australia and the State’s official bird emblem, is particularly vulnerable to bird flu compared to other birds. Similarly, humans who contract the virus are also very vulnerable, with high fatality rates.

Black swan DNA could help us understand human response to bird flu

Date Time Black swan DNA could help us understand human response to bird flu In a world-first, scientists from The University of Western Australia have assembled the entire DNA of the black swan, which could offer insight into how the bird, and even humans, respond to bird flu and other pandemics in the same family of viruses. The black swan, a species native to Western Australia and the State’s official bird emblem, is particularly vulnerable to bird flu compared to other birds. Similarly, humans who contract the virus are also very vulnerable, with high fatality rates. “Because viruses such as bird flu can spill over into humans, and pandemics are only predicted to increase in the future, research into animal and human responses to them has never been more important.”

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