Autor:
Downing, T.
Lynn, D.J.
Connell, S.
Lloyd, A.T.
Bhuiyan, A.K.F.H.
Silva, P.
Naqvi, A.N.
Sanfo, R.
Sow, R.S.
Overseas Development Institute
O'Farrelly, C.O.
Hanotte, Olivier H.
Bradley, D.G.
There have been significant evolutionary pressures on the chicken during both its speciation and its subsequent domestication by man. Infectious diseases are expected to have exerted strong selective pressures during these processes. Consequently, it is likely that genes associated with disease s...
Enlace original:
https://cgspace.cgiar.org/handle/10568/474
Downing, T.
,
Lynn, D.J.
,
Connell, S.
,
Lloyd, A.T.
,
Bhuiyan, A.K.F.H.
,
Silva, P.
,
Naqvi, A.N.
,
Sanfo, R.
,
Sow, R.S.
,
Overseas Development Institute
,
O'Farrelly, C.O.
,
Hanotte, Olivier H.
,
Bradley, D.G.
,
[Contrasting evolution of diversity at two disease-associated chicken genes]
,
Contrasting evolution of diversity at two disease-associated chicken genes