[77548] in Daily_Rumour
Stronger Immunity Starts Here - Exclusive Video Inside
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Immunity Breakthroughs)
Sun Mar 16 02:51:43 2025
Date: Sun, 16 Mar 2025 07:36:11 +0100
From: "Immunity Breakthroughs" <ImmunityBreakthroughs@moring.best>
Reply-To: "Immunity Breakthroughs" <ImmunityResearchInsider@moring.best>
To: <rumour-mtg@bloom-picayune.mit.edu>
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Stronger Immunity Starts Here - Exclusive Video Inside
http://moring.best/XrbJLZhUQl9ICpwnJsjWpvxAdH3kI1XojbN6l0ZG4syLnXLWbQ
http://moring.best/Lfx1Iv15EG4RjIePpGES5_TZKcsD97y3HOn3ovwquugd3jNYMw
ure birds alive in the wild.
While some apparent inbreeding depression was noted in the captive birds,[citation needed] it was certainly lower than might be expected given that the effective population size was maybe 5 individuals during the mid-1970s. It is known that several genetic lineages of Mauritius kestrels have disappeared entirely during the 20th century population decline.[citation needed] However, the debilitating effects of DDT accumulation on the birds' health, and not inbreeding, are considered to have been the major cause for the failure of Temple's breeding program.[citation needed]
The evolutionary history of the birds seems to hold clues as to why: Mauritius is a volcanic island, and although the colonization of the island by kestrels cannot be dated with high precision, it was almost certainly some time before volcanic activity died down. The Mauritius kestrel population seems to have survived a prolonged period of volcanic activity, which must have kept the population small and fluctuating as habitat, food, and kestrels were destroyed by volcanic eruptions time and again. As near-panmictic conditions were sustained for many generations, alleles that might cause inbreeding depression were steadily removed by means of natural selection. The phenomenon that effective population sizes as low as 4–5 can be tolerated without pronounced inbreeding depression is also known from other small-island birds, such as Petroica traversi or the Laysan duck.
The classification as an endangered species is due to the same fact: on an islan
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<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:10px;">ure birds alive in the wild. While some apparent inbreeding depression was noted in the captive birds,[citation needed] it was certainly lower than might be expected given that the effective population size was maybe 5 individuals during the mid-1970s. It is known that several genetic lineages of Mauritius kestrels have disappeared entirely during the 20th century population decline.[citation needed] However, the debilitating effects of DDT accumulation on the birds' health, and not inbreeding, are considered to have been the major cause for the failure of Temple's breeding program.[citation needed] The evolutionary history of the birds seems to hold clues as to why: Mauritius is a volcanic island, and although the colonization of the island by kestrels cannot be dated with high precision, it was almost certainly some time before volcanic activity died down. The Mauritius kestrel population seems to have survived a prolonged period of volcanic activity, which must have kept the population small and fluctuating as habitat, food, and kestrels were destroyed by volcanic eruptions time and again. As near-panmictic conditions were sustained for many generations, alleles that might cause inbreeding depression were steadily removed by means of natural selection. The phenomenon that effective population sizes as low as 4–5 can be tolerated without pronounced inbreeding depression is also known from other small-island birds, such as Petroica traversi or the Laysan duck. The classification as an endangered species is due to the same fact: on an islan</div>
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