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Are You SICK of the “Woke ️ Snowflakes?” So are we!

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Mario)
Sat Jul 20 08:41:04 2024

Date: Sat, 20 Jul 2024 14:26:01 +0200
From: "Mario" <Nicholas@pharmabrain.za.com>
Reply-To: "Susan" <Linda@pharmabrain.za.com>
To: <linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu>

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Are You SICK of the “Woke &#65039; Snowflakes?” So are we!

http://pharmabrain.za.com/WN799Gj2UMWBbyIUXwVQDoBXgj1xTjgjnzotg52oiBX74ctZRA

http://pharmabrain.za.com/P6OfBJUaRxYmzyDI3oJhatvU805btjAZm6HeZzAISxVIIoUv7w

nd almost 280 ibexes and four colonies in Slovenia.

As of 2020, the IUCN considers the Alpine ibex to be of Least Concern with a recovery score of 79%, making it "moderately depleted". While the species would likely have gone extinct without conservation efforts in the 19th and 20th centuries, as of 2021, it has a low conservation dependence, meaning that without current protections, the population decline of the species would be minimal. Some countries allow limited hunting.

Genetic bottleneck and purity
Having gone through a genetic bottleneck, the Alpine ibex population has low genetic diversity and is at risk of inbreeding depression. A 2020 analysis found highly deleterious mutations were lost in these new populations, but they had also gained mildly deleterious ones. The genetic bottleneck of populations may increase vulnerability to infectious diseases because their immune system has low major histocompatibility complex diversity. In the Bornes Massif region of the French Alps, management actions, including a test-and-cull program to control outbreaks, effectively reduced Brucella infection prevalence in adult females from 51% in 2013 to 21% in 2018, and active infections also significantly declined.

The genetic purity of the species may be threatened by hybridisation with domestic goats, which have been allowed to roam in the Alpine Ibex's habitat.

Cultural significance
The Alpine ibex is called the steinbock, which originated from the Old High German word steinboc, literally "stone buck". Several European names for the animal developed from this, including the French bouquetin and the Italian stambecco. The Alpine ibex is one of many animals depicted in the art of the Late Pleistocene-era Magdalenian culture in Western Europe. Local people used Ibexes for traditional medicine; the horn material was used to counter cramps, poisoning, and hysteria, while the blood was thought to prevent stones from developing in the bladder. The species' value as a source of medicine led to its near extinction. Since its recovery, the Alpine ibex has been seen as a resilient symbol of the mountain range. The sp

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<span style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:10px;">nd almost 280 ibexes and four colonies in Slovenia. As of 2020, the IUCN considers the Alpine ibex to be of Least Concern with a recovery score of 79%, making it &quot;moderately depleted&quot;. While the species would likely have gone extinct without conservation efforts in the 19th and 20th centuries, as of 2021, it has a low conservation dependence, meaning that without current protections, the population decline of the species would be minimal. Some countries allow limited hunting. Genetic bottleneck and purity Having gone through a genetic bottleneck, the Alpine ibex population has low genetic diversity and is at risk of inbreeding depression. A 2020 analysis found highly deleterious mutations were lost in these new populations, but they had also gained mildly deleterious ones. The genetic bottleneck of populations may increase vulnerability to infectious diseases because their immune system has low major histocompatibility complex diversity. In the Bornes Massif region of the French Alps, management actions, including a test-and-cull program to control outbreaks, effectively reduced Brucella infection prevalence in adult females from 51% in 2013 to 21% in 2018, and active infections also significantly declined. The genetic purity of the species may be threatened by hybridisation with domestic goats, which have been allowed to roam in the Alpine Ibex&#39;s habitat. Cultural significance The Alpine ibex is called the steinbock, which originated from the Old High German word steinboc, literally &quot;stone buck&quot;. Several European names for the animal developed from this, including the French bouquetin and the Italian stambecco. The Alpine ibex is one of many animals depicted in the art of the Late Pleistocene-era Magdalenian culture in Western Europe. Local people used Ibexes for traditional medicine; the horn material was used to counter cramps, poisoning, and hysteria, while the blood was thought to prevent stones from developing in the bladder. The species&#39; value as a source of medicine led to its near extinction. Since its recovery, the Alpine ibex has been seen as a resilient symbol of the mountain range. The sp</span><br />
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