"imprinting"
Imprinting by geese
Imprinting
Imprinting
First one needs to understand what imprinting is. One receives one copy of a gene from the mother, and another from the father. Sometimes the copy from mother or father is silenced, and only the copy from one parent is active. If the only active gene is damaged, it can show up in the form of genetic disease. An example of genomic imprinting, is the mixing of tigers and lions. Who the mother is, has direct effect on the offspring. A mother tiger and a father lion, results in a liger. Ligers are much bigger than either parent. A mother lion and a father tiger, results in a tigon. Tigons are about the same size as their parents. The difference in the two mixes come from genomic imprinting related to the maternal expression of certain genes.
Imprinting is a behavior seen in certain bird species, where they bond with the first moving object they see after hatching. Lions do not exhibit imprinting behavior as birds do, but they do form strong social bonds with their pride members through interactions and experiences from a young age.
yes
A widely accepted hypothesis for the evolution of genomic imprinting is the "parental conflic.
No, imprinting is limited to birds and a few other animals. Humans form attachments.
"imprinting"
Imprinting is introduced in new moon.
natual
the mother must be present. :))
no
imprinting is important as the ideal mate has to be found to keep the blood line going and makin sure of warewolf's survival
Conditioning is practice and learning. imprinting is like how a duck knows to follow its mother right when its born.
Lorenz