by Jason Hughes
| ISBN | 9781806248490 |
|---|---|
| Publisher | Digital Drive Learning |
| Copyright Year | 2026 |
| Price | $259.00 |
This book provides an overview of controversial concepts in genetics and embryology as they relate to the ear and touch organs that let us hear and adjust. It provides a unique asset that connects systems at the atomic, cellular, and structural levels to support knowledge of the ontogeny of the hearing and vestibular senses. In order to communicate contemporary ideas, a variety of representations are used. This article describes genes and gene components associated with layer channels, and atomic flagging falls, translation elements, and more. The authors explain the importance of genes, subatomic particles, cell relationships to normal development, human inner ear illness, including deafness, and how to fix the problem. The explosion of new information on formative subatomic systems is combined with fresh and, by now, well-established disclosures regarding functional and anatomical alterations throughout ontogeny. Recent developments in fish cytogenetics have increased interest in chromosome analysis in both critical (aquaculture, preservation and response to poisons, entire genome sequencing of model fish species) and connected (systematics and near genomics among angles and other vertebrate groups) investigations. The experience has clearly shown that fish chromosomes must be handled with specific rules, even though the genetic material, or chromosomes, are fundamentally the same in different organisms.