View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Hybridisation.
Hybridisation
Hybridisation meaning
Non-Oxford British English standard spelling of hybridization.
Synonyms of Hybridisation
Example sentences (15)
Such hybridisation isn’t easy in mustard, as its flowers have both female (pistil) and male (stamen) reproductive organs, making the plants largely self-pollinating.
The team then controls hybridisation in such a way that it changes the overall fluorescent signal so that it corresponds to the square root of the original number.
All health records, as well as hybridisation issues, should be open, transparent and made clear to the public, and full genetic profiles should be built up of all species.
Mr Bell added: “The cameras give us amazing insight to this priceless group of wildcats which have somehow survived here and avoided hybridisation.
They are analysing genetic data from ravens that lived in the early 1900s to investigate whether the hybridisation has accelerated since then.
An allopolyploid plant may result from a hybridisation event between two different species.
However, the diversity of cuisine has been increased further by the "hybridisation" of different styles (e.
Hybridisation has been immensely successful in combining the best aspects of different species to give plants which flower at an earlier age than the parent species, as well as having more impressive flowers.
In it, he proposed the hypothesis that natural selection could drive the reproductive isolation of two varieties by encouraging the development of barriers against hybridisation.
It is an emerging designated digital economy with mixed economy hybridisation and an emerging market with 8.7% GDP growth in 2012.
It is unclear if any existing cultivar can replace Cavendish bananas, so various hybridisation and genetic engineering programs are attempting to create a disease-resistant, mass-market banana.
Sound hybridisation or "morphing" has been implemented by additive resynthesis.
That move was supported by chromosome and DNA DNA hybridisation studies, but challenged on the grounds that all three groups are monophyletic with respect to the other Coraciiformes.
The hybridisation is believed to be at its greatest for cerium, which has the lowest melting point of all, 795 °C.
Wallace had suggested to Darwin that natural selection could play a role in preventing hybridisation in private correspondence as early as 1868, but had not worked it out to this level of detail.