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Dyne Immune's Portable, Low-Cost Rabies Screen Delivers Life-Saving Information To Veterinarians, Animal Workers In Minutes
Thursday, 02.05.2009, 11:00am
Dyne Immune, LLC announced their new, portable Rabies RAPIDâ„¢(Rapid Antibody Portable Immunodetection) Screen, which can detect the presence of rabies in an animal saliva sample within 30 minutes, providing vital information much sooner than traditional testing methods.
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Dyne Immune's Portable, Low-Cost Rabies Screen Delivers Life-Saving Information To Veterinarians, Animal Workers In Minutes
Thursday, 02.05.2009, 11:00am
Dyne Immune, LLC announced their new, portable Rabies RAPIDâ„¢(Rapid Antibody Portable Immunodetection) Screen, which can detect the presence of rabies in an animal saliva sample within 30 minutes, providing vital information much sooner than traditional testing methods.
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Compact Biosensor For Wide-Ranging Applications
Wednesday, 02.04.2009, 04:00pm
Scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) are partnering with industry to develop a sensor system for biomolecules that could make a significant contribution to a variety of fields such as healthcare, veterinary diagnostics, food safety, environmental testing, and national security. NRL has developed a highly sensitive, portable biosensor system called the compact Bead Array Sensor System (cBASS®).
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Compact Biosensor For Wide-Ranging Applications
Wednesday, 02.04.2009, 04:00pm
Scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) are partnering with industry to develop a sensor system for biomolecules that could make a significant contribution to a variety of fields such as healthcare, veterinary diagnostics, food safety, environmental testing, and national security. NRL has developed a highly sensitive, portable biosensor system called the compact Bead Array Sensor System (cBASS®).
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Why Don't More Animals Change Their Sex?
Tuesday, 02.03.2009, 01:00pm
Most animals, like humans, have separate sexes-they are born, live out their lives and reproduce as one sex or the other. However, some animals live as one sex in part of their lifetime and then switch to the other sex, a phenomenon called sequential hermaphroditism. What remains a puzzle, according to Yale scientists, is why the phenomenon is so rare, since their analysis shows the biological "costs" of changing sexes rarely outweigh the advantages.
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Why Don't More Animals Change Their Sex?
Tuesday, 02.03.2009, 01:00pm
Most animals, like humans, have separate sexes-they are born, live out their lives and reproduce as one sex or the other. However, some animals live as one sex in part of their lifetime and then switch to the other sex, a phenomenon called sequential hermaphroditism. What remains a puzzle, according to Yale scientists, is why the phenomenon is so rare, since their analysis shows the biological "costs" of changing sexes rarely outweigh the advantages.
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