actually it would be like the current fungal infection scare with bananas the Dwarf Cavendish(sp) which are seedless then pre-1950 bananas where the Gros Michel (sp) which had seeds, are still around rare. on a side note the banana genome is just strange we have done some truly weird things to these plants with just breeding.
I thought the break through was when they installed thumb controls on my steering wheel , now i can keep both hands on the steering wheel and operate all the accessories. no need to wave my hands around the car.
there are different strains of malaria, but the one most common and damaging to humans is Plasmodium falciparum ( by way not a bacteria) and pretty much exclusive to humans since the main vector of transmission is An. gambiae a mosquito that feeds almost exclusively on humans as well. So if you eliminate the natural reservoirs i.e. infected humans, you can eliminate the disease or at least its most virulent form.
except it does, it often selects for attractiveness examples include; attracting birds and others to eat fruit thereby moving the seeds, bees to drink nectar to spread the pollen, or flies in the case of others , ants to live in and on a tree to defend it from other predators, and you can keep going. nature generally solves each problem in many different ways.
actually it would be like the current fungal infection scare with bananas the Dwarf Cavendish(sp) which are seedless then pre-1950 bananas where the Gros Michel (sp) which had seeds, are still around rare. on a side note the banana genome is just strange we have done some truly weird things to these plants with just breeding.
here's the link to the actual EFF press release/post, not some random board post linking to it. https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/...
I thought the break through was when they installed thumb controls on my steering wheel , now i can keep both hands on the steering wheel and operate all the accessories. no need to wave my hands around the car.
there are different strains of malaria, but the one most common and damaging to humans is Plasmodium falciparum ( by way not a bacteria) and pretty much exclusive to humans since the main vector of transmission is An. gambiae a mosquito that feeds almost exclusively on humans as well. So if you eliminate the natural reservoirs i.e. infected humans, you can eliminate the disease or at least its most virulent form.
except it does, it often selects for attractiveness examples include; attracting birds and others to eat fruit thereby moving the seeds, bees to drink nectar to spread the pollen, or flies in the case of others , ants to live in and on a tree to defend it from other predators, and you can keep going. nature generally solves each problem in many different ways.
If you want a game that was everything DIII should of been and more you should try path of exile, http://www.pathofexile.com/ .