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book Campbell Biology 11th Edition by Lisa Urry,Michael Cain,Steven Wasserman,Peter Minorsky,Jane Reece cover

Campbell Biology 11th Edition by Lisa Urry,Michael Cain,Steven Wasserman,Peter Minorsky,Jane Reece

Edition 11ISBN: 978-0134093413
book Campbell Biology 11th Edition by Lisa Urry,Michael Cain,Steven Wasserman,Peter Minorsky,Jane Reece cover

Campbell Biology 11th Edition by Lisa Urry,Michael Cain,Steven Wasserman,Peter Minorsky,Jane Reece

Edition 11ISBN: 978-0134093413
Exercise 10
Are you a victim of fish fraud
When buying salmon, perhaps you prefer the more expensive wild-caught Pacific salmon ( Oncorhynchus species) over farmed Atlantic salmon ( Salmo salar ). But studies reveal that about 40% of the time, you aren't getting the fish you paid for! Watch the video in the MasteringBiology Study Area for more information. Are you a victim of fish fraud  When buying salmon, perhaps you prefer the more expensive wild-caught Pacific salmon ( Oncorhynchus species) over farmed Atlantic salmon ( Salmo salar ). But studies reveal that about 40% of the time, you aren't getting the fish you paid for! Watch the video in the MasteringBiology Study Area for more information.      ABC News Video: Fake Fish in Stores and Restaurants    Instructors : A version of this Problem- Solving Exercise can be assigned in Chapter 5 of MasteringBiology. A more extensive investigation is in Chapter 26 of MasteringBiology. In this exercise, you will investigate whether a piece of salmon has been fraudulently labeled.  Your Approach  The principle guiding your investigation is that DNA sequences from within a species or from closely related species are more similar to each other than are sequences from more distantly related species. Your Data  You've been sold a piece of salmon labeled as coho salmon ( Oncorhynchus kisutch ). To see whether your fish was labeled correctly, you will compare a short DNA sequence from your sample to standard sequences from the same gene for three salmon species. The sequences are:    Scan along the standard sequences ( O. kisutch, O. keta , and S. salar ), base by base, circling any bases that do not match the sequence from your fish sample. Are you a victim of fish fraud  When buying salmon, perhaps you prefer the more expensive wild-caught Pacific salmon ( Oncorhynchus species) over farmed Atlantic salmon ( Salmo salar ). But studies reveal that about 40% of the time, you aren't getting the fish you paid for! Watch the video in the MasteringBiology Study Area for more information.      ABC News Video: Fake Fish in Stores and Restaurants    Instructors : A version of this Problem- Solving Exercise can be assigned in Chapter 5 of MasteringBiology. A more extensive investigation is in Chapter 26 of MasteringBiology. In this exercise, you will investigate whether a piece of salmon has been fraudulently labeled.  Your Approach  The principle guiding your investigation is that DNA sequences from within a species or from closely related species are more similar to each other than are sequences from more distantly related species. Your Data  You've been sold a piece of salmon labeled as coho salmon ( Oncorhynchus kisutch ). To see whether your fish was labeled correctly, you will compare a short DNA sequence from your sample to standard sequences from the same gene for three salmon species. The sequences are:    Scan along the standard sequences ( O. kisutch, O. keta , and S. salar ), base by base, circling any bases that do not match the sequence from your fish sample.
ABC News Video: Fake Fish in Stores and Restaurants Are you a victim of fish fraud  When buying salmon, perhaps you prefer the more expensive wild-caught Pacific salmon ( Oncorhynchus species) over farmed Atlantic salmon ( Salmo salar ). But studies reveal that about 40% of the time, you aren't getting the fish you paid for! Watch the video in the MasteringBiology Study Area for more information.      ABC News Video: Fake Fish in Stores and Restaurants    Instructors : A version of this Problem- Solving Exercise can be assigned in Chapter 5 of MasteringBiology. A more extensive investigation is in Chapter 26 of MasteringBiology. In this exercise, you will investigate whether a piece of salmon has been fraudulently labeled.  Your Approach  The principle guiding your investigation is that DNA sequences from within a species or from closely related species are more similar to each other than are sequences from more distantly related species. Your Data  You've been sold a piece of salmon labeled as coho salmon ( Oncorhynchus kisutch ). To see whether your fish was labeled correctly, you will compare a short DNA sequence from your sample to standard sequences from the same gene for three salmon species. The sequences are:    Scan along the standard sequences ( O. kisutch, O. keta , and S. salar ), base by base, circling any bases that do not match the sequence from your fish sample.
Instructors : A version of this Problem- Solving Exercise can be assigned in Chapter 5 of MasteringBiology. A more extensive investigation is in Chapter 26 of MasteringBiology.
In this exercise, you will investigate whether a piece of salmon has been fraudulently labeled.
Your Approach
The principle guiding your investigation is that DNA sequences from within a species or from closely related species are more similar to each other than are sequences from more distantly related species.
Your Data
You've been sold a piece of salmon labeled as coho salmon ( Oncorhynchus kisutch ). To see whether your fish was labeled correctly, you will compare a short DNA sequence from your sample to standard sequences from the same gene for three salmon species. The sequences are: Are you a victim of fish fraud  When buying salmon, perhaps you prefer the more expensive wild-caught Pacific salmon ( Oncorhynchus species) over farmed Atlantic salmon ( Salmo salar ). But studies reveal that about 40% of the time, you aren't getting the fish you paid for! Watch the video in the MasteringBiology Study Area for more information.      ABC News Video: Fake Fish in Stores and Restaurants    Instructors : A version of this Problem- Solving Exercise can be assigned in Chapter 5 of MasteringBiology. A more extensive investigation is in Chapter 26 of MasteringBiology. In this exercise, you will investigate whether a piece of salmon has been fraudulently labeled.  Your Approach  The principle guiding your investigation is that DNA sequences from within a species or from closely related species are more similar to each other than are sequences from more distantly related species. Your Data  You've been sold a piece of salmon labeled as coho salmon ( Oncorhynchus kisutch ). To see whether your fish was labeled correctly, you will compare a short DNA sequence from your sample to standard sequences from the same gene for three salmon species. The sequences are:    Scan along the standard sequences ( O. kisutch, O. keta , and S. salar ), base by base, circling any bases that do not match the sequence from your fish sample.
Scan along the standard sequences ( O. kisutch, O. keta , and S. salar ), base by base, circling any bases that do not match the sequence from your fish sample.
Explanation
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The given fish DNA sample sequence is ar...

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Campbell Biology 11th Edition by Lisa Urry,Michael Cain,Steven Wasserman,Peter Minorsky,Jane Reece
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