Abnormal expression of secondary sex characters in a population of mosquitofish, Gambusia affinis holbrooki: evidence for environmentally induced
masculinization. Copeia 4:676-681 (1980).
This experiment was performed during the summer of 2015, so we cannot rule out the possibility that the estrogens expired (although they were stored below 4[degrees]C the entire time) and their effect at physiological level was altered, resulting in a
masculinization instead of a feminization of the reproductive tissue.
Hence, the objectives of our present study are to evaluate the effectiveness of various doses of two hormonal treatments on
masculinization, as well as growth performance and changes in gonadal structure after the termination of treatments.
[22.] Tzchori I, Zak T, Sachs O (2004)
Masculinization of genetic females of C.
In this sense some authors describe that female
masculinization and lack of sexual dimorphism may be related to interspecific competition for feeding territory in Eulemur fulvus rufus (Ostner et al.
Female
masculinization and reproductive life history in the western mosquitofish, Gambusia affinis.
Corticosteroids deficiency leads to raised adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) which stimulates adrenal cortex to produce more androgenic hormones leading to features of
masculinization (development of male characteristics in a genotypical female) of female fetus resulting in ambiguous genitalia.
Gardiner finds this symptomatic of a current American ethos of "militarized masculinity," arguing that the traditional Christ narrative "does not require Gibson's relentless
masculinization of Jesus." Yet in order to make this claim, Gardiner prunes Gibson's film, with its many potential viewpoints and audience identifications, into a narrow narrative lens.
Phonosurgery for pitch alteration: Feminization and
masculinization of the voice.
1999.--Effect of fish density on efficacy of
masculinization by immersion in MDHT.
Key Words: Cyprinus carpio; 17a-methyltestosterone;
Masculinization; Growth; Meat quality
Odessa was the epicenter and staging ground not only of the Russian Jew's secularization but also of his
masculinization. The great voice and chronicler of this dual evolution was Issac Babel, whose stories I re-read with great pleasure while sitting in cafes on tourist-thronged Deribasovskaya Street, in a post-Soviet Odessa that has lost most of its Jews but is in many ways unchanged from the city that Babel described with such pungent and precise language, and to such mythic effect.