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1 year ago
"Avian Influenza (b) Expression Aspects In Niveus Opion Of Putorana State Natural Reserve As A Key For

"Avian influenza (b) expression aspects in Niveus opion of Putorana State Natural Reserve as a key for CNS physiotipe correlation, Novosibirsk State University, 2028, Günter et al"

Introduction:

N. opion (a name given after "Snowy" and "Poppy juice" in Greek, regarding to white, feather-like cover, and intoxicating aroma of recorded subjects), vastly known as an "Opium bird", are a nature phenomena and a current centre of zoological research for the last year, yet laboratories still lacking the sufficient amount of full anatomical evidence of grown organism. Basic visual similarities with aves, enlarged second digit claw (Neumann J., 2027, Foot trace of N. opion as a key to understanding their locomotion apparatus), and few suggestions on the enlarged tail structure (Günter & Neumann, 2027) may place N. opion in Paraves clade, despite all evolutionary theories for now are still unclear.

Yet there's a variability of life traces that grown specimen can left in known ecosystems, which are relatively easy to interpret in projection on loval avian and even human health. Recently, on a peak of IAV-b (avian influenza second generation) spread amongst birds of Putorana State Natural Reserve, a sudden change in the behaviour of infected specimens was spotted. After several independent observations on 207 subjects in summary, a significant breakthrough was made in developing an image of brain physiology by using new distant tomography-based and DEMFR-mapping technologies of comparative neurobiology.

Summary:

Our team contributed few theses on a global research plan on N. opion. We gathered statistical evidences and DEMFR-mapping approval of suggested earlier neurotype models of specimens, which lay the groundwork for further studies on their intelligence aspects. Also few highly possible suggestions about sexual dimorphism infliction on behaviour were made, which also explain why female specimens are more likely to contact with human when affected by flu.


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