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IbsaMouse and Snake Embryos.jpg
English: Excerpt of figure from “From Lizard to Snake; Behind the Evolution of an Extreme Body Plan” (Woltering, 2012), showing the embryo of a snake and mouse to highlight the different in body plan. The mouse is a day 12 post fertilization embryo and the snake (Corn snake, Pantherophis guttatus), is around 2 days post ovo-positioning. The Corn snake is not a basal snake, and thus does bot exhibit hind limb bud formation.
Guyyaa
Lakkaddaa
"From Lizard to Snake; Behind the Evolution of an Extreme Body Plan"[1]
qooduuf – hojicha garagalchuuf, faffacaasuu fi daddabarsuuf
walimakuuf – hojicha madaqsuuf
Haalota armaan gadii jalatti:
amala – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use.
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5CC BY 2.5 Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 truetrue
↑"From Lizard to Snake; Behind the Evolution of an Extreme Body Plan". Current Genomics13 (4): 289–299. DOI:10.2174/138920212800793302.
Captions
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Mouse embryo 12 day post fertilization side by side with Corn Snake embryo 2 days post ovo-positioning.