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Equus asinus (male) X Equus caballus (female) intragenus hybrid
Known as:
Mule
, Mules
Non-fertile offspring of a female horse and male donkey.
National Institutes of Health
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Related topics
1 relation
Broader (1)
Equidae
Papers overview
Semantic Scholar uses AI to extract papers important to this topic.
Highly Cited
2005
Highly Cited
2005
Mule/ARF-BP1, a BH3-Only E3 Ubiquitin Ligase, Catalyzes the Polyubiquitination of Mcl-1 and Regulates Apoptosis
Q. Zhong
,
Wenhua Gao
,
Fenghe Du
,
Xiaodong Wang
Cell
2005
Corpus ID: 16656949
Highly Cited
2005
Highly Cited
2005
Assessment of the welfare of working horses, mules and donkeys, using health and behaviour parameters.
J. Pritchard
,
A. Lindberg
,
D. Main
,
H. Whay
Preventive Veterinary Medicine
2005
Corpus ID: 21928197
Highly Cited
2004
Highly Cited
2004
Environmental Sources of Prion Transmission in Mule Deer
Michael W. Miller
,
E. Williams
,
N. Hobbs
,
L. Wolfe
Emerging Infectious Diseases
2004
Corpus ID: 6735352
Whether transmission of the chronic wasting disease (CWD) prion among cervids requires direct interaction with infected animals…
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Highly Cited
2003
Highly Cited
2003
Data MULEs: modeling a three-tier architecture for sparse sensor networks
R. Shah
,
S. Roy
,
S. Jain
,
Waylon Brunette
Proceedings of the First IEEE International…
2003
Corpus ID: 179434
This paper presents and analyzes an architecture to collect sensor data in sparse sensor networks. Our approach exploits the…
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Highly Cited
2003
Highly Cited
2003
A Mule Cloned from Fetal Cells by Nuclear Transfer
G. L. Woods
,
K. White
,
+5 authors
Barry J. Pate
Science
2003
Corpus ID: 41512688
Nuclear transfer was used to produce a cloned mule, a sterile hybrid equine species. Mules result from breeding a male donkey…
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Highly Cited
2003
Highly Cited
2003
Prion disease: Horizontal prion transmission in mule deer
Michael W. Miller
,
E. Williams
Nature
2003
Corpus ID: 4408001
Epidemics of contagious prion diseases can be perpetuated by horizontal (animal to animal) and maternal (dam to offspring, before…
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Highly Cited
2000
Highly Cited
2000
Comparison of left ventricular ejection fraction and volumes in heart failure by echocardiography, radionuclide ventriculography and cardiovascular magnetic resonance; are they interchangeable?
N. Bellenger
,
M. Burgess
,
+4 authors
D. Pennell
European Heart Journal
2000
Corpus ID: 17520589
AIMS To prospectively compare the agreement of left ventricular volumes and ejection fraction by M-mode echocardiography (echo…
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Highly Cited
1999
Highly Cited
1999
Oral transmission and early lymphoid tropism of chronic wasting disease PrPres in mule deer fawns (Odocoileus hemionus).
C. Sigurdson
,
E. Williams
,
Michael W. Miller
,
T. Spraker
,
K. O'Rourke
,
E. Hoover
Journal of General Virology
1999
Corpus ID: 18769138
Mule deer fawns (Odocoileus hemionus) were inoculated orally with a brain homogenate prepared from mule deer with naturally…
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Highly Cited
1987
Highly Cited
1987
Role of Tannins in Defending Plants Against Ruminants: Reduction in Dry Matter Digestion?
C. Robbins
,
S. Mole
,
A. Hagerman
,
T. A. Hanley
Ecology
1987
Corpus ID: 19619030
Polyphenolic allelochemicals, such as tannins, are widely thought to reduce the digestibility of plants consumed by herbivores by…
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Highly Cited
1980
Highly Cited
1980
CHRONIC WASTING DISEASE OF CAPTIVE MULE DEER: A SPONGIFORM ENCEPHALOPATHY1
E. Williams
,
S. Young
Journal of Wildlife Diseases
1980
Corpus ID: 453351
In the past 12 years (1967–79) a syndrome we identify as chronic wasting disease has been observed in 53 mule deer (Odocoileus…
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