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  • Drosophila Fly Head is an outdoor 1988 sculpture by Wayne Chabre, installed on the University of Oregon campus in Eugene, Oregon, in the United States. The hammered copper sheet high-relief of a fly head measures approximately 3.5 feet (1.1 m) x 3 feet (0.91 m) x 2.5 feet (0.76 m). It was surveyed by the Smithsonian Institution's "Save Outdoor Sculpture!" program in March 1993, though its condition was undetermined.
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  • Drosophila Fly Head is an outdoor 1988 sculpture by Wayne Chabre, installed on the University of Oregon campus in Eugene, Oregon, in the United States.
  • This page introduces the fly, drosophila, as a developmental model organism. The small drosophila fruitfly has been used by genetisists for many years now and much is now...
  • Coloured scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of the head of a fruit fly, showing its large compound eyes (red, centre left and right) and mouthparts (lower centre).
  • 1). It's sequenced genome, fast replication cycle and easy handling makes Drosophila to a brilliant manipulative (genetic) model and tool to study a variety of...
  • Antennae (1 and 2 on the image): this is a pair of sensory elements on the head part of the fly.
  • Probably the most valuable recent progress comes from the fly Drosophila melanogaster: spontaneous responses of flying Drosophila to linearly polarized light...
  • The fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster has been extensively studied for over a century as a model organism for genetic investigations.
  • A gain-of-function mutation in head involution defective , Wrinkled, causes precocious cell death of wing epidermal cells in Drosophila.
  • In a dpp-null fly, so is never expressed in the anlage of the visual system, although expression in the SNS and head mesoderm is unchanged (Chang, 2001).
  • "We focused on the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster because it is of particular interest for research into the nervous system.
  • Reddish pigment cells are found in wild‐type Drosophila , excess blue light is absorbed by them; therefore, ambient light is not made the fly blind [ 13 ].
  • The Drosophila head should be highly detailed, with visible micro-computer and electronic components such as miniature circuits, LEDs...