Anonymous ID: a76f5d Aug. 7, 2021, 11:20 a.m. No.14291805   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1827

>>14290068

if you look at a lost dog regristry, you will see that a good number of dogs are beagles.

 

we have had beagles, and they do like to take off and follow their nose.

But , how did fauchi get his hands on so many beagles?

Anonymous ID: a76f5d Aug. 7, 2021, 11:31 a.m. No.14291875   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://research.nhgri.nih.gov/dog_genome/

 

 

The NHGRI Dog Genome Project

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The NHGRI Dog Genome Project is run by Elaine Ostrander's Laboratory at NIH and focuses on the genetics of health and body structure in the domestic dog. We are particularly interested in the variation represented in individual dog breeds, which allows us to focus on locating genes involved in both canine cancer and the morphologic traits. Our research yields not only an understanding of how genes interact to create the modern dog breeds we see today and how we can keep our four-legged friends happy and healthy, but also insight into the health and disease of their two-legged caregivers.

 

Because of the breed structure, dogs display extensive variation in nearly all traits from size to coat color to behavior. There are giant and toy breeds; breeds with curly coats and those with straight coats; breeds with short snouts and those with longer snouts. Did you know overall body size varies forty-fold between large and little breeds? Modern dog breeds offer a great opportunity to understand the genetic basis of body plans and size in mammals.

 

In addition to differences in physical traits, breeds vary in disease risk. More than 350 inherited diseases have been described in domestic dogs, many of which predominate in a single breed or a small group of breeds. The NHGRI Dog Genome Project is working to find DNA variants that are associated with disease to help reduce their occurrence in affected breeds. Since many diseases in dogs are similar to disorders in humans, our findings will likely provide insight and new avenues of research for human health as well.

 

Would you like to interact with researchers at the NHGRI Dog Genome Project? We are always interested in the voluntary submission of DNA samples from all types of dogs as we have multiple studies underway at all times. We suggest you start by clicking through the material on this site and visiting our Facebook page.

 

You also can see our most recent publications, learn about events and/or dog shows we're attending, see research study plans, or ask questions to the experts in the lab.

Anonymous ID: a76f5d Aug. 7, 2021, 11:34 a.m. No.14291890   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://www.newsweek.com/anthony-fauci-vaccine-experiments-beagle-dog-research-university-georgia-1616987

 

University Defends Vaccine Tests on Dogs After Dr. Fauci and NIH Blasted With Criticism

BY BRENDAN COLE ON 8/6/21

 

Auniversity has defended its research that has been criticized by a group opposing taxpayer-funded animal testing.

 

The White Coat Waste Project said documents it obtained showed the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) had directed $424,455 to the University of Georgia in September 2020 to infect 28 beagles with disease-causing parasites.

 

The group's criticism centred on NIAID and its director Dr. Anthony Fauci. The group told Newsweek it didn't know if Fauci had personally ordered the experiment, but said that "it was ordered by his NIH (National Institutes of Health) division."

 

Documents that White Coat Waste obtained under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), also reviewed by the right-wing news outlet The Daily Caller, found that the animals were to be allowed to develop infections for three months and that then they would be euthanized for blood collection.