Instructions:
Bushmeat is meat from wild animals hunted in Africa and Asia. The term has particularly been used to refer to meat from animals in West and Central Africa. Today the term is often used to refer to a wider range of countries and especially in reference to the hunting of endangered ape species. Bushmeat is commonly used for meat of terrestrial wild animals, killed for sustenance or commercial purposes throughout the humid tropics of the Americas, Asia, and Africa. Bushmeat hunting is common in many parts of the world where hunting of animals from the wild is performed. The bushmeat trade refers to the sale of any wild species, though Western sources tend to focus on the trade specifically involving great apes.The bushmeat trade is considered by some antiglobalization activists to be one of many ways in which globalization affects life on the planet, due to the lumber trade. There is no way to tell which lumber has been produced in a way that assists the hunting of apes, and which has not.
Sample #A62498: Marshbuck
Sample #B77342: Atherurus africanus
Sample #C79942: Anubis Baboon
Sample #C80217: African Elephant
Sample #C90034: Drill
Sample #D51210: Western Gorilla Lowland Gorilla
Sample #G34176: Preuss’s Monkey, Preuss's Guenon
Sample #G54358: Greater Cane Rat
Sample #H64991: West African Red Colobus, Bay Colobus, Western Red Colobus, Red Colobus
Sample #I38722: Peters' Duiker, Peter's Duiker
Sample #K28831: Jentink's Duiker
Sample #N51683: Eland
Conclusion:
I can't know what kind of the species is it when they are giving me a big meat. The only way that can make me know what kind of species is it is take the DNA of the meat that they give me and i will know the genome.
This helps me identify endangered or threatened species because when I test the DNA of the meat I can know what species they are. If that species are cow or the animals that allow then it will be ok, but if that species is not allow killing or hunting then I will call the police so they can
it lets us be able to identify the specie without directly looking at it. If you look at the muscle tissue of many animals, it will appear identical or very similar. However if you look at the DNA sequence between say an Elephant and a Pterodactyl, there will be an obvious difference between the two. Many endangered or threatened species are often over-exploited in the form of bushmeat. Their meats look similar and can be sold under many names. Baboon meat could be sold as "beef" and no one would realize it until perhaps cooking or consumption. Knowing genomes allows us to see if any threatened or endangered species are being sold thus allowing us to prevent the bushmeat trade.
Bushmeat is meat from wild animals hunted in Africa and Asia. The term has particularly been used to refer to meat from animals in West and Central Africa. Today the term is often used to refer to a wider range of countries and especially in reference to the hunting of endangered ape species. Bushmeat is commonly used for meat of terrestrial wild animals, killed for sustenance or commercial purposes throughout the humid tropics of the Americas, Asia, and Africa. Bushmeat hunting is common in many parts of the world where hunting of animals from the wild is performed. The bushmeat trade refers to the sale of any wild species, though Western sources tend to focus on the trade specifically involving great apes.The bushmeat trade is considered by some antiglobalization activists to be one of many ways in which globalization affects life on the planet, due to the lumber trade. There is no way to tell which lumber has been produced in a way that assists the hunting of apes, and which has not.
Sample #A62498: Marshbuck
Sample #B77342: Atherurus africanus
Sample #C79942: Anubis Baboon
Sample #C80217: African Elephant
Sample #C90034: Drill
Sample #D51210: Western Gorilla Lowland Gorilla
Sample #G34176: Preuss’s Monkey, Preuss's Guenon
Sample #G54358: Greater Cane Rat
Sample #H64991: West African Red Colobus, Bay Colobus, Western Red Colobus, Red Colobus
Sample #I38722: Peters' Duiker, Peter's Duiker
Sample #K28831: Jentink's Duiker
Sample #N51683: Eland
Conclusion:
I can't know what kind of the species is it when they are giving me a big meat. The only way that can make me know what kind of species is it is take the DNA of the meat that they give me and i will know the genome.
This helps me identify endangered or threatened species because when I test the DNA of the meat I can know what species they are. If that species are cow or the animals that allow then it will be ok, but if that species is not allow killing or hunting then I will call the police so they can
it lets us be able to identify the specie without directly looking at it. If you look at the muscle tissue of many animals, it will appear identical or very similar. However if you look at the DNA sequence between say an Elephant and a Pterodactyl, there will be an obvious difference between the two. Many endangered or threatened species are often over-exploited in the form of bushmeat. Their meats look similar and can be sold under many names. Baboon meat could be sold as "beef" and no one would realize it until perhaps cooking or consumption. Knowing genomes allows us to see if any threatened or endangered species are being sold thus allowing us to prevent the bushmeat trade.