• Population Control Method: High Doses of Pesticides
    6 replies, posted
Researchers at North Carolina State University studied the effects of exposure to an insecticide called pyriproxyfen. The exposure resulted in a heightened production of male offspring, and subsequently less female. Polygamy practitioners, I suggest you start consuming organic foods as soon as possible. [QUOTE]The researchers have now found that the hormone binds with a protein receptor called the Mf receptor, which can regulate gene transcription and appears to be tied to the production of male offspring.[/QUOTE] [URL="http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/04/130422111238.htm"]http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/04/130422111238.htm[/URL]
Women have cooties.
[img]http://images.sciencedaily.com/2013/04/130422111238.jpg[/img] Well done, you didn't even specify the animal.
I wonder... maybe this is what is affecting all the bees?
[QUOTE=Phaselancer;40382320]I wonder... maybe this is what is affecting all the bees?[/QUOTE] Shhh, bees are supposed to dissapear. Don't remember them.
[QUOTE=Zenreon117;40382346]Shhh, bees are supposed to dissapear. Don't remember them.[/QUOTE] I saw a bee once. It was kind of like that time I looked at an apple and it was red. I mean, I know apples are red, but it was actually red. Like, red red.
May explain why there's usually a 55/45 split for males and females respectively among humans, if it transfers over in a similar manner.
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