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The phrase "a much larger effective" is not correct as it is incomplete and lacks context.
It could be used in a context where you are comparing effectiveness, but it needs additional information to be clear.
Example: "The new strategy proved to be a much larger effective solution than the previous one."
Alternatives: "a significantly greater impact" or "a far more effective".
Exact(1)
The observed phenotypic diversity in chicken is much larger than that of turkey, [ 26, 27] most likely reflecting a much larger effective population size of chicken, before specialized commercial populations were established during the twentieth century.
Similar(59)
In contrast, CERV-K experienced an apparently flat dynamic after a significantly (around ten-fold) higher growth in numbers up until 15 MYBP, and had very much larger effective population sizes than the other two species.
The control lines experienced much larger effective population size than the MA lines.
To evaluate another recent assembler, SparseAssembler [ 12], the authors assembled another dataset (NA12878), using much larger effective k values.
In contrast, in species with much larger effective population sizes, such as mouse or fruit fly, the estimated α values are typically 40 60% [ 5].
The higher diversity in Tibetan is largely due to the much larger effective population size of D-M174 in Tibetan compared with other populations.
The much larger effective population size in Z. mays as compared with luxurians (Ross-Ibarra et al. 2009) would translate to higher efficacy of removal of slightly deleterious mutations (such as TE insertions) in Z. mays.
Therefore, we propose that much larger effective population sizes are the primary factor responsible for the similarity of the Atlantic and Pacific sub-populations of skipjack and yellowfin tuna.
This is in agreement with the general observation that gene expression is more tightly regulated in unicellular compared to multicellular organisms, for evolutionary reasons, such as the much larger effective population size and stronger energetic constraints in small organisms [ 15, 16].
These breeds may not be the ideal comparison for the DT40 cell line derived from a commercial layer breed with a much larger likely effective population size.
Yet, it could be noted that Eőry et al. (2010) found constraint at 4-fold degenerate sites to be lower in murids than in hominids, despite the much large effective population sizes of the former than of the latter.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com