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Discover LudwigThe phrase "one offspring" is grammatically correct and commonly used in written English.
It specifically refers to a single young animal or child that is produced or born from parents. Example: The gorilla gave birth to one offspring, a healthy baby boy, at the zoo yesterday.
Exact(60)
But the infant's parent may not benefit, in an evolutionary sense, from lavishing so much attention on one offspring.
Pedigree analysis revealed that the minimum number of sires per dam was one, resulting in one offspring (dead on day 7) produced from that pair.
The sample unit consists of two parents and one offspring yielding information on four genomes (two per parent).
By 1990, tortoise nests were observed on Española Island, and at least one offspring was documented by us in 1994.
The authorities said a second herd of cows in Washington that includes one offspring of the diseased Holstein was quarantined on Wednesday.
For class (5), there had to be more than one offspring with a nonmissing genotype, and when the classification was based on the absence of heterozygotes, there had to be more than one offspring with each homozygote genotype.
In most species, females give birth to only one offspring per year.
We randomly selected one offspring representing each inferred mother for further analyses.
They generally have just one offspring or twins, and invest much more in parenting.
Pangolins produce only one offspring a year, not enough to replace the population being lost to poachers.
It takes two adults, working all hours, to support one offspring down the unsteady road from diapers to gainful employment.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com