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María José Chapela

Researcher at Spanish National Research Council

Publications -  6
Citations -  406

María José Chapela is an academic researcher from Spanish National Research Council. The author has contributed to research in topics: Restriction fragment length polymorphism & Hake. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 6 publications receiving 376 citations. Previous affiliations of María José Chapela include University of Santiago de Compostela.

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Towards sustainable and efficient use of fishery resources: present and future trends

TL;DR: In this article, the present utilization of discards and fishery wastage and also the future trends and the expected future of fishery industry are presented, as well as the future trend and expected future future of industry.
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Comparison of DNA extraction methods from muscle of canned tuna for species identification

TL;DR: Results show that DNA extraction from canned tuna preserved in different liquid media could be optimized employing a specific DNA extraction method in each case.
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Identification of Hake species (Merluccius Genus) using sequencing and PCR-RFLP analysis of mitochondrial DNA control region sequences.

TL;DR: In this paper, a short fragment of the left hypervariable domain of the mitochondrial control region was amplified, sequenced, and digested from 11 hake species to identify species belonging to the Merluccius genus.
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Identification of cephalopod species (Ommastrephidae and Loliginidae) in seafood products by forensically informative nucleotide sequencing (FINS)

TL;DR: An identification technique of commercially important cephalopods based on 16s RNA analysis was developed, with sequences employed for species identification showing that FINS is a suitable technique for identification of processed cepHalopods.
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Molecular identification of cephalopod species by FINS and PCR-RFLP of a cytochrome b gene fragment

TL;DR: Two different molecular techniques, FINS and PCR-RFLP, were developed to identify 8 cephalopod species employing a fragment of the cytochrome b gene, using specific DNA restriction patterns for species identification.