Sarcophilus harrisii 76_7.0

Taxonomy: Eukaryota; Opisthokonta; Metazoa; Eumetazoa; Bilateria; Deuterostomia; Chordata; Craniata; Vertebrata; Gnathostomata; Teleostomi; Euteleostomi; Sarcopterygii; Tetrapoda; Amniota; Mammalia; Theria; Metatheria; Dasyuromorphia; Dasyuridae; Sarcophilus

Source: Ensembl

Compared to

PQI Score
User Score

Voting

Click on the stars to rate this proteome.

The Tasmanian devil (Sarcophilus harrisii) (palawa kani: purinina) is a carnivorous marsupial of the family Dasyuridae. It was formerly present across mainland Australia, but became extinct there around 3,500 years ago. The size of a small dog, the Tasmanian devil became the largest carnivorous marsupial in the world following the extinction of the thylacine in 1936. It is related to quolls, and distantly related to the thylacine. It is characterised by its stocky and muscular build, black fur, pungent odour, extremely loud and disturbing screech, keen sense of smell, and ferocity when feeding. The Tasmanian devil's large head and neck allow it to generate among the strongest bites per unit body mass of any extant predatory land mammal. It hunts prey and scavenges on carrion.

Show in SUPERFAMILY Download sequences for this proteome

Proteome Quality Index Information

Scoring Method Raw Score Metric Rating
X content 0.0261 0.026138 0.622041
CEG Domain Combination Homology 0.4936 0.493559 0.577838
Percent of Sequences covered 44.0000 0.610696 0.750960
Number of Superfamilies 1070.0000 0.412761 0.860952
Average Sequence Length 534.0000 0.159797 0.939142
Average hit length 327.0000 0.717077 0.691666
Number of Families 1257.0000 0.199027 0.939150
Number of Unique Architectures 4723.0000 0.311759 0.898988
Percent with Assignment 72.0000 0.448841 0.812595
Percent of sequences in Uniprot 100.0000 100.000000 1.000000
DOGMA 88.8600 88.860000 0.760020

comments powered by Disqus