288 results
Search Results
252. AN ECOLOGICAL STUDY OF THE HARE LEPUS AMERICANUS
- Author
-
J. Roger Bider
- Subjects
Ecology ,Range (biology) ,animal diseases ,Ecological study ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Vegetation ,Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
This paper deals with the ranges of hares in an area of the Quebec Laurentians which is characterized by a heterogeneity of vegetation structure. The vegetation structures are described, and the relation of the hares to this environment is shown in terms of utilization. Modifications of rates and areas of movements of the hares are correlated to physical and climatic factors. By expanding trap lines from main study areas, and by gang-trapping, social aspects of individuals are studied. Conclusions reached are: (a) vegetation structure plays an important role in determining the ranges of hares; (b) climatic and physical factors dampen or activate movements within the ranges; (c) female hares are consistent in their choice of browse and cover areas whereas males are not; (d) daily ranges of males and females in summer and winter are found to be about 4 acres; (e) modifications of daily ranges of hares are decreases when females care for young, and increases when males move from one female's range to another; (f) the total ranges of males is ultimately determined by the sum of the ranges of the female hares which they court.
- Published
- 1961
253. Variations in the foliar amino acid composition of flowering and non-flowering balsam fir (Abies balsamea (L.) Mill.) and white spruce (Picea glauca (Moench) Voss) in relation to outbreaks of the spruce budworm (Choristoneura fumiferana (Clem))
- Author
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J. P. Kimmins
- Subjects
Balsam ,biology ,fungi ,food and beverages ,Outbreak ,biology.organism_classification ,Choristoneura fumiferana ,White (mutation) ,Amino acid composition ,Botany ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Abies balsamea ,Spruce budworm - Abstract
The amino acids of new and old foliage of flowering and non-flowering balsam fir (Abies balsamea (L.) Mill.) and white spruce (Picea glauca (Moench) Voss) were investigated using two-dimensional descending paper chromatography. The data were analyzed for variation associated with age of foliage, age of tree, and flowering condition. The concentration of foliar amino acids was greater in balsam fir than in white spruce, and greater in new foliage than old foliage.The difference in concentration between foliage of flowering and non-flowering trees was smaller. However, the new foliage of flowering fir had higher levels of most of the amino acids examined than any other foliage category. This appears to reflect the known suitability of these foliage categories for spruce budworm larvae. While the data presented do not quantify the ecological significance of this apparent correlation, they do support the theory that variations in the nutritional quality of host plants play a very important role in the dynamics of herbivore populations.
- Published
- 1971
254. IN WHAT EMBRYONIC STAGE DO THE EGGS OF NEODIPRION ENTER THE WINTER DIAPAUSE?
- Author
-
Wolodymyr Brygider
- Subjects
Neodiprion ,Embryonic Structure ,Embryogenesis ,Botany ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Embryonic Stage ,Biology ,Diapause ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
This paper deals with the early embryonic development of Neodiprion banksianae Roh., N. nanulus Schedl., and N. sertifer Geoff., up to the initiation of winter diapause. Methods of preparation are described and the course of development is traced and described with the aid of two text-figures and two plates. The three species were found to enter diapause at approximately the same stage, but some differences in the details of their embryonic structure were discovered.
- Published
- 1952
255. The embryology of Lytta viridana Le Conte (Coleoptera: Meloidae). VII. Eighty-eight to 132 h: the appendages, the cephalic apodemes, and head segmentation
- Author
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N. S. Church and J. G. Rempel
- Subjects
Appendage ,Labrum ,biology ,Head segmentation ,Maxilla ,Embryology ,Coelom ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Anatomy ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Lytta ,Tentorium - Abstract
This study deals with segmentation and the segmental appendages in Lytta viridana from 88 to 132 h. The emphasis is on head segmentation. The first part of the paper describes the development of the appendages at 88, 120, and 132 h. The main changes involve the rotation of the mandibles through 120° in a posteromedian direction, which begins shortly before 88 h and is complete at 132 h, the fusion of the labial appendages at 120 h, and the movement of the labium forward in front of the maxillae at 132 h. Blastokinesis, which in this species is limited to the formation of a prominent secondary dorsal organ, occurs at 120 h. The second part describes the cephalic apodemes and tentorium at 88, 120, and 132 h. Cephalic apodemes appear in the labral, antennal, intercalary, mandibular, maxillary, and labial segments. Since the labrum arises from two appendage-like rudiments, possesses mesoderm that arises in situ and is provided with coelomic sacs, and has a pair of apodemes, it is considered to be appendicular. Hence the head is believed to consist of an acron and six metameres.
- Published
- 1971
256. The embryology of Lytta viridana Le Conte (Coleoptera: Meloidae). III. The structure of the chorion and micropyles
- Author
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J. G. Rempel, N. S. Church, R. G. Gerrity, and P. R. Sweeny
- Subjects
endocrine system ,urogenital system ,Zoology ,Morphology (biology) ,Anatomy ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,law.invention ,law ,Embryology ,embryonic structures ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Electron microscope ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Lytta - Abstract
This paper deals with the morphology of the chorion and associated structures in the egg of Lytta viridana as observed through the light microscope and the electron microscope. The chorion proper is a thin, single layer exhibiting a delicate banded pattern at high magnification. The micropyles are extremely complex protrusions of the chorion, having central cavities from which flap-like arms extend at various angles. These flaps exhibit the same banding pattern as the chorion, although the periodicity is more variable. Exterior to the chorion is found a frothy mucilaginous material which holds the eggs together in a clump after they are laid. Between the chorion and the vitelline membrane a thin layer of homogeneous material is found in laid eggs. The peculiar characteristics of these structures are compared with those of other insect eggs, and their significance in connection with water conservation, respiration, and sperm entry is discussed.
- Published
- 1968
257. THE STRUCTURE AND SECRETION OF THE SPERMATHECA OF RHODNIUS PROLIXUS STÅL: A HISTOCHEMICAL STUDY
- Author
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G. F. Webster and K. G. Davey
- Subjects
endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,biology ,urogenital system ,Lumen (anatomy) ,biology.organism_classification ,Cell biology ,Endocrinology ,Spermatheca ,Cytology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Secretion ,Mucoprotein ,Rhodnius prolixus ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
This paper presents a light microscope study of the cytology of the cells which secrete a substance into the lumen of the spermatheca of Rhodnius prolixus. On the basis of histochemical tests, the material in the lumen appears to be a mucoprotein or glycoprotein. It is suggested that the secretion provides a source of energy for the maintenance of the spermatozoa.
- Published
- 1967
258. Description of Gymnophallus somateriae (Levinsen, 1881) from Macoma inconspicua and diving ducks from Vancouver, Canada
- Author
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Hilda Lei Ching
- Subjects
Canada ,Macoma ,Lacunovermis ,Bird Diseases ,Ecology ,Host (biology) ,Meiogymnophallus ,Trematode Infections ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Bivalvia ,Gymnophallus ,Ducks ,parasitic diseases ,Animals ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Trematoda ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
In the same clam host, the metacercaria of Gymnophallus somateriae differs from those of Lacunovermis conspicuus and Meiogymnophallus multigemmulus in the body shape and spination; small, irregular vitellaria; and lyre-shaped excretory bladder. The adult from diving ducks differs from Levinsen's description in the shorter posterior range of the uterus and shorter length of the eggs. The fusiform body, sucker ratio, location of the ventral sucker in the posterior third of the body, and bipartite seminal vesicle with large distal portion and smaller proximal portion are characteristic of the species. G. somateriae of Odhner (1900, 1905) belongs to a new genus and new species because of the size and location of the genital pore and will be described in the next paper. G. gibberosus Loos-Frank, 1971 is closely related to G. somateriae but has a ventral sucker in the middle third of the body, a uterus only in the anterior half of the body, and a proximal seminal vesicle smaller in diameter than the ventral sucker.
- Published
- 1973
259. DISEASE IN CODLING MOTH LARVAE PRODUCED BY SEVERAL STRAINS OF BACILLUS CEREUS
- Author
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June M. Stephens
- Subjects
Larva ,animal structures ,biology ,Codling moth ,fungi ,Bacillus cereus ,Animal Science and Zoology ,sense organs ,biology.organism_classification ,Pathogenicity ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Microbiology - Abstract
This paper describes a bacteriological study of strains of Bacillus cereus Frankland and Frankland producing disease in codling moth larvae and an investigation of their pathogenicity. Strains of the bacterium were pathogenic to the codling moth by feeding or by injection.
- Published
- 1952
260. LABORATORY REARING STUDIES OF THE POSTCAPPING STAGES OF THE HONEY BEE (APIS MELLIFERA L.): I. REARING BROOD OUTSIDE CELLS
- Author
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S C Jay
- Subjects
Pupa ,Larva ,Honey Bees ,Ecology ,Research ,Animals ,Zoology ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Honey bee ,Bees ,Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Brood - Abstract
Honey bee studies would be facilitated and extended if a reliable method of rearing honey bees in the laboratory were devised. Most failures in development occur in the postcapping stages. Therefore, fully fed larvae or pupae of all three castes were removed from the comb and reared in the laboratory in various ways to ascertain if the precapping or postcapping techniques were at fault. Developmental failure was measured by an arbitrary "scale of success" in which the prepupal and preimaginal ecdyses were scored according to the distance the skin was shed.Routine handling of the postcapping stages with forceps does not appear to affect development, and exposure to room temperatures and humidities is damaging only to drone larvae and pupae. Hindgut intimae should not be removed by hand. Prepupae and pupae, in natural cells, had high ecdysal scores when held at 20–80% R.H. probably because water vapor loss is reduced by the cell cappings. However, outside the natural cell the postcapping stages can best be reared at 80% R.H. and pupae can also be reared at 60%. The best material on which to rear the bees is paper tissue or surgical gauze. Pupae also rear well in wax grooves or on surgical cotton wool. However, when no cell is used, several abnormalities in development occur.
- Published
- 1965
261. HYBRIDIZATION EXPERIMENTS IN ACHEILOGNATHINE FISHES (CYPRINIDAE, TELEOSTEI): THE HYBRIDS BETWEEN FEMALE ACHEILOGNATHUS LANCEOLATUS AND RHODEUS AMARUS AND MALE ACHEILOGNATHUS HIMANTEGUS
- Author
-
J. J. Duyvené de Wit
- Subjects
Teleostei ,biology ,Acheilognathus ,Ecology ,Cyprinidae ,Zoology ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Rhodeus ,Acheilognathus lanceolatus ,Subspecies ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Hybrid - Abstract
The presence of gametic compatibility on the subspecies, species, and generic level has been demonstrated in a number of bitterling species. In this paper the hybridization between Acheilognathus lanceolatus from Japan × Acheilognathus himantegus from Taiwan and Rhodeus amarus from Holland × A. himantegus has been reported. From both combinations, hybrids have been obtained with the aid of artificial insemination. They showed a male phenotype. Although bright nuptial colors were present in the spawning season, milt production by means of stripping was extremely small or absent. A diagram is presented showing the gametic compatibility between A. himantegus and three other allopatric bitterling species.
- Published
- 1962
262. THE EMBRYOLOGY OF LYTTA VIRIDANA LE CONTE (COLEOPTERA: MELOIDAE): I. MATURATION, FERTILIZATION, AND CLEAVAGE
- Author
-
N. S. Church and J. G. Rempel
- Subjects
food.ingredient ,Cell division ,Embryogenesis ,Vitelline membrane ,Anatomy ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Sperm ,Cell biology ,food ,Human fertilization ,Embryology ,Yolk ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Lytta - Abstract
This paper describes the embryonic development of Lytta viridana from oviposition to the formation of the blastema. The egg has the features commonly found in an insect egg. Bilateral symmetry is shown by the shape of the egg, variation in thickness of the vitelline membrane, and distribution of the yolk components. In the newly laid egg the vitelline membrane is porous. This is believed to be the first record of this phenomenon in insects. During cell division chromatin elimination occurs along the spindle to the equatorial plane. It is especially marked in the first meiotic division, but continues into late cleavage. During the first 4 hours the periplasm flows first forward to the cephalic region and then caudad along the central axis. The belief is expressed that this movement is associated with the prefusion movements of the sperm and fertilization. Fertilization occurs at about 3 hours. During the first 14 hours of development, marked morphogenetic movements of the deutoplasm occur.
- Published
- 1965
263. SOMATIC CHROMOSOMES OF HIGHER DIPTERA: II. DIFFERENTIATION OF SARCOPHAGID SPECIES
- Author
-
J. W. Boyes
- Subjects
Genetics ,Sarcophaga aldrichi ,Aculeata ,biology ,Somatic cell ,Sarcophaga ,Zoology ,Chromosome ,Animal Science and Zoology ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The somatic chromosome complements of nine sarcophagid species are described using methods presented in the first paper of this series. These species are Acridiophaga aculeata, Kellymyia kellyi, Protodexia australis, P. hunteri, Pseudosarcophaga affinis, Sarcophaga aldrichi, S. cooleyi, Sarcophaga "H", and S. reversa. P. affinis has 19 or 20 chromosomes whereas all the others have 12-chromosome complements most of which can be distinguished.
- Published
- 1953
264. THE RATE OF DIGESTION OF BLOOD IN MOSQUITOES. PRECIPITIN TEST STUDIES
- Author
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G. S. Eligh and A. S. West
- Subjects
Veterinary medicine ,Western equine encephalitis ,Transmission (medicine) ,fungi ,Culex restuans ,Aedes aegypti ,Biology ,Precipitin ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,parasitic diseases ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Digestion ,Disease transmission ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
This paper describes the use of the serological procedure known as the precipitin test to study the rate of digestion of host blood in mosquitoes. In the laboratory, at constant temperatures, precipitin reactions were obtained on blood meals of Aedes aegypti eight days after engorgement when the mosquitoes were held at 11 °C. but only one or two days after engorgement when the holding temperature was 27 °C. Field studies with A. hexodontus in northern Manitoba also showed that temperature has a strong influence on the rate of blood digestion. Pertinent literature is reviewed and the limitations of the precipitin test are discussed. Until now little attention has been devoted in Canada to possible disease transmission by mosquitoes. Increasing interest in mosquitoes as vectors of the encephalitides and proved transmission of western equine encephalitis by Culex restuans in Manitoba suggest the importance of further knowledge of mosquito physiology.
- Published
- 1952
265. THE PROTEIN AND LIPID CONSTITUTION OF GUINEA PIG MILK
- Author
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E. I. Bertok, A. L. Symes, and B. E. Baker
- Subjects
Guinea pig ,Cow milk ,Butterfat ,fluids and secretions ,Milk fat ,Casein ,food and beverages ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Composition (visual arts) ,Fatty acid composition ,Food science ,Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The fat component of guinea pig milk has been analyzed by gas liquid partition chromatography. Nine of the fatty acids present in butterfat were not detected in guinea pig milk fat. Paper electrophoretic analysis of the guinea ig milk casein showed that it contained a-casein (25.3%) and p-casein (48.1%! Previous work on the isoantigenicity and autoantigenicity of guinea pig milk (2) showed that this milk does not cross-react with cow milk under the conditions of the experiment which were employed. This observation has stimulated interest in the constitution of the protein components of guinea pig mill
- Published
- 1963
266. BEHAVIOR AND FUNCTION OF LYMPHOCYTES IN RELATION TO THEIR BASIC NUCLEAR UNITS
- Author
-
Vibeke E. Engelbert
- Subjects
medicine.anatomical_structure ,Organelle ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Nuclear membrane ,Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Function (biology) ,Cell biology - Abstract
This paper records a discovery of basic, partially independent nuclear units that lie within a common nuclear membrane of some vertebrate cells. The cells concerned are found in series from small (1–2 μ) to large (10–15 μ or more). The smallest cells possess one basic nuclear unit, the larger cells have several. The series of cells from small to large represent stages of a life cycle. Certain of the basic nuclear units act as reproductive organelles and certain large cells are parent cells producing new small cells thus closing one life cycle and starting another. The large cells are formed from the small cells through a series of fusions. The basic nuclear units behave similarly to micronuclei, the reproductive organelles in ciliates, but the fusions of the vertebrate cells are permanent, not temporary unions such as conjugation in ciliates.
- Published
- 1956
267. FREEZING AND MELTING POINTS OF INSECT TISSUES
- Author
-
R. W. Salt
- Subjects
Ice formation ,media_common.quotation_subject ,fungi ,Botany ,Melting point ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Insect ,Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,media_common - Abstract
The various tissues of two species of insects, one cold-hardy and the other not, were found to have melting points between −0.5° and −1.0° C. Because of this uniformity, the relationship between temperature and extent of ice formation, quantitatively worked out for blood of Loxoslege sliclicalis (L.) in a previous paper, may be considered representative of insect tissues in general, except possibly those of insects that withstand freezing.
- Published
- 1956
268. NEW SPECIES OF FORCIPOMYIA IN THE LASIOHELEA COMPLEX DESCRIBED IN ALL STAGES (DIPTERA, CERATOPOGONIDAE)
- Author
-
L. G. Saunders
- Subjects
food.ingredient ,food ,Ceratopogonidae ,biology ,Genus ,Forcipomyia ,Zoology ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Subgenus ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Lasiohelea - Abstract
Kieffer's genus Lasiohelea is now recognized as an association of subgenera of Forcipomyia having in common an elongated second radial cell in the wing. Tokunaga separated two of the component subgenera of this Lasiohelea complex, using adult characters. The present paper introduces the evidence of the early stages, adding six new species to the subgenus Lasiohelea, four to Neoforcipomyia, and one to Warmkea.
- Published
- 1964
269. EFFECTS OF GONADOTROPIC HORMONES ON MALE HYPOPHYSECTOMIZED LAKE CHUB, COUESIUS PLUMBEUS
- Author
-
Syed Nazar Ahsan
- Subjects
Male ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hypophysectomy ,biology ,Gonadotropic hormones ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Fishes ,Spermatocyte ,biology.organism_classification ,Spermatozoa ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Couesius plumbeus ,Internal medicine ,Gonadotropins, Pituitary ,Testis ,medicine ,Animals ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Gonadotropins pituitary ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
In lake chub, Couesius plumbeus, hypophysectomy causes marked regression in the testes, suppresses the mitotic ability of the spermatogonia, completely blocks their transformation into spermatocytes, and affects the normal secretory activity of the lobule boundary cells. Spermatogenesis is largely reinitiated and secretory activity of lobule boundary cells is restored by injections of a partially purified salmon pituitary extract, by mammalian luteinizing hormone, and by crude extracts of whole pituitary of salmon. The gonadotropin responsible for testicular maturation is similar to mammalian luteinizing hormone; a factor like mammalian follicle-stimulating hormone is probably not physiologically active in this fish. Although gonadotropin is primarily responsible for gonadal maturation, other factors such as thyrotropin and somatotropin probably have a stimulatory effect by acting synergistically with the gonadotropin. The paper presents details of a technique for hypophysectomy.
- Published
- 1966
270. FURTHER INVESTIGATIONS INTO THE CHEMICAL BASIS OF INSECT–HOST PLANT RELATIONSHIPS IN AN OLIGOPHAGOUS INSECT, PLUTELLA MACULIPENNIS (CURTIS) (LEPIDOPTERA: PLUTELLIDAE)
- Author
-
J. K. Nayar and A. J. Thorsteinson
- Subjects
Progoitrin ,Frass ,fungi ,Plutella ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Lepidoptera genitalia ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Sinigrin ,Plutellidae ,Botany ,Instar ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Palatability ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Samples of nine crystalline mustard oil glucosides including sinigrin were isolated from plant tissues of species in the families Cruciferae and Tropaeolaceae. The isolations were achieved by the use of column chromatography on neutral alumina, cellulose powder, activated carbon; by paper and thin-layer chromatography; and by crystallization from methanol–water mixtures.Feeding responses of fifth instar larvae of Plutella maculipennis (Curtis) were tested on agar–cellulose diets containing individual glucosides at various concentrations in the presence or absence of 0.1 M glucose. The amount of feeding was measured by counts of frass pellets produced by the larvae during the test period. All the above-mentioned glucosides were found to act as feeding stimulants for the larvae of P. maculipennis. However, the relative palatability of these glucosides at the same concentration (20 mg per 10 ml of water in the diet) was found to be in the following order: progoitrin > glucocheirolin = glucoconringiin = glucoerucin > glucotropaeolin = sinigrin = sinalbin > gluconasturtiin = gluconapin. Higher concentrations of the glucosides, gluconasturtiin, and gluconapin were toxic to the larvae.
- Published
- 1963
271. IDENTIFYING RECENT AND FOSSIL BARNACLES
- Author
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Ira E. Cornwall
- Subjects
Paleontology ,Shell (structure) ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biology ,Constant (mathematics) ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The study of the microstructure of the shells of sessile barnacles shows that in many of them there is a figure, or pattern, that is constant in both recent and fossil shells of the same species and this can be used in identification.It is quite easy to find the pattern in the shell and the method of doing it is fully described in this paper.
- Published
- 1958
272. An annotated checklist of the freshwater Tricladida of the Nearctic and Neotropical Regions
- Author
-
Ian R. Ball
- Subjects
Western hemisphere ,biology ,Ecology ,Nearctic ecozone ,Zoology ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Tricladida ,biology.organism_classification ,Turbellaria ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Checklist - Abstract
Sixty-three valid species of freshwater triclads (Platyhelminthes, Turbellaria), representing 16 genera, are listed from North and South America. Comments on nomenclatural problems or changes of taxonomic status are included when necessary. Worldwide distributional data are provided at the generic level, but at the specific level only the Western hemisphere is considered. The taxonomic status of four incompletely described species is also briefly discussed. A bibliography of 84 references directs users of the checklist to the most important recent papers dealing with the taxonomy and distribution of the individual species, and provides a key to the older literature. New records for Canada, involving nine species, are given preliminary mention.
- Published
- 1969
273. Parasitic protozoa from marine and euryhaline fish of Newfoundland and New Brunswick. I. Peritrichous ciliates
- Author
-
Marshall Laird and Jiří Lom
- Subjects
Trichodina ,biology ,Ecology ,Protozoa ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Euryhaline ,Flagellum ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Trichodina elizabethae n. sp. (which is commonly hyperparasitized by the suctorian Endosphaera engelmanni Entz), T. galyae n. sp., and T. domerguei (Wallengren) saintjohnsi n. subsp. are described from Newfoundland waters; the first two from the radiated shanny and lumpfish respectively, and the last from the mailed sculpin, lumpfish, and shorthorn sculpin. T. jarmilae n. sp. parasitizes the sea raven in the Bay of Fundy, New Brunswick. In both provinces, T. cottidarum Dogiel, sensu lato, occurs on shorthorn and longhorn sculpins. Two species of fish from brackish pools (the threespine stickleback in both areas; the mummichog in the Bay of Fundy) are often heavily parasitized by T. tenuidens Fauré-Fremiet. All the ciliates referred to were collected from the gills of their hosts, only two of which bore peritrichs other than trichodinids. One of these, Caliperia brevipes Laird, is found on the little skate in the Bay of Fundy and has been described elsewhere. The other, Scyphidia arctica Zhukov, is now reported from the longhorn sculpin in Newfoundland. Only five (16%) of 31 species of marine fish from Newfoundland bore trichodinids, as compared with nine (35%) of 26 from New Brunswick. However, four of the latter group had extremely light or sporadic infestations. Three of the rest, showing high incidence and heavy to extremely heavy infestations, were sculpins (Cottidae), as were three of the five Newfoundland hosts. Thus, while information is accumulating to suggest that marine fish trichodinids find optimum environmental conditions where mean seawater temperatures are not extreme (neither very warm nor very cold), certain fish are evidently more prone to infestation than others. This may well be due to varying ecological vulnerability to parasitization rather than to the operation of host specificity, an important question which, like that of environmental tolerances, merits early experimental attention. The paper includes a list of 61 species of Trichodina and the closely related Tripartiella and Trichodinella now known from marine and euryhaline fish, their validity being assessed on the basis of technique and the taxonomic criteria used.
- Published
- 1969
274. DNA–DNA hybridization in blackflies (Diptera: Simuliidae)
- Author
-
Ikuko Teshima
- Subjects
Genetics ,DNA–DNA hybridization ,Thermal transition ,Buoyant density ,Biology ,Homology (biology) ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Close relationship ,Botany ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Base sequence ,Incubation ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,DNA - Abstract
This paper is a study of base sequence relationships in blackflies by DNA–DNA hybridization. The species used are: Simulium venustum, S. tuberosum, S. vittatum, Cnephia dacotensis, and Prosimulium multidentatum. The midpoints of thermal transition and the buoyant density in CsCl were determined for the DNA of each species and the percent G + C estimated. With the filter method of hybrid formation, maximal yield was obtained at 60 °C; 24 h was found to be a practical length of time for incubation. When the amount of DNA on filter was varied, the homologous reaction reached a plateau at about 50% of the input radioactive DNA; the heterologous reaction reached a plateau at a lesser value in a species-dependent manner. The results indicate a close relationship between S. venustum and S. tuberosum, a more distant one between these species and S. vittatum, and an intermediate one with C. dacotensis. Prosimulium multidentatum shared very little homology with members of the other genera. A precise quantitative evaluation of the results is difficult owing to the complexity of interacting factors. Interpretation would be aided by knowledge of genome sizes and intragenome repetition frequencies. Appropriate studies are underway.
- Published
- 1972
275. THE MONONCHIDAE OF NIGERIA
- Author
-
R. H. Mulvey and H. J. Jensen
- Subjects
Ecology ,Zoology ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Natural enemies ,Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Predation ,Mononchidae - Abstract
This paper contains a taxonomic survey of nematodes belonging to the predaceous family Mononchidae, collected by Dr. Fields Caveness in western Nigeria during 1959–61. Four genera, new to science, Crassibucca, Hadronchus, Polyonchulus, and Prionchulellus, and 16 new species, Crassibucca penicula, C. macrocauda, C. microdonta, Hadronchus bisexualis, H. monohystera, Iotonchus acuticaudus, I. clarki, I. nigeriensts. I. parabasidontus, I. tarjani, Miconchus pararapax, M. thornei, Mylonchulus curvicaudus, Polyonchulus cobbi, P. megadontus, and Prionchulellus cavenessi are described and illustrated.Several already described species are also included. Iotonchus piracicabae (Lordello) and Mononchus (I.) piracicaboides Carvalho are placed in synonymy of I. trichurus (Cobb). Miconchus dadayi (Micoletzky) in Schneider, 1953 is considered a synonym of Miconchus pararapax n. sp. Miconchus dadayi (Micoletzky, 1914), (=Mononchus macrostoma of Daday, 1910) is regarded as species inquirenda. Mylonchulus hawaiiensis (Cassidy) is removed from synonymy, and Iotonchus similis (Cobb) is designated incertae sedis. Mylonchulus montanus (Thorne) is considered a synonym of Mylonchulus lacustris (Cobb). An illustrated taxonomic key to the 14 genera in the family Mononchidae is presented. Keys to most of the world species in these genera are also included.The value of the tuberculate and non-tuberculate valve as a generic character is discussed.
- Published
- 1967
276. THE DEVELOPMENT OF LIFE TABLES FOR THE SPRUCE BUDWORM
- Author
-
R. F. Morris and C. A. Miller
- Subjects
Hydrology ,Field data ,River watershed ,Forest management ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Column (database) ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Spruce budworm - Abstract
A method for preparing life tables is described and two examples are presented, based on field data from the Green River Watershed in northwestern New Brunswick. Column headings for age interval (x), survivorship (lx), deaths (dx), and death rate (qx) are adopted from human life tables. An additional column, dx factor, should be added to insect life tables so that the different mortality factors can be tabulated. Life tables for the spruce budworm are based on intensive population sampling on permanent plots, complemented by data on fecundity, natural and applied control factors, and dispersion. Techniques for these basic studies will be detailed in subsequent papers. Life tables for consecutive generations of the budworm in different forest types should provide fundamental information on the epidemiology of the species and on the possible reduction of damage through forest management and through direct control measures.
- Published
- 1954
277. Copulatory behaviour of Richardson's ground squirrels (Spermophilus richardsonii) in the wild
- Author
-
Lloyd S. Davis
- Subjects
Above ground ,Ecology ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Spermophilus richardsonii - Abstract
In this paper I give the first authenticated account of copulation occurring above ground in Richardson's ground squirrels. Copulation occurs in a dorso-ventral position with both animals lying on their sides, and is characterized by a high degree of agonism between the pair.
- Published
- 1982
278. Successful release of rehabilitated Merlins (Falco columbarius)
- Author
-
Ian G. Warkentin
- Subjects
Ulnar fractures ,Nest ,biology ,Zoology ,Animal Science and Zoology ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Falco columbarius - Abstract
Survival rates of released rehabilitated birds are rarely known. This paper describes the winter release of two Merlins (Falco columbarius), treated for ulnar fractures, in Saskatoon, Sask. Telemetry was used to maintain contact with one of these birds during the postrelease period, while the progress of the second was monitored through yearly nest surveys. Successful release is defined for Merlins as survival for at least 4 weeks. The first bird survived for 51 days, while the second lived at least 2 years and produced 10 young.
- Published
- 1986
279. Reply to Watson and Moss (1987)
- Author
-
A. T. Bergerud
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,Ecology ,Watson ,Rebuttal ,Population ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,education ,Moss ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Genealogy - Abstract
In our original paper (Bergerud, A. T., Mossop, D. H., and Myrberget, S. 1985. Can. J. Zool. 63: 2240–2248) we presented a precise diagram of two major hypotheses on the mechanics of change in ptarmigan numbers: H1, territorial limitations determine breeding numbers, and H2, breeding success determines breeding numbers. We accepted H2 based on a review of the literature and the reanalysis of 11 population studies. Watson and Moss (Watson, A., and Moss, R. 1987. Can. J. Zool. 65: 1043–1047) have not provided a rebuttal to H2 based on data or reanalysis; we believe their arguments are largely semantic. We have pointed out several weaknesses in their choice of study areas and study populations, the most serious being the problems of ingress and egress that confound an understanding of how reproductive and mortality rates change numbers. Further progress requires that they clarify their views; if they still believe in H1, they should state what they will accept as a valid disproof of their territorial model.
- Published
- 1987
280. Occurrence of threespine sticklebacks (Gasterosteus aculeatus) in the open North Pacific Ocean: migration or drift?
- Author
-
T. P. Quinn and J. T. Light
- Subjects
biology ,Ecology ,Fish species ,Stickleback ,Pelagic zone ,Gasterosteus ,biology.organism_classification ,Pacific ocean ,Geographic distribution ,Fishery ,Trout ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Salmo ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
This paper documents the occurrence of a small fish species, the threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus), in the open North Pacific Ocean. Sticklebacks were incidentally caught in 77 of 4138 (1.86%) purse seine sets for Pacific salmon and were found in the stomachs of 31 of 639 (4.85%) steelhead trout (Salmo gairdneri) caught on the high seas. If destined to reproduce, these pelagic sticklebacks would be an exception to the general rule that long distance migration is undertaken only by large fish species, but it is also possible that they were isolated from breeding populations.
- Published
- 1989
281. Inventaire préliminaire d'acariens (Acari : Hydryphantidae et Arrenuridae) ectoparasites de moustiques (Diptera : Culicidae) du lac Boivin, Granby, Québec
- Author
-
D. J. Leprince
- Subjects
Aedes ,biology ,Culex ,Ecology ,Anopheles ,Animal Science and Zoology ,biology.organism_classification ,Mansonia ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
In 1977, more than 11 000 mosquitoes were collected at Boivin Lake, Granby, and examined for ectoparasitic water mites. Mosquitoes of the genera Aedes, Anopheles, Culex, and Mansonia were parasitized by water mites of the families Hydryphantidae and (or) Arrenuridae. There are 11 new host records presented in this paper. Mosquitoes were found parasitized by two different species of mites on six occasions.
- Published
- 1981
282. A critique of the concept of genetic assimilation as a mechanism in the evolution of the terrestrial talitrids (amphipoda)
- Author
-
Kelvin W. Duncan
- Subjects
Amphipoda ,biology ,Mechanism (biology) ,Ecology ,Talitridae ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biological evolution ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Genetic assimilation - Abstract
This note is a critique of Matsuda's 1982 paper (R. Matsuda. 1982. Can. J. Zool. 60: 733–749) in which he discussed the mechanisms involved in the evolution of the terrestrial Talitridae or landhoppers.
- Published
- 1985
283. The occurrence of a pair of exocrine glands in the mesothorax of Lytta nuttalli Say (Coleoptera: Meloidae)
- Author
-
Anne Morgan
- Subjects
Larva ,Cantharidin ,Exocrine gland ,Anatomy ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Lytta nuttalli ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Mesothorax ,medicine ,Thorax (insect anatomy) ,Pheromone ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Lytta - Abstract
This paper describes a pair of convoluted structures tying on either side of the digestive tract in the mesothorax of Lytta nuttalli Say. They are absent in all the larval stages, but in both sexes of the adults they are equally well developed. They are also found in Lytta viridana LeConte. Each structure has two distal branches ending blindly in the thorax and a short proximal portion leading to an external opening via a prominent reservoir. Histologically they are typically glandular in appearance and show definite indications of secretory activity. They are not thought to secrete either saliva or cantharidin, but rather to produce a pheromone which mediates the formation of protective aggregations of the insects. This type of gland is not known to occur in any other family of insects.
- Published
- 1968
284. Shell dropping by Northwestern Crows: a reexamination of an optimal foraging study
- Author
-
J. E. Paloheimo, R. C. Plowright, and G. A. Fuller
- Subjects
Fishery ,Ecology ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Optimal foraging theory - Abstract
The report by Zach (Zach, R. 1979. Behaviour, 68: 106–117) that Northwestern Crows (Corvus caurinus), when breaking whelks, drop the shells from an optimal height is reexamined. The currency used by Zach is arguably inappropriate because of the significant handling costs incurred by the birds in the shell-breaking process. As the birds ascend to a lower height than is predicted by any of the optimality models examined in this paper, it is suggested that their behaviour should not be cited as an example of the successful application of optimal foraging theory.
- Published
- 1989
285. Duncan's critique of Matsuda
- Author
-
Roy Douglas Pearson
- Subjects
Ecology ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biological evolution ,Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Genetic assimilation ,Epistemology - Abstract
Although Duncan (K. W. Duncan. 1985. Can. J. Zool. 63: 2230–2232) holds, "there can be little point in taking Matsuda's thesis seriously," this author argues that some of the ideas found in Matsuda's paper (R. Matsuda. 1982. Can. J. Zool. 60: 733–749) are actually a refinement of Waddington's notion of "genetic assimilation" by means of "canalization." The latter term implies not only the rigidity of the genotype but also its flexibility; it was this quality, plasticity, that Matsuda laboured to examine but that Duncan failed to appreciate.
- Published
- 1985
286. Parental investment: the problem of currency
- Author
-
Richard W. Knapton
- Subjects
Offspring ,Currency ,Sexual selection ,Energy (esotericism) ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Monetary economics ,Risk factor (computing) ,Biology ,Parental investment ,Investment (macroeconomics) ,health care economics and organizations ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Evolutionary thinking of sexual strategies has been shaped by a stimulating paper by R. L. Trivers on parental investment and sexual selection. However, there is a major problem in the practical application of the concept of parental investment to those systems in which both males and females offer a substantial amount of parental investment in each offspring, but where the investment of each parent takes different forms. Quantifiable measures (i.e., currency) of the investments of each parent can be of different units (in terms of time, energy, and a risk factor) and hence not additive, and thus one cannot predict who will be the choosier sex.
- Published
- 1984
287. NEMATODE PARASITES FROM VERTEBRATES TAKEN ON LAN YÜ, FORMOSA: II. NEMATODES FROM FISH, AMPHIBIANS, REPTILES, BIRDS
- Author
-
Betty June Myers and Robert E. Kuntz
- Subjects
Nematode ,Ecology ,%22">Fish ,Helminths ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Aquatic organisms - Abstract
This paper records seven species of nematodes, none of which are new, and a number of immature forms from Lan Yü, Formosa.
- Published
- 1962
288. Molecular studies of animal systems/Études au niveau moléculaire des systèmes animaux: Introduction
- Author
-
J. J. Pasternak
- Subjects
Molecular level ,Ecology ,Research strategies ,Library science ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The 26th annual meeting of the Canadian Society of Zoologists, held in May 1987, included a symposium entitled Molecular Studies of Animal Systems. Certainly, a recent and pervasive research thrust in the study of animals has been the accessibility of molecular biology techniques to complement existing research strategies. In organizing this session, Dr. Marilyn Scott had two major objectives: first, to demonstrate how studies at the molecular level facilitate an understanding of the biology of animals and second, to use examples of research programmes that would be of interest to zoologists, in particular those concerned with insect and fish physiology, parasitology, and evolutionary biology. An attempt was made to provide some breadth without being too divergent. The specific research topics derived from the original lectures and included in this issue of the Canadian Journal of Zoology describe and discuss (i) molecular commonality of cuticular and genomic structures between a free-living nematode and a parasitic one, (ii) regulation of vitellogenesis in the locust, and (iii) characterization at the molecular level of fish antifreeze proteins. These papers illustrate how various molecular biology methodologies can be used to resolve problems of biological interest.
- Published
- 1988
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