5 results on '"Bashinskiy IV"'
Search Results
2. Strigea robusta (Digenea: Strigeidae) infection effects on the gonadal structure and limb malformation in toad early development.
- Author
-
Svinin AO, Matushkina KA, Dedukh DV, Bashinskiy IV, Ermakov OA, and Litvinchuk SN
- Subjects
- Animals, Anura parasitology, Gonads parasitology, Gonads pathology, Larva parasitology, Polydactyly parasitology, Bufonidae parasitology, Trematoda physiology, Trematode Infections veterinary
- Abstract
The anomaly P is a mass morphological anomaly reported in some water frog populations across Europe. It was found that polydactyly is only a mild attenuated form of heavy cases of the anomaly P syndrome, which have strong deformations of the hindlimbs and, partly, forelimbs. It was shown that the anomaly P is caused by the trematode Strigea robusta and this syndrome can be considered as a special case of strigeosis in amphibians. The anomaly P for a long time considered to be specific for water frogs of the genus Pelophylax. Herein, we describe polydactyly and heavy forms of the anomaly P syndrome in toads of the genera Bufo and Bufotes, as a result of exposure to S. robusta cercariae. A total of 150 tadpoles of Bufo bufo, 60 tadpoles of Bufotes viridis, and 60 tadpoles of Bufotes baturae were divided into five experimental and four control groups (30 tadpoles in each group). All anomalies in the toads were similar to those observed in water frogs. The survival of tadpoles in the experimental groups was 76%. The anomaly P was observed in 57.9% of toad tadpoles (51.8% of mild forms and 6.1% of heavy forms). The occurrence of the anomaly P varied among groups from 19% to 78%. Heavy forms of the anomaly P were found in all experimental groups. We described rare asymmetrical cases of the anomaly P. According to severe modification of limb morphology, we supposed changes of gonadal morphology (any modifications of the germ and somatic cells). The gonadal development of infected tadpoles was however the same as in uninfected toad tadpoles, and heterochromatin distribution within gonocytes had no differences as well. It seems like the parasite doesn't have any effect on the gonadal development of the toads. The lack of heavy forms in natural populations of toads, as well as a development of gonads were discussed., (© 2022 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Strigea robusta causes polydactyly and severe forms of Rostand's anomaly P in water frogs.
- Author
-
Svinin AO, Bashinskiy IV, Litvinchuk SN, Ermakov OA, Ivanov AY, Neymark LA, Vedernikov AA, Osipov VV, Drobot GP, and Dubois A
- Subjects
- Animals, Forelimb abnormalities, Forelimb parasitology, Gastropoda parasitology, Genes, Helminth, Larva growth & development, Larva parasitology, Life Cycle Stages, Pathology, Molecular, Toes abnormalities, Toes parasitology, Polydactyly parasitology, Ranidae parasitology, Trematoda genetics, Trematoda pathogenicity, Trematoda physiology
- Abstract
Background: Cases of polydactyly in natural populations of amphibians have attracted great interest from biologists. At the end of the 1940s, the French biologist Jean Rostand discovered a polymorphic syndrome in some water frog (Anura: Pelophylax) populations that included polydactyly and some severe morphological anomalies (he called it 'anomaly P'). The cause of this anomaly remains unknown for 70 years. In a previous study, we obtained anomaly P in the laboratory in tadpoles of water frogs that developed together with molluscs Planorbarius corneus (Mollusca: Gastropoda) collected in the field. We thus proposed the 'trematode hypothesis', according to which the infectious agent responsible for anomaly P is a trematode species., Methods: Metacercariae from tadpoles with anomaly P were identified using ITS2 gene sequencing as Strigea robusta (Trematoda: Strigeidae). To verify teratogenic features of the species, cercariae of S. robusta were tested for the possibility to cause anomalies. Identification of cercariae species was made using morphological and molecular methods (sequencing of ITS2 and 28S rRNA). The tadpoles were exposed to parasites at four doses of cercariae (control, low, medium and high) and divided into two groups: "early" (at 25-27 Gosner stages) and "late" (at 29-34 Gosner stages) exposure., Results: A total of 58 (72.5%) tadpoles survived until metamorphosis under the dose-dependent experiment with the trematode S. robusta. Differences in the survival rates were observed between the exposed and unexposed tadpoles both in the group of "early" tadpoles and "late" tadpoles. The exposure of tadpoles to the cercariae of S. robusta induced anomaly P in 82% of surviving tadpoles. The severe forms developed only in "early" stages under all doses of cercariae exposure. Polydactyly predominantly developed in the "late" stages; under a light exposure dose, polydactyly also developed in "early" tadpoles. Laboratory-hatched tadpoles reared together with infected snails had different rates of survival and complexity of deformations associated with the period of coexistence., Conclusions: The experiments with direct cercariae exposure provide compelling evidence that S. robusta leads to anomaly P in tadpoles of water frogs. The manifestation of anomaly P turned out to be dependent on the stage of development, cercariae dose, and the location of the cysts.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Electrofishing method improves evaluation of amphibian larvae abundance: a case of "beaver rivers".
- Author
-
Dgebuadze YY and Bashinskiy IV
- Subjects
- Animals, Environmental Monitoring, Larva, Rodentia, Russia, Amphibians, Rivers
- Abstract
There are many locations in Russia where Eurasian beaver (Castor fiber) populations have been restored. As a keystone species, beavers provide wide-ranging direct and indirect impacts on aquatic ecosystems. In particular, beaver-created ponds are sites for spawning and nursery places for tadpoles of the brown frogs (genus Rana). Because of such impacts, study techniques for assessing aquatic organism abundance are being developed. We compared two methods for estimating tadpole abundance: traditional catches by dipnet and electrofishing. Our results show that the dipnet catch data for the shallower ponds with larger water surface area were five times lower than that obtained by electrofishing. Therefore, we conclude that dipnet catches are not suitable for comparing the relative abundance of tadpoles in the two beaver ponds that were studied., (© 2016 International Society of Zoological Sciences, Institute of Zoology/Chinese Academy of Sciences and John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Analysis of fatty acid composition revealed differences in the diets of tadpoles of two amphibian species.
- Author
-
Dgebuadze YY, Sushchik NN, Bashinskiy IV, Makhutova ON, Kalacheva GS, Osipov VV, and Gladyshev MI
- Subjects
- Animals, Ecosystem, Larva metabolism, Larva physiology, Ranidae classification, Ranidae growth & development, Species Specificity, Diet, Fatty Acids metabolism, Feeding Behavior, Ranidae physiology
- Abstract
The study of the composition of fatty acid markers of tadpoles of cohabiting amphibian species for the first time revealed differences in their diets: the moor frog Rana arvalis prefers bacteria not associated with plant detritus, whereas the diet of the common spadefoot Pelobates fuscus is based on cyanobacteria, green algae, diatoms, and possibly higher plants. Major differences in the fatty acid composition are determined by the difference in the percentage of eicosapentaenoic and myristic acids.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.