1,351 results on '"animal taxonomy"'
Search Results
2. Conceptual shifts in animal systematics as reflected in the taxonomic history of a common aquatic snail species (Lymnaea stagnalis)
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Vinarski, Maxim V. and Pensoft Publishers
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animal taxonomy ,great pond snail ,Historia naturalis ,historical development ,Lymnaea stagnalis ,Malacology ,Species - Published
- 2015
3. Remote perspectives: Capturing the perfect shot sometimes means not having the camera operator present. Luckily, advances in camera traps and drone technology are making remote photography more and more viable, says Keith Wilson
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Wilson, Keith
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Photographic equipment -- Innovations ,Photography -- Technology application ,Animal taxonomy ,Scientists ,Technology ,Insects ,Astronomy ,Photographers ,Technology application ,Geography - Abstract
Our planet has been explored, surveyed and photographed to such an extent that it seems difficult to comprehend that new species of flora and fauna continue to be found every [...]
- Published
- 2020
4. AVIAN ARTIST: Painter Jane Kim's monumental murals help people connect with nature
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Grumbaum, Mara
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Animal taxonomy ,Mural painting ,Painters (Artists) ,Birds ,Artists ,Education ,Science and technology - Abstract
What shape are a robin's tail feathers? What precise shade of blue is the gleam in a pelican's eye? Questions like these are what Jane Kim ponders while she works. [...]
- Published
- 2019
5. New records for the Peruvian high-altitude diving beetle Rhantus blancasi Guignot, 1955 (Coleoptera, Dytiscidae, Colymbetinae)
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Balke, Michael, Suarez-Megna, Yoandri, Hendrich, Lars, Zenteno, Nilver, and Figueroa, Luis
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- 2019
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6. Geographic distribution of Phalloceros Eigenmann, 1907 (Cyprinodontiformes, Poeciliidae) in the Ilha Grande Bay Hydrographic Region, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
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Souto-Santos, Igor Cavalcanti de Araujo, Ferraro, Gustavo Andres, Jennings, William Bryan, Vergara, Gabriela Lucia da Silva, and Buckup, Paulo Andreas
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- 2019
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7. An inverse latitudinal gradient in speciation rate for marine fishes
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Rabosky, Daniel L., Chang, Jonathan, Title, Pascal O., Cowman, Peter F., Sallan, Lauren, Friedman, Matt, and Kaschner, Kristin
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Fishes -- Genetic aspects ,Phylogeny -- Analysis ,Speciation -- Research ,Oceans ,Resveratrol ,Animal taxonomy ,Environmental issues ,Science and technology ,Zoology and wildlife conservation - Abstract
Far more species of organisms are found in the tropics than in temperate and polar regions, but the evolutionary and ecological causes of this pattern remain controversial.sup.1,2. Tropical marine fish communities are much more diverse than cold-water fish communities found at higher latitudes.sup.3,4, and several explanations for this latitudinal diversity gradient propose that warm reef environments serve as evolutionary 'hotspots' for species formation.sup.5-8. Here we test the relationship between latitude, species richness and speciation rate across marine fishes. We assembled a time-calibrated phylogeny of all ray-finned fishes (31,526 tips, of which 11,638 had genetic data) and used this framework to describe the spatial dynamics of speciation in the marine realm. We show that the fastest rates of speciation occur in species-poor regions outside the tropics, and that high-latitude fish lineages form new species at much faster rates than their tropical counterparts. High rates of speciation occur in geographical regions that are characterized by low surface temperatures and high endemism. Our results reject a broad class of mechanisms under which the tropics serve as an evolutionary cradle for marine fish diversity and raise new questions about why the coldest oceans on Earth are present-day hotspots of species formation.Contrary to previous hypotheses, high-latitude fish lineages form new species at much faster rates than their tropical counterparts especially in geographical regions that are characterized by low surface temperatures and high endemism., Author(s): Daniel L. Rabosky [sup.1] , Jonathan Chang [sup.2] , Pascal O. Title [sup.1] , Peter F. Cowman [sup.3] [sup.4] , Lauren Sallan [sup.5] , Matt Friedman [sup.6] , Kristin [...]
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- 2018
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8. Does MHC heterozygosity influence microbiota form and function?
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Khan, M. A. Wadud, Stephens, W. Zac, Mohammed, Ahmed Dawood, Round, June Louise, and Kubinak, Jason Lee
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COMPLEMENT receptors , *MAJOR histocompatibility complex , *HETEROZYGOSITY , *HOMOZYGOSITY , *CYTOLOGY , *ANIMAL classification , *MULTICELLULAR organisms - Abstract
MHC molecules are essential for the adaptive immune response, and they are the most polymorphic genetic loci in vertebrates. Extreme genetic variation at these loci is paradoxical given their central importance to host health. Classic models of MHC gene evolution center on antagonistic host-pathogen interactions to promote gene diversification and allelic diversity in host populations. However, all multicellular organisms are persistently colonized by their microbiota that perform essential metabolic functions for their host and protect from infection. Here, we provide data to support the hypothesis that MHC heterozygote advantage (a main force of selection thought to drive MHC gene evolution), may operate by enhancing fitness advantages conferred by the host’s microbiome. We utilized fecal 16S rRNA gene sequences and their predicted metagenome datasets collected from multiple MHC congenic homozygote and heterozygote mouse strains to describe the influence of MHC heterozygosity on microbiome form and function. We find that in contrast to homozygosity at MHC loci, MHC heterozygosity promotes functional diversification of the microbiome, enhances microbial network connectivity, and results in enrichment for a variety of microbial functions that are positively associated with host fitness. We demonstrate that taxonomic and functional diversity of the microbiome is positively correlated in MHC heterozygote but not homozygote animals, suggesting that heterozygote microbiomes are more functionally adaptive under similar environmental conditions than homozygote microbiomes. Our data complement previous observations on the role of MHC polymorphism in sculpting microbiota composition, but also provide functional insights into how MHC heterozygosity may enhance host health by modulating microbiome form and function. We also provide evidence to support that MHC heterozygosity limits functional redundancy among commensal microbes and may enhance the metabolic versatility of their microbiome. Results from our analyses yield multiple testable predictions regarding the role of MHC heterozygosity on the microbiome that will help guide future research in the area of MHC-microbiome interactions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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9. Arms of larval seastars of Pisaster ochraceus provide versatility in muscular and ciliary swimming.
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George, Sophie B. and Strathmann, Richard R.
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POSTEROLATERAL corner , *SWIMMING - Abstract
Larval swimming with cilia, unaided by muscles, is the presumed ancestral condition for echinoderms, but use of muscles in swimming has evolved several times. Ciliation and musculature of the arms of brachiolaria-stage larvae in the family Asteriidae provide unusual versatility in the use of muscles in swimming. The muscles affect swimming in two different ways. (1) Contraction of muscles moves the arms, propelling the larva. (2) Contraction of muscles changes orientation of the arms, thereby changing direction of ciliary currents and direction of swimming. New observations of the brachiolaria of the asteriid seastar Pisaster ochraceus demonstrate more versatility in both of these uses of muscles than had been previously described: the posterolateral arms stroke in more ways to propel the larva forward and to change the direction of swimming, and more pairs of the arms point ciliary currents in more directions for changes in direction of swimming. Morphology of brachiolariae suggests that these uses of muscles in swimming evolved before divergence of the families Stichasteridae and Asteriidae within forcipulate asteroids. This versatile use of muscles for swimming, both alone and in combination with ciliary currents, further distinguishes the swimming of these brachiolariae from swimming by larvae of other echinoderms and larvae of acorn worms in the sister phylum Hemichordata. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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10. Functional diversity and nutritional content in a deep-sea faunal assemblage through total lipid, lipid class, and fatty acid analyses.
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Parzanini, Camilla, Parrish, Christopher C., Hamel, Jean-François, and Mercier, Annie
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TRIGLYCERIDES , *LIPIDS , *FATTY acids , *PHOSPHOLIPIDS , *ESTERS - Abstract
Lipids are key compounds in marine ecosystems being involved in organism growth, reproduction, and survival. Despite their biological significance and ease of measurement, the use of lipids in deep-sea studies is limited, as is our understanding of energy and nutrient flows in the deep ocean. Here, a comprehensive analysis of total lipid content, and lipid class and fatty acid composition, was used to explore functional diversity and nutritional content within a deep-sea faunal assemblage comprising 139 species from 8 phyla, including the Chordata, Arthropoda, and Cnidaria. A wide range of total lipid content and lipid class composition suggested a diversified set of energy allocation strategies across taxa. Overall, phospholipid was the dominant lipid class. While triacylglycerol was present in most taxa as the main form of energy storage, a few crustaceans, fish, jellyfishes, and corals had higher levels of wax esters/steryl esters instead. Type and amount of energy reserves may reflect dietary sources and environmental conditions for certain deep-sea taxa. Conversely, the composition of fatty acids was less diverse than that of lipid class composition, and large proportions of unsaturated fatty acids were detected, consistent with the growing literature on cold-water species. In addition, levels of unsaturation increased with depth, likely suggesting an adaptive strategy to maintain normal membrane structure and function in species found in deeper waters. Although proportions of n-3 fatty acids were high across all phyla, representatives of the Chordata and Arthropoda were the main reservoirs of these essential nutrients, thus suggesting health benefits to their consumers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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11. DNA barcoding Brooklyn (New York): A first assessment of biodiversity in Marine Park by citizen scientists.
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Marizzi, Christine, Florio, Antonia, Lee, Melissa, Khalfan, Mohammed, Ghiban, Cornel, Nash, Bruce, Dorey, Jenna, McKenzie, Sean, Mazza, Christine, Cellini, Fabiana, Baria, Carlo, Bepat, Ron, Cosentino, Lena, Dvorak, Alexander, Gacevic, Amina, Guzman-Moumtzis, Cristina, Heller, Francesca, Holt, Nicholas Alexander, Horenstein, Jeffrey, and Joralemon, Vincent
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GENETIC barcoding , *MARINE parks & reserves , *SPECIES diversity , *PLANT classification , *PLANT morphology - Abstract
DNA barcoding is both an important research and science education tool. The technique allows for quick and accurate species identification using only minimal amounts of tissue samples taken from any organism at any developmental phase. DNA barcoding has many practical applications including furthering the study of taxonomy and monitoring biodiversity. In addition to these uses, DNA barcoding is a powerful tool to empower, engage, and educate students in the scientific method while conducting productive and creative research. The study presented here provides the first assessment of Marine Park (Brooklyn, New York, USA) biodiversity using DNA barcoding. New York City citizen scientists (high school students and their teachers) were trained to identify species using DNA barcoding during a two–week long institute. By performing NCBI GenBank BLAST searches, students taxonomically identified 187 samples (1 fungus, 70 animals and 116 plants) and also published 12 novel DNA barcodes on GenBank. Students also identified 7 ant species and demonstrated the potential of DNA barcoding for identification of this especially diverse group when coupled with traditional taxonomy using morphology. Here we outline how DNA barcoding allows citizen scientists to make preliminary taxonomic identifications and contribute to modern biodiversity research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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12. The tempo and mode of the taxonomic correction process: How taxonomists have corrected and recorrected North American bird species over the last 127 years.
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Vaidya, Gaurav, Lepage, Denis, and Guralnick, Robert
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BIRD classification , *BIRDS , *BIRD evolution , *PREDICTION models , *TAXONOMISTS - Abstract
While studies of taxonomy usually focus on species description, there is also a taxonomic correction process that retests and updates existing species circumscriptions on the basis of new evidence. These corrections may themselves be subsequently retested and recorrected. We studied this correction process by using the Check-List of North and Middle American Birds, a well-known taxonomic checklist that spans 130 years. We identified 142 lumps and 95 splits across sixty-three versions of the Check-List and found that while lumping rates have markedly decreased since the 1970s, splitting rates are accelerating. We found that 74% of North American bird species recognized today have never been corrected (i.e., lumped or split) over the period of the checklist, while 16% have been corrected exactly once and 10% have been corrected twice or more. Since North American bird species are known to have been extensively lumped in the first half of the 20th century with the advent of the biological species concept, we determined whether most splits seen today were the result of those lumps being recorrected. We found that 5% of lumps and 23% of splits fully reverted previous corrections, while a further 3% of lumps and 13% of splits are partial reversions. These results show a taxonomic correction process with moderate levels of recorrection, particularly of previous lumps. However, 81% of corrections do not revert any previous corrections, suggesting that the majority result in novel circumscriptions not previously recognized by the Check-List. We could find no order or family with a significantly higher rate of correction than any other, but twenty-two genera as currently recognized by the AOU do have significantly higher rates than others. Given the currently accelerating rate of splitting, prediction of the end-point of the taxonomic recorrection process is difficult, and many entirely new taxonomic concepts are still being, and likely will continue to be, proposed and further tested. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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13. Anteroposterior axis patterning by early canonical Wnt signaling during hemichordate development.
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Darras, Sébastien, Fritzenwanker, Jens H., Uhlinger, Kevin R., Farrelly, Ellyn, Pani, Ariel M., Hurley, Imogen A., Norris, Rachael P., Osovitz, Michelle, Terasaki, Mark, Wu, Mike, Aronowicz, Jochanan, Kirschner, Marc, Gerhart, John C., and Lowe, Christopher J.
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WNT signal transduction , *HEMICHORDATA , *VERTEBRATE embryology , *HOMEOSTASIS , *HYPOTHESIS - Abstract
The Wnt family of secreted proteins has been proposed to play a conserved role in early specification of the bilaterian anteroposterior (A/P) axis. This hypothesis is based predominantly on data from vertebrate embryogenesis as well as planarian regeneration and homeostasis, indicating that canonical Wnt (cWnt) signaling endows cells with positional information along the A/P axis. Outside of these phyla, there is strong support for a conserved role of cWnt signaling in the repression of anterior fates, but little comparative support for a conserved role in promotion of posterior fates. We further test the hypothesis by investigating the role of cWnt signaling during early patterning along the A/P axis of the hemichordate Saccoglossus kowalevskii. We have cloned and investigated the expression of the complete Wnt ligand and Frizzled receptor complement of S. kowalevskii during early development along with many secreted Wnt modifiers. Eleven of the 13 Wnt ligands are ectodermally expressed in overlapping domains, predominantly in the posterior, and Wnt antagonists are localized predominantly to the anterior ectoderm in a pattern reminiscent of their distribution in vertebrate embryos. Overexpression and knockdown experiments, in combination with embryological manipulations, establish the importance of cWnt signaling for repression of anterior fates and activation of mid-axial ectodermal fates during the early development of S. kowalevskii. However, surprisingly, terminal posterior fates, defined by posterior Hox genes, are unresponsive to manipulation of cWnt levels during the early establishment of the A/P axis at late blastula and early gastrula. We establish experimental support for a conserved role of Wnt signaling in the early specification of the A/P axis during deuterostome body plan diversification, and further build support for an ancestral role of this pathway in early evolution of the bilaterian A/P axis. We find strong support for a role of cWnt in suppression of anterior fates and promotion of mid-axial fates, but we find no evidence that cWnt signaling plays a role in the early specification of the most posterior axial fates in S. kowalevskii. This posterior autonomy may be a conserved feature of early deuterostome axis specification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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14. Scientific research on animal biodiversity is systematically biased towards vertebrates and temperate regions.
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Titley, Mark A., Snaddon, Jake L., and Turner, Edgar C.
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ANIMAL diversity , *WILDLIFE conservation , *ENDANGERED species , *ANIMAL classification , *ZOOGEOGRAPHY - Abstract
Over the last 25 years, research on biodiversity has expanded dramatically, fuelled by increasing threats to the natural world. However, the number of published studies is heavily weighted towards certain taxa, perhaps influencing conservation awareness of and funding for less-popular groups. Few studies have systematically quantified these biases, although information on this topic is important for informing future research and conservation priorities. We investigated: i) which animal taxa are being studied; ii) if any taxonomic biases are the same in temperate and tropical regions; iii) whether the taxon studied is named in the title of papers on biodiversity, perhaps reflecting a perception of what biodiversity is; iv) the geographical distribution of biodiversity research, compared with the distribution of biodiversity and threatened species; and v) the geographical distribution of authors’ countries of origin. To do this, we used the search engine Web of Science to systematically sample a subset of the published literature with ‘biodiversity’ in the title. In total 526 research papers were screened—5% of all papers in Web of Science with biodiversity in the title. For each paper, details on taxonomic group, title phrasing, number of citations, study location, and author locations were recorded. Compared to the proportions of described species, we identified a considerable taxonomic weighting towards vertebrates and an under-representation of invertebrates (particularly arachnids and insects) in the published literature. This discrepancy is more pronounced in highly cited papers, and in tropical regions, with only 43% of biodiversity research in the tropics including invertebrates. Furthermore, while papers on vertebrate taxa typically did not specify the taxonomic group in the title, the converse was true for invertebrate papers. Biodiversity research is also biased geographically: studies are more frequently carried out in developed countries with larger economies, and for a given level of species or threatened species, tropical countries were understudied relative to temperate countries. Finally, biodiversity research is disproportionately authored by researchers from wealthier countries, with studies less likely to be carried out by scientists in lower-GDP nations. Our results highlight the need for a more systematic and directed evaluation of biodiversity studies, perhaps informing more targeted research towards those areas and taxa most depauperate in research. Only by doing so can we ensure that biodiversity research yields results that are relevant and applicable to all regions and that the information necessary for the conservation of threatened species is available to conservation practitioners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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15. Proyecto de inversión para procesamiento de cobayos (Cavia porcellus L.), Napo, Ecuador
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Alcívar Gómez, Dionicio Fremioth, Pinos Vélez, Eduardo Guillermo, Alcívar Gómez, Dionicio Fremioth, and Pinos Vélez, Eduardo Guillermo
- Abstract
Guinea pig production is an economic activity characteristic of rural areas, either by tradition or by the hardiness of the species. This research seeks to determine the feasibility of a guinea pig processing project. The research was descriptive. In the market study, the survey technique was used, applying a total of 126 surveys; while for the other studies, the documentary analysis technique was used. The results showed that 50% of respondents want to consume guinea pig meat more frequently. The demand for meat in the study area is 190,865 kg/year (urban) and 378,594 kg/year (rural). The project requires an investment of $37,386.74; its NPV is 108,413.99; an IRR of 106.62%, and a benefit-cost ratio of $1.20, i.e., for every dollar invested, $0.20 will be obtained. This consolidates a positive viability of the project., La producción de cobayos es una actividad económica característica de zonas rurales, ya sea, por tradición o por la rusticidad de la especie. Esta investigación busca determinar la viabilidad de un proyecto de procesamiento de cobayos. La Investigación fue de tipo descriptivo En el estudio de mercado se usó la técnica de encuesta, aplicándose un total de 126 encuestas; mientras que, para los otros estudios, se utilizó la técnica de análisis documental. Los resultados mostraron que 50% de encuestados desean consumir carne de cobayo con mayor frecuencia. La demanda de carne del área de estudio es de 190 865 kg/año (urbano) y 378 594 Kg/año (rural). El proyecto requiere de una inversión de $37 386,74; cuyo VAN es de 108 413,99; un TIR de 106,62%, y una relación beneficio costo de $1,20, es decir, por cada dólar invertido se obtendrá $0,20. Esto consolida una viabilidad positiva del proyecto.
- Published
- 2022
16. ОРТАҒАСЫЛЫҚ АҚЫРТАС ТӨРТКҮЛІНІҢ ОСТЕОЛОГИЯЛЫҚ МАТЕРИАЛДАРЫ
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Geography ,Animal taxonomy ,Anthropology ,Middle Ages - Abstract
Мақалада 2000–2014 жылдар аралығында Ә. Х. Марғұлан атындағы Археология институты қызметкерлерінің Тараз қаласынан 40 км шығыста орналасқан ортағасырлық Ақыртас төрткүліне (Х–ХІІІ ғ. басы) жүргізген археологиялық қазба жұмыстары барысында жиналған остеологиялық материалдары археозоологиялық тұрғыдан қарастырылады. Остеологиялық материалдар жануар түрлеріне, қаңқа элементтеріне, сақталу дәрежесіне қарай топтастырылып, зерттеледі. Зерттеунәтижесінде Ақыртас төрткүлінің шаруашылығында үй жануарларының барлық түрі болғаны және уақ малдың басым екендігі анықталады. Төрткүл тұрғындарында аңшылықтың рөлі үлкен болмаған. Мұны Талас өңіріндегі басқа да ортағасырлық ескерткіштерден табылған остеологиялық материалдар растайды. Төрт түліктен(жылқы, түйе, ірі қара және уақ мал) бөлек, көлік құралы ретінде есекті де қолданғаны байқалады. Жануар сүйектеріне систематикалық шолу барысында, бірқатар жануарларда анатомиялық ерекшеліктер бар екені анықталады. Ақыртас төрткүлінен табылған жануар сүйектері Талас өңірінің ортағасырлық фаунасында үлкен өзгерістерболмағанын көрсетіп отыр. Морфометриялық зерттеу нәтижелері мен жануарлар фаунасы бірқатар ежелгі және ортағасырлық ескерткіштерден (ортағасырлық Шеңгелді, Талғар, Қаратөбе, Қастек, Тараз, Құлан, Ақтөбе, Күлтөбе, Отырар, Жанкент, Қостөбе) табылған жануар сүйектерімен салыстырмалы түрде талданады. Талас өңірініңортағасырлық фаунасы Іле өңірі мен Сырдарияның орта және төменгі ағысының ортағасырлық фаунасымен салыстырылып, шаруашылықтағы үй жануарларының көлемінде айырмашылықтар бар екендігі анықталады. Библиографические ссылки 1. Базылхан Н. Этносемантические особенности некоторых этнонимов кочевых этносов // Ұлы дала: I-ші гум. ғыл. форум. м-ры / жауапты ред. Д.К. Кыдырали. Астана: Халықаралық түркі академиясы, 2016. С. 159–164. 2. Байпаков К.М. Археологический комплекс Акыртас. Научный отчет по программе «Культурное наследие» Джамбулской области. 2008 // Архив Института археологии им. А.Х. Маргулана. Ф. 2, оп. 2, д. 2893, 53 л. 3. Байпаков К.М. Городище Акыртас. Отчет по «Государственной наследие по теме: Городище Акыртас в 2009 году // Архив Институт археологии им. А.Х. Маргулана. Ф. 2, оп. 2, д. 2592, 31 л. 4. Байпаков К.М. Архитектурно-археологический комплекс Акыртас // Археология Казахстана. 2018. № 1–2. С. 118–132. 5. Байпаков К.М., Марьяшев А.Н. Баян-Жүрек петроглифтері. Алматы: ИД «Credo», 2008. 200 б., 64 қосарбет (қазақ, орыс, ағылшын тілдерінде). 6. Бейсенов А.З., Марьяшев А.Н. Петроглифы раннего железного века Жетысу. Алматы: Институт археологии им.А.Х. Маргулана, 2014. 156 с. 7. Бубнова М.А. Средневековое поселение Ак-Тобе 1 у с. Орловки // Археологические памятники Таласской долины. Фрунзе: изд-во АН КиргССР, 1963. С. 125–145. 8. Витт В.О. Лошади Пазырыкских курганов // СА. 1952. Вып. XVI. С. 163–206. 9. Гайдученко Л.Л. Остеологические материалы из раскопок городища Джанкент (2009–2012 гг.) // Комплексные исследования городища Джанкент (работы 2011–2014 гг.) /сост.: И.А. Аржанцева, А.А. Тажекеев. Алматы: «Арыс», 2014. С. 161–178. 10. Ерохин Н.Г., Бачура О.П. Новый подход к компьютерной формализации раздробленности костных остатков млеокпитающих в археозоологических исследованиях // Методика междисциплинарных археологических исследований. сб. науч. ст. и метод. рекомендаций. Омск: Омский гос. ун-т им. Ф.М. Достоевского, 2011. С. 62–69. 11. Зверев А.А., Зефиров Т.Л. Статистические методы в биологии: учебно-методическое пособие. Казань: Казанский Федеральный Университет, 2013. 42 с. 12. Иванов Л.Д. К вопросу о некоторых туркестанских древностях // ИРГО. 1886. Т. 21. С. 162–167. 13. Каллаур В. Поездка на Акыр-таш (Ахур-таш, Таш-акыр) и его окрестности // ПТКЛА. Историко-культурные памятники Казахстана / авт. предисл. и сост. М.Е. Елеуов, М.М. Бахтыбаев. Туркестан: «Туран», 2011. С. 349–354. 14. Карачаровский В.В. Результаты определения костных остатков животных // Труды Семиреченской археологической экспедиции (1936–1938). Таласская долина / Сост. под общ. ред. проф. А.Н. Бернштама. Алма-Ата: изд-во АН КазССР, 1949.С. 198–202. 15. Кононов А.Н. Родословная туркмен. Сочинение Абулгазы хана Хивинского. М.– Л.: изд-во АН СССР, Ленингр. Отд., 1958. 193 с. 16. Курган Урджар / сост. Б.А. Байтанаев. Алматы: Институт археологии им. А.Х. Маргулана, 2018. 120 с. 17. Макарова Л.А. Кости животных из некоторых археологических раскопок в Казахстане // В глубь веков / отв. ред. К.А. Акишев. Алма-Ата: изд-во «Наука» КазССР, 1974. С. 201–207. 18. Марьяшев А.Н., Горячев А.А. Наскальные изображения Семиречья. Алматы: Фонд «ХХІ век», 1998. 207 с. 19. Нуржанов А.А., Гимранов Д.О. Исследования костных остатков животных из археологического памятника средневековья городища Кастек // Маргулановские чтения–2019: м-лы Междунар. археол. науч.-практ. конф., посвящ. 95-летию со дня рождения выдающегося казахстанского археолога К.А. Акишева (г. Нур-Султан, 19– 20 апреля 2019 г.). Нур-Султан: НИИ им. К.А. Акишева при ЕНУ им. Л.Н. Гумилева, 2019. С. 529–538. 20. Пацевич Г.И. Акыр-таш (Ахур-таш, Таш-акыр). Археологические работы. 1940 г. // Архив Института археологии им. А.Х. Маргулана. Ф. 2, оп. 2, д. 38, 9 л. 21. Пацевич Г.И. Ахыр-Таш // Вестник АН КазССР. 1949. № 4. С. 80–85. 22. Савельева Т.В., Шагирбаев М.С. Остеологические материалы из караван-сарая Шенгельды // Вестник КазНПУ им. Абая. Сер. «Историч. и соц.-полит. науки». 2020. № 1 (64). С. 390–400. 23. Самашев З., Мургабаев С., Елеуов М. Сауысқандық петроглифтері. Астана: Ә.Х. Марғұлан ат. Археология институтының Астана қаласындағы филиалының баспа тобы, 2014. 374 б. 24. Талеев Д.Ә., Ержигитова А., Шағырбаев М.С. Ежелгі Сауран (Қаратөбе) қаласының остеологиялық материалдары // «Орталық Азияның ежелгі және дәстүрлі қоғамдарының тарихи-мәдени мұрасы: зерттеу, түсіндіру және сақтау мәселелері» атты «ХІІ Оразбаев оқулары» халықар. ғыл.-әдіст. конф. м-ры (Алматы қ., 17–18 сәуір 2020 ж.). Алматы: «Қазақ университеті», 2020. 201–209 бб. 25. Талеев Д.Ә., Шагирбаев М.С. Бурнооктябрьск 1 (Жылқышытөбе) қаласының остеологиялық материалдары // Марғұлан оқулары – 2020: «Ұлы Дала археологиялық және пәнаралық зерттеулер аясында» атты халықар. ғыл.-тәж. конф. м-ры. Алматы. Ә.Х. Марғұлан ат. Археология институты, 2020. 1 т. 230–242 бб. 26. Утубаев Ж.Р., Шагирбаев М.С. Остеологические материалы античного памятника Бабиш-мола 7 в низовьях Сырдарьи (по материалам 2019 года) // Вестник КазНПУ им. Абая, сер. «Историч. и соц.-полит. науки». 2020. № 4 (67). С. 354–363. 27. Шарденова З.Ж. Замок правителя на городище Акыртас // Известия МОН РК, НАН РК. Сер. обществ. наук. 2000. № 1. С. 186–196. 28. Шарденова З.Ж. Крепость Акыртас // Отчет об археологических исследованиях по Государственной программе «Культурное наследие» в 2005 году. Алматы: Институт археологии им. А.Х. Маргулана, 2005. С. 217–220 (на каз., рус. яз.). 29. Шарденова З.Ж. Крепость средневекового Касрибаса // Известия НАН РК. Сер. обществ. наук. 2010. № 1. С. 194–201. 30. Driesch A.V. A Guide to the measurement of animal bones from archeological sites // Preabody Museum of Archeology and Ethnology Harvard University. 1976. Bulletin 1. 136 р. 31. Eisenmann V., Karchound A. Analyses multidimensionnelles des metapodes d`Equus // Bulletin Museum natn. Hist. nat. Paris, 1982. P. 75–103.
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- 2021
17. NEWLY RECORDED SPECIES AND SPATIO-TEMPORAL DISTRIBUTION OF RARELYCOLLECTED TRIBE ADESHINI(BRACONIDAE: BRACONINAE) FROM PAKISTAN
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Animal taxonomy ,Wasps ,Biological sciences - Abstract
Byline: N. Nargis, M. Naeem, L. Vilhelmsen, I. Bodlah and M.S. Nadeem Keywords: Taxonomy; Hymenoptera; Braconinae; new records; distribution; Pakistan. INTRODUCTION Braconinae 1812, with 200 genera and 2500 described species [...]
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- 2020
18. Read 'L'for locusts
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Animal taxonomy ,Locusts (Insects) ,Grasshoppers ,Environmental issues ,Regional focus/area studies - Abstract
INDIA, June 10 -- Hi. My name is Locust. Actually, the full name is Desert Locust. But we will stick to 'Locust' for now. I am a small insect. But [...]
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- 2020
19. GloFishLLC Adds New Betta Species to Family of Fluorescent Fish
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Animal taxonomy ,LEDs ,Animal behavior ,Fluorescence ,Arts and entertainment industries - Abstract
GloFishLLC reported it is welcoming a new species to its family of fluorescent fish with GloFish Betta. According to a media release, the Electric Green GloFish Betta species is the [...]
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- 2020
20. GloFishLLC Introduces New Betta Species to Family of Fluorescent Fish
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Animal taxonomy ,LEDs ,Animal behavior ,Fluorescence ,Arts and entertainment industries - Abstract
GloFishLLC reported it is welcoming a new species to its family of fluorescent fish with GloFish Betta. According to a media release, the Electric Green GloFish Betta species is the [...]
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- 2020
21. GloFish Debuts New Betta Species
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Animal taxonomy ,LEDs ,Animal behavior ,Fluorescence ,Arts and entertainment industries - Abstract
GloFish is welcoming a new species to its family of fluorescent fish with GloFish Betta. According to a media release, the Electric Green GloFish Betta species is the first to [...]
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- 2020
22. GloFish Introduces New Betta Species to Family of Fluorescent Fish
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Animal taxonomy ,Animal behavior ,Pets ,Fluorescence ,LEDs ,Business - Abstract
Byline: Pet Age Staff Press release: GloFish GloFish LLC (https://shop.glofish.com/) is welcoming a new species to its ever-expanding family of fluorescent fish with GloFish Betta. The Electric Green GloFish Betta [...]
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- 2020
23. On specimen killing in the era of conservation crisis – A quantitative case for modernizing taxonomy and biodiversity inventories.
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Waeber, Patrick O., Gardner, Charlie J., Lourenço, Wilson R., and Wilmé, Lucienne
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DEAD animals , *TAXONOMISTS , *BIOLOGICAL specimens , *VERTEBRATES , *ARTHROPODA - Abstract
Background to the work: For centuries taxonomy has relied on dead animal specimens, a practice that persists today despite the emergence of innovative biodiversity assessment methods. Taxonomists and conservationists are engaged in vigorous discussions over the necessity of killing animals for specimen sampling, but quantitative data on taxonomic trends and specimen sampling over time, which could inform these debates, are lacking. Methods: We interrogated a long-term research database documenting 2,723 land vertebrate and 419 invertebrate taxa from Madagascar, and their associated specimens conserved in the major natural history museums. We further compared specimen collection and species description rates for the birds, mammals and scorpions over the last two centuries, to identify trends and links to taxon descriptions. Results: We located 15,364 specimens documenting endemic mammals and 11,666 specimens documenting endemic birds collected between 1820 and 2010. Most specimens were collected at the time of the Mission Zoologique Franco-Anglo-Américaine (MZFAA) in the 1930s and during the last two decades, with major differences according to the groups considered. The small mammal and bat collections date primarily from recent years, and are paralleled by the description of new species. Lemur specimens were collected during the MZFAA but the descriptions of new taxa are recent, with the type series limited to non-killed specimens. Bird specimens, particularly of non-passerines, are mainly from the time of the MZFAA. The passerines have also been intensely collected during the last two decades; the new material has been used to solve the phylogeny of the groups and only two new endemic taxa of passerine birds have been described over the last two decades. Conclusions: Our data show that specimen collection has been critical for advancing our understanding of the taxonomy of Madagascar’s biodiversity at the onset of zoological work in Madagascar, but less so in recent decades. It is crucial to look for alternatives to avoid killing animals in the name of documenting life, and encourage all efforts to share the information attached to historical and recent collections held in natural history museums. In times of conservation crisis and the advancement in digital technologies and open source sharing, it seems obsolete to kill animals in well-known taxonomic groups for the sake of enriching natural history collections around the world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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24. From body scale ontogeny to species ontogeny: Histological and morphological assessment of the Late Devonian acanthodian Triazeugacanthus affinis from Miguasha, Canada.
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Chevrinais, Marion, Sire, Jean-Yves, and Cloutier, Richard
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PALEOZOIC Era , *FISH morphology , *ONTOGENY , *FISHES , *FISH larvae - Abstract
Growth series of Palaeozoic fishes are rare because of the fragility of larval and juvenile specimens owing to their weak mineralisation and the scarcity of articulated specimens. This rarity makes it difficult to describe early vertebrate growth patterns and processes in extinct taxa. Indeed, only a few growth series of complete Palaeozoic fishes are available; however, they allow the growth of isolated elements to be described and individual growth from these isolated elements to be inferred. In addition, isolated and in situ scales are generally abundant and well-preserved, and bring information on (1) their morphology and structure relevant to phylogenetic relationships and (2) individual growth patterns and processes relative to species ontogeny. The Late Devonian acanthodian Triazeugacanthus affinis from the Miguasha Fossil-Lagerstätte preserves one of the best known fossilised ontogenies of early vertebrates because of the exceptional preservation, the large size range, and the abundance of complete specimens. Here, we present morphological, histological, and chemical data on scales from juvenile and adult specimens (scales not being formed in larvae). Histologically, Triazeugacanthus scales are composed of a basal layer of acellular bone housing Sharpey’s fibers, a mid-layer of mesodentine, and a superficial layer of ganoine. Developmentally, scales grow first through concentric addition of mesodentine and bone around a central primordium and then through superposition of ganoine layers. Ontogenetically, scales form first in the region below the dorsal fin spine, then squamation spreads anteriorly and posteriorly, and on fin webs. Phylogenetically, Triazeugacanthus scales show similarities with acanthodians (e.g. “box-in-box” growth), chondrichthyans (e.g. squamation pattern), and actinopterygians (e.g. ganoine). Scale histology and growth are interpreted in the light of a new phylogenetic analysis of gnathostomes supporting acanthodians as stem chondrichthyans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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25. Unique diversity of acanthothoracid placoderms (basal jawed vertebrates) in the Early Devonian of the Prague Basin, Czech Republic: A new look at Radotina and Holopetalichthys.
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Vaškaninová, Valéria and Ahlberg, Per E.
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VERTEBRATE evolution , *BIOLOGICAL classification , *PHYLOGENY , *DEVONIAN Period , *LOCHKOVIAN Stage - Abstract
The taxonomy of Early Devonian placoderm material from the Lochkovian and Pragian of the Prague basin, previously attributed to the genera Radotina and Holopetalichthys, is revised. The Pragian species Radotina tesselata Gross 1958 shares detailed similarities with the holotype of the Lochkovian Radotina kosorensis Gross 1950, which is also the holotype of the genus; the assignation of both species to Radotina is supported. However, the Lochkovian material previously attributed to Radotina kosorensis also contains two unrecognised taxa, distinguishable from Radotina at the generic level: these are here named Tlamaspis and Sudaspis. The disputed genus Holopetalichthys, synonymised with Radotina by some previous authors, is shown to be valid. Furthermore, whereas Radotina, Tlamaspis and Sudaspis can all be assigned to the group Acanthothoracii, on the basis of several features including possession of a projecting prenasal region of the endocranium, Holopetalichthys lacks such a region and is probably not an acanthothoracid. Skull roof patterns and other aspects of morphology vary greatly between these taxa. Radotina has a substantially tesselated skull roof, whereas the skull roofs of Tlamaspis and Holopetalichthys appear to lack tesserae altogether. Tlamaspis has an extremely elongated facial region and appears to lack a premedian plate. Sudaspis has a long prenasal region, but unlike Tlamaspis the postnasal face is not elongated. Past descriptions of the braincase of 'Radotina' and the skull roofs of 'Radotina' and 'Holopetalichthys' incorporate data from more than one taxon, giving rise to spurious characterisations including an apparently extreme degree of skull roof variability. These descriptions should all be disregarded. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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26. A new osteichthyan from the late Silurian of Yunnan, China.
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Choo, Brian, Zhu, Min, Qu, Qingming, Yu, Xiaobo, Jia, Liantao, and Zhao, Wenjin
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FOSSIL animals , *SILURIAN Period , *ANIMAL classification , *ANIMAL morphology - Abstract
Our understanding of early gnathostome evolution has been hampered by a generally scant fossil record beyond the Devonian. Recent discoveries from the late Silurian Xiaoxiang Fauna of Yunnan, China, have yielded significant new information, including the earliest articulated osteichthyan fossils from the Ludlow-aged Kuanti Formation. Here we describe the partial postcranium of a new primitive bony fish from the Kuanti Formation that represents the second known taxon of pre-Devonian osteichthyan revealing articulated remains. The new form, Sparalepis tingi gen. et sp. nov., displays similarities with Guiyu and Psarolepis, including a spine-bearing pectoral girdle and a placoderm-like dermal pelvic girdle, a structure only recently identified in early osteichthyans. The squamation with particularly thick rhombic scales shares an overall morphological similarity to that of Psarolepis. However, the anterior flank scales of Sparalepis possess an unusual interlocking system of ventral bulges embraced by dorsal concavities on the outer surfaces. A phylogenetic analysis resolves Sparalepis within a previously recovered cluster of stem-sarcopterygians including Guiyu, Psarolepis and Achoania. The high diversity of osteichthyans from the Ludlow of Yunnan strongly contrasts with other Silurian vertebrate assemblages, suggesting that the South China block may have been an early center of diversification for early gnathostomes, well before the advent of the Devonian “Age of Fishes”. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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27. The internal cranial anatomy of Romundina stellina Ørvig, 1975 (Vertebrata, Placodermi, Acanthothoraci) and the origin of jawed vertebrates—Anatomical atlas of a primitive gnathostome.
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Dupret, Vincent, Sanchez, Sophie, Goujet, Daniel, and Ahlberg, Per Erik
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SKULL base , *PLACODERMI , *VERTEBRATES , *NEUROCRANIAL restructuring , *MORPHOLOGY - Abstract
Placoderms are considered as the first jawed vertebrates and constitute a paraphyletic group in the stem-gnathostome grade. The acanthothoracid placoderms are among the phylogenetically most basal and morphologically primitive gnathostomes, but their neurocranial anatomy is poorly understood. Here we present a near-complete three-dimensional skull of Romundina stellina, a small Early Devonian acanthothoracid from the Canadian Arctic Archipelago, scanned with propagation phase contrast microtomography at a 7.46 μm isotropic voxel size at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility, Grenoble, France. This is the first model of an early gnathostome skull produced using this technique, and as such represents a major advance in objectivity compared to past descriptions of placoderm neurocrania on the basis of grinding series. Despite some loss of material along an oblique crack, most of the internal structures are remarkably preserved, and most of the missing structures can be reconstructed by symmetry. This virtual approach offers the possibility to connect with certainty all the external foramina to the blood and nerve canals and the central structures, and thus identify accurate homologies without destroying the specimen. The high level of detail enables description of the main arterial, venous and nerve canals of the skull, and other perichondrally ossified endocranial structures such as the palatoquadrate articulations, the endocranial cavity and the inner ear cavities. The braincase morphology appears less extreme than that of Brindabellaspis, and is in some respects more reminiscent of a basal arthrodire such as Kujdanowiaspis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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28. A Pannonhalmi Főapátsági Könyvtár kora újkori zoológia könyveinek vizsgálata.
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BAKONYI, GÁBOR and BAKONYI, ZSUZSANNA
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The Library of the Archabbey of Pannonhalma is the oldest one in Hungary. About 200 works were kept here as early as the 11th century. Its history is rich in turns, but the holdings of the library have been increasing more or less continously, and the current collection contains about 400 000 volumes. As the Benedictine monks have been active on the teaching and the scientific field, zoological books, among others, were collected during the centuries. However, these books have never been listed and analysed from the zoological point of view in the modern holdings. As a result of our examination, currently 150 volumes of zoology books are to be found in the library from the 16-18th centuries. Most of them are series of books, reference works, dissertations or school-books, but some high-quality scientific works of the era, as books of CONRAD GESSNER, ULISSE ALDROVANDI or CARL LINNÉ are also located in the collection. About one-quarter of the listed books are present only in this library in Hungary. This is a sign that valuable zoological books can be found in church libraries as well. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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29. Climate-Related Local Extinctions Are Already Widespread among Plant and Animal Species.
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Wiens, John J.
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EFFECT of climate on wildlife resources , *VEGETATION & climate , *ANIMAL species , *CLIMATE & zoogeography , *EFFECT of climate on biodiversity - Abstract
Current climate change may be a major threat to global biodiversity, but the extent of species loss will depend on the details of how species respond to changing climates. For example, if most species can undergo rapid change in their climatic niches, then extinctions may be limited. Numerous studies have now documented shifts in the geographic ranges of species that were inferred to be related to climate change, especially shifts towards higher mean elevations and latitudes. Many of these studies contain valuable data on extinctions of local populations that have not yet been thoroughly explored. Specifically, overall range shifts can include range contractions at the “warm edges” of species’ ranges (i.e., lower latitudes and elevations), contractions which occur through local extinctions. Here, data on climate-related range shifts were used to test the frequency of local extinctions related to recent climate change. The results show that climate-related local extinctions have already occurred in hundreds of species, including 47% of the 976 species surveyed. This frequency of local extinctions was broadly similar across climatic zones, clades, and habitats but was significantly higher in tropical species than in temperate species (55% versus 39%), in animals than in plants (50% versus 39%), and in freshwater habitats relative to terrestrial and marine habitats (74% versus 46% versus 51%). Overall, these results suggest that local extinctions related to climate change are already widespread, even though levels of climate change so far are modest relative to those predicted in the next 100 years. These extinctions will presumably become much more prevalent as global warming increases further by roughly 2-fold to 5-fold over the coming decades. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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30. Caracteristicas morfologicas de un grupo de zarigueyas (Didelphys marsupialis) del suroccidente Colombiano
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Lozada, Santiago, Fernando Ramírez, Ginés, and Osorio, José Henry
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- 2015
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31. Origin and evolutionary landscape of Nr2f transcription factors across Metazoa
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Joshua S. Waxman and Ugo Coppola
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Subfamily ,Invertebrate Genomics ,Chordata ,Bilateria ,Zebrafish ,Phylogeny ,Data Management ,Multidisciplinary ,Mammalian Genomics ,Genome ,Vertebrate ,Eukaryota ,Phylogenetic Analysis ,Genomics ,Animal Models ,Exons ,Phylogenetics ,Experimental Organism Systems ,Osteichthyes ,Molecular phylogenetics ,Vertebrates ,Medicine ,Research Article ,Computer and Information Sciences ,Architecture domain ,NF-E2-Related Factor 2 ,Science ,Biology ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Evolution, Molecular ,Model Organisms ,Gnathostomata ,biology.animal ,Genetics ,Gene family ,Animals ,Evolutionary Systematics ,Gene ,Synteny ,Taxonomy ,Vertebrata ,Evolutionary Biology ,Organisms ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Computational Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Genome Analysis ,Invertebrates ,Introns ,Fish ,Evolutionary biology ,Animal Genomics ,Animal Taxonomy ,Animal Studies ,Zoology - Abstract
Background Nuclear Receptor Subfamily 2 Group F (Nr2f) orphan nuclear hormone transcription factors (TFs) are fundamental regulators of many developmental processes in invertebrates and vertebrates. Despite the importance of these TFs throughout metazoan development, previous work has not clearly outlined their evolutionary history. Results We integrated molecular phylogeny with comparisons of intron/exon structure, domain architecture, and syntenic conservation to define critical evolutionary events that distinguish the Nr2f gene family in Metazoa. Our data indicate that a single ancestral eumetazoan Nr2f gene predated six main Bilateria subfamilies, which include single Nr2f homologs, here referred to as Nr2f1/2/5/6, that are present in invertebrate protostomes and deuterostomes, Nr2f1/2 homologs in agnathans, and Nr2f1, Nr2f2, Nr2f5, and Nr2f6 orthologs that are found in gnathostomes. Four cnidarian Nr2f1/2/5/6 and three agnathan Nr2f1/2 members are each due to independent expansions, while the vertebrate Nr2f1/Nr2f2 and Nr2f5/Nr2f6 members each form paralogous groups that arose from the established series of whole-genome duplications (WGDs). Nr2f6 members are the most divergent Nr2f subfamily in gnathostomes. Interestingly, in contrast to the other gnathostome Nr2f subfamilies, Nr2f5 has been independently lost in numerous vertebrate lineages. Furthermore, our analysis shows there are differential expansions and losses of Nr2f genes in teleosts following their additional rounds of WGDs. Conclusion Overall, our analysis of Nr2f gene evolution helps to reveal the origins and previously unrecognized relationships of this ancient TF family, which may allow for greater insights into the conservation of Nr2f functions that shape Metazoan body plans.
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- 2021
32. Home range and habitat use of White-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) and spatial variation of its density in the PNN Chingaza
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Carrillo Villamizar, Jennifer Zilenthsjigh, López Arévalo, Hugo Fernando, and Grupo en conservación y manejo de vida silvestre
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National parks and reserves ,Conservación de la vida silvestre ,Selección del hábitat ,Habitat selection ,Uso del hábitat ,Densidad poblacional ,Home range ,599 - Mamíferos [590 - Animales] ,Parques nacionales ,Habitat use ,Taxonomía animal ,Animal taxonomy ,Wildlife conservation ,White-tailed deer ,Área de acción ,Population density ,Páramo ,Venado cola blanca - Abstract
ilustraciones, fotografías, gráficas, mapas, tablas El conocimiento del venado cola blanca de páramo, sus poblaciones y hábitats es aún incipiente y las recomendaciones para su manejo y conservación aún se basan en observaciones esporádicas. Con el fin de dar respuesta a algunos interrogantes relacionados con estos temas, se capturó un macho adulto y se siguió durante ocho meses usando un collar de telemetría satelital, se calculó y analizó el área de acción total, mensual, semanal, por épocas climáticas y en ausencia y presencia de visitantes, y los patrones de actividad y uso del hábitat de este individuo en uno de los sectores del PNN Chingaza, resaltando la oportunidad de seguimiento durante el periodo de cierre del Parque Nacional Natural Chingaza durante 2020 por pandemia; además se calcularon los parámetros evaluados en hematología y química sanguínea, y el análisis de coproscópico y coprológico. Por otra parte, se instalaron transectos lineales con parcelas circulares en dos sectores del parque, con el fin de evaluar la densidad poblacional utilizando dos métodos y dos técnicas, la estructura de edades y el uso del hábitat. El individuo marcado se movió por un área de acción total de 1,85 km2 por el MCP y 2,22 km2 por Kernel, en las épocas climáticas el área de acción fue disminuyendo hacia la época de post-lluvia donde se registran las más pequeñas (1,12 km2 MCP y 1,44 km2 Kernel); se encontró que con el ingreso de visitantes al área protegida el tamaño del área de acción del individuo marcado disminuyó. Recorrió en promedio 54,5 ± 10,08 km mensualmente, 11,85 ± 3,04 km semanalmente y 1,78 ± 0,64 km diariamente, y su patrón de actividad fue diurno. La densidad poblacional con técnica FSC para Monterredondo fue entre 2,51 y 2,06 ind/km2, mientras que para el sector de la Paila fue entre 1,69 y 1,01 ind/km2. Al estimarla utilizando PELLET se obtuvieron valores de entre 0,7 ind/km2 ± 0,6 y 0,28 ind/km2 ± 0,3 para Monterredondo y entre 0,5 ind/km2 ± 0,8 y 0,09 ind/km2 ± 0,1 para La Paila. Con la técnica FAR la densidad de Monterredondo fue de 2,09 ind/km2 y en la Paila fue de 0,94 ind/km2, y con PELLET los valores de densidad poblacional para Monterredondo fueron de 0,37 ind/km2 ± 0,4 y 0,16 ind/km2 ± 0,2 para La Paila. La proporción en las clases de edad (adulto, juvenil y cervatillo) para el sector Monterredondo fue 1: 0,29: 0 (147 adultos, 42 juveniles y cero crías); para el sector de La Paila, la proporción fue de 1: 0,57: 0,04 (69 adultos 39 juveniles y 3 crías). En cuanto al análisis de uso del hábitat, usando transectos se observó que el venado cola blanca muestra preferencias por cinco tipos de coberturas una de las cuales solo se encuentra en el sector de la Paila (pastos limpios). En Monterredondo prefiere arbustales abiertos, mientras que para la Paila prefiere los mosaicos y pastos limpios, y evita los bosques en ambos sectores. El individuo marcado prefiere en todas las épocas la cobertura de mosaico y evita el arbustal denso en todos los casos. Los análisis sanguíneos, de coproscópico y coprológico mostraron la ausencia de enfermedades virales y de parásitos gastrointestinales en valores críticos; los valores de bioquímica sanguínea se encontraron dentro de lo reportado para la especie con modificaciones asociadas al tipo de captura, se resalta la ausencia de ectoparásitos en el individuo capturado. El ciclo de astas no está sincronizado entre los individuos y existe un alto grado de acostumbramiento de los venados a la presencia humana. El área de acción aquí estimada difiere de estudios realizados tanto en Colombia como en los países norteños, en este caso el área es menor y no presenta diferencias entre épocas climáticas, pero si hubo diferencias con el ingreso de visitantes al parque, el patrón de actividad altamente diurno se ha reportado en otros estudios a lo largo de su distribución. Se resalta la importancia de este primer estudio en los páramos colombianos bajo condiciones de mínimo contacto con humanos y la necesidad de ampliar el número de muestra. La estimación de la densidad poblacional de venado cola blanca en el PNN Chingaza varía temporal y espacialmente, con una disminución en comparación con lo reportado por estudios anteriores en el área protegida. Las mayores estimaciones se concentran hacia el sector Monterredondo en comparación con La Paila. Finalmente, es importante dar continuidad a estudios de este tipo con el fin de corroborar lo que aquí se propone y obtener más información sobre la química sanguínea de individuos en vida silvestre, además de muestras de pelo que permitan clarificar el estado taxonómico de la especie que aún se encuentra en discusión para el país. (Texto tomado de la fuente) Knowledge of the white-tailed deer in the paramo, its populations and habitats is still incipient and the recommendations for its management and conservation are still based on sporadic observations. In order to answer some questions related to these issues, an adult male was captured and followed for eight months using a satellite telemetry collar, the home range was calculated and analyzed monthly, weekly, by climatic seasons and in the absence and presence of visitors, patterns of activity and habitat use of this individual in one of the sectors of the PNN Chingaza, highlighting the opportunity for follow-up during the closure period of the Chingaza National Natural Park during 2020 due to a pandemic. In addition, parameters in hematology and blood chemistry analysis were performed. On the other hand, linear transects with circular plots were installed in two sectors of the park, in order to evaluate the population density using two methods and two techniques, age structure and habitat use. The marked individual moved through a total home range of 1.85 km2 by the MCP and 2.22 km2 by Kernel, in climatic seasons the home range decreased towards the post-rain season where the smallest are registered (1.12 km2 MCP and 1.44 km2 Kernel). It was found that with the presence of visitors in the protected area, the size of the home range decreased. He traveled an average of 54.5 ± 10.08 km monthly, 11.85 ± 3.04 km weekly and 1.78 ± 0.64 km daily, and his activity pattern was diurnal. The population density with the FSC technique for Monterredondo was between 2.51 and 2.06 ind / km2, while for La Paila sector it was between 1.69 and 1.01 ind / km2. When estimating it using PELLET, values between 0.7 ind / km2 ± 0.6 and 0.28 ind / km2 ± 0.3 were obtained for Monterredondo and between 0.5 ind / km2 ± 0.8 and 0.09 ind / km2 ± 0.1 for La Paila. With the FAR technique the density of Monterredondo was 2.09 ind / km2 and in La Paila it was 0.94 ind / km2, and with PELLET the population density values for Monterredondo were 0.37 ind / km2 ± 0.4 and 0.16 ind / km2 ± 0.2 for La Paila. The proportion in the age classes (adult, juvenile and fawn) for the Monterredondo sector was 1: 0.29: 0 (147 adults, 42 juveniles and zero fawns); for La Paila sector, the ratio was 1: 0.57: 0.04 (69 adults, 39 juveniles and 3 fawns). Regarding the analysis of habitat use, using transects it was observed that the white-tailed deer shows preferences for five types of cover, one of which is only found in La Paila (clean pastures). In Monterredondo it prefers open shrubs, while for La Paila it prefers mosaics and clean pastures, and avoids forests in both sectors. The marked individual prefers mosaic coverage at all times and avoids dense shrubland in all cases. Blood and coproscopic analysis showed the absence of viral diseases and gastrointestinal parasites at critical values; blood biochemistry values were found within that reported for the species with modifications associated with the type of capture, the absence of ectoparasites in the captured individual is highlighted. The antler cycle is not synchronized between individuals and there is a high degree of accustoming of deer to human presence. The home range estimated here differs from studies carried out both in Colombia and in northern countries, in this case the area is smaller and does not show differences between climatic seasons, but there were differences with the presence of visitors in the park, the pattern of activity highly diurnal has been reported in other studies throughout its distribution. The importance of this first study in the Colombian paramos under conditions of minimal contact with humans and the need to expand the sample number is highlighted. The population density estimation of white-tailed deer in the PNN Chingaza varies temporally and spatially, with a decrease compared to previous studies in the protected area. The highest estimates are concentrated towards the Monterredondo sector compared to La Paila. Finally, it is important to continue this type of studies in order to corroborate what is proposed here and to obtain more information on the blood chemistry of individuals in the wild, as well as hair samples that allow clarifying the taxonomic status of the species that it is still under discussion for the country. Maestría Magíster en Ciencias - Biología Conservación y manejo de vida silvestre
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- 2021
33. Multiple Evolutionary Origins of Ubiquitous Cu2+ and Zn2+ Binding in the S100 Protein Family.
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Wheeler, Lucas C., Donor, Micah T., Prell, James S., and Harms, Michael J.
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TRANSITION metal compounds , *COPPER ions , *MOLECULAR biology , *BIOLOGICAL evolution , *GENETIC mutation , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *ISOTHERMAL titration calorimetry - Abstract
The S100 proteins are a large family of signaling proteins that play critical roles in biology and disease. Many S100 proteins bind Zn2+, Cu2+, and/or Mn2+ as part of their biological functions; however, the evolutionary origins of binding remain obscure. One key question is whether divalent transition metal binding is ancestral, or instead arose independently on multiple lineages. To tackle this question, we combined phylogenetics with biophysical characterization of modern S100 proteins. We demonstrate an earlier origin for established S100 subfamilies than previously believed, and reveal that transition metal binding is widely distributed across the tree. Using isothermal titration calorimetry, we found that Cu2+ and Zn2+ binding are common features of the family: the full breadth of human S100 paralogs—as well as two early-branching S100 proteins found in the tunicate Oikopleura dioica—bind these metals with μM affinity and stoichiometries ranging from 1:1 to 3:1 (metal:protein). While binding is consistent across the tree, structural responses to binding are quite variable. Further, mutational analysis and structural modeling revealed that transition metal binding occurs at different sites in different S100 proteins. This is consistent with multiple origins of transition metal binding over the evolution of this protein family. Our work reveals an evolutionary pattern in which the overall phenotype of binding is a constant feature of S100 proteins, even while the site and mechanism of binding is evolutionarily labile. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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34. The Global Diversity of Hemichordata.
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Tassia, Michael G., Cannon, Johanna T., Konikoff, Charlotte E., Shenkar, Noa, Halanych, Kenneth M., and Swalla, Billie J.
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HEMICHORDATA , *INVERTEBRATE diversity , *INVERTEBRATE phylogeny , *CLASSIFICATION of invertebrates , *SPECIES distribution , *ENTEROPNEUSTA - Abstract
Phylum Hemichordata, composed of worm-like Enteropneusta and colonial Pterobranchia, has been reported to only contain about 100 species. However, recent studies of hemichordate phylogeny and taxonomy suggest the species number has been largely underestimated. One issue is that species must be described by experts, and historically few taxonomists have studied this group of marine invertebrates. Despite this previous lack of coverage, interest in hemichordates has piqued in the past couple of decades, as they are critical to understanding the evolution of chordates–as acorn worms likely resemble the deuterostome ancestor more closely than any other extant animal. This review provides an overview of our current knowledge of hemichordates, focusing specifically on their global biodiversity, geographic distribution, and taxonomy. Using information available in the World Register of Marine Species and published literature, we assembled a list of 130 described, extant species. The majority (83%) of these species are enteropneusts, and more taxonomic descriptions are forthcoming. Ptychoderidae contained the greatest number of species (41 species), closely followed by Harrimaniidae (40 species), of the recognized hemichordate families. Hemichordates are found throughout the world’s oceans, with the highest reported numbers by regions with marine labs and diligent taxonomic efforts (e.g. North Pacific and North Atlantic). Pterobranchs are abundant in Antarctica, but have also been found at lower latitudes. We consider this a baseline report and expect new species of Hemichordata will continue to be discovered and described as new marine habitats are characterized and explored. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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35. Early Gnathostome Phylogeny Revisited: Multiple Method Consensus.
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Qiao, Tuo, King, Benedict, Long, John A., Ahlberg, Per E., and Zhu, Min
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VERTEBRATE phylogeny , *PLACODERMI , *PARSIMONIOUS models , *LIKELIHOOD ratio tests , *BAYESIAN analysis - Abstract
A series of recent studies recovered consistent phylogenetic scenarios of jawed vertebrates, such as the paraphyly of placoderms with respect to crown gnathostomes, and antiarchs as the sister group of all other jawed vertebrates. However, some of the phylogenetic relationships within the group have remained controversial, such as the positions of Entelognathus, ptyctodontids, and the Guiyu-lineage that comprises Guiyu, Psarolepis and Achoania. The revision of the dataset in a recent study reveals a modified phylogenetic hypothesis, which shows that some of these phylogenetic conflicts were sourced from a few inadvertent miscodings. The interrelationships of early gnathostomes are addressed based on a combined new dataset with 103 taxa and 335 characters, which is the most comprehensive morphological dataset constructed to date. This dataset is investigated in a phylogenetic context using maximum parsimony (MP), Bayesian inference (BI) and maximum likelihood (ML) approaches in an attempt to explore the consensus and incongruence between the hypotheses of early gnathostome interrelationships recovered from different methods. Our findings consistently corroborate the paraphyly of placoderms, all ‘acanthodians’ as a paraphyletic stem group of chondrichthyans, Entelognathus as a stem gnathostome, and the Guiyu-lineage as stem sarcopterygians. The incongruence using different methods is less significant than the consensus, and mainly relates to the positions of the placoderm Wuttagoonaspis, the stem chondrichthyan Ramirosuarezia, and the stem osteichthyan Lophosteus—the taxa that are either poorly known or highly specialized in character complement. Given that the different performances of each phylogenetic approach, our study provides an empirical case that the multiple phylogenetic analyses of morphological data are mutually complementary rather than redundant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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36. The 3-D Structural Basis for the Pgi Genotypic Differences in the Performance of the Butterfly Melitaea cinxia at Different Temperatures.
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Li, Yuan and Andersson, Stefan
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MELITAEA cinxia , *BIOLOGICAL fitness , *GENOTYPE-environment interaction , *EFFECT of heat on insects , *GLUCOSE phosphate isomerase , *PROTEIN structure , *HOMOLOGY (Biochemistry) - Abstract
Although genotype-by-environment interaction has long been used to unveil the genetic variation that affects Darwinian fitness, the mechanisms underlying the interaction usually remain unknown. Genetic variation at the dimeric glycolytic enzyme phosphoglucoisomerase (Pgi) has been observed to interact with temperature to explain the variation in the individual performance of the butterfly Melitaea cinxia. At relatively high temperature, individuals with Pgi-non-f genotypes generally surpass those with Pgi-f genotypes, while the opposite applies at relatively low temperature. In this study, we did protein structure predictions and BlastP homology searches with the aim to understand the structural basis for this temperature-dependent difference in the performance of M. cinxia. Our results show that, at amino acid (AA) site 372, one of the two sites that distinguish Pgi-f (the translated polypeptide of the Pgi-f allele) from Pgi-non-f (the translated polypeptide of the Pgi-non-f allele), the Pgi-non-f-related residue strengthens an electrostatic attraction between a pair of residues (Glu373-Lys472) that are from different monomers, compared to the Pgi-f-related residue. Further, BlastP searches of animal protein sequences reveal a dramatic excess of electrostatically attractive combinations of the residues at the Pgi AA sites equivalent to sites 373 and 472 in M. cinxia. This suggests that factors enhancing the inter-monomer interaction between these two sites, and therefore helping the tight association of two Pgi monomers, are favourable. Our homology-modelling results also show that, at the second AA site that distinguishes Pgi-f from Pgi-non-f in M. cinxia, the Pgi-non-f-related residue is more entropy-favourable (leading to higher structural stability) than the Pgi-f-related residue. To sum up, this study suggests a higher structural stability of the protein products of the Pgi-non-f genotypes than those of the Pgi-f genotypes, which may explain why individuals carrying Pgi-non-f genotypes outperform those carrying Pgi-f genotypes at stressful high temerature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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37. Molecular systematics and taxonomic update of the genus Chondrina Reichenbach, 1828 (Gastropoda, Pulmonata, Chondrinidae) in the Iberian Peninsula
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Madeira García, María José, Gómez Moliner, Benjamin Juan, Zoología y biología celular animal, Zoologia eta animalia zelulen biologia, Somoza Valdeolmillos, Eder, Madeira García, María José, Gómez Moliner, Benjamin Juan, Zoología y biología celular animal, Zoologia eta animalia zelulen biologia, and Somoza Valdeolmillos, Eder
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248 p., Chondrina es un género altamente diverso de moluscos terrestres que incluye 44 especies. Se distribuye por el centro y sur de Europa, desde Portugal en el oeste hasta el Cáucaso y Asia Menor en el este. Aproximadamente el 70% de las especies son endémicas de la península ibérica (PI) constituyendo su principal centro de especiación. Este género incluye multitud de microendemismos confinados a hábitats estrictamente de roca caliza, distribuyéndose a lo largo de afloramientos rocosos hasta 2000 m s.n.m. Son caracoles cónico-fusiformes que se diferencia principalmente en los caracteres de la concha y en el número y posición de los dientes en su apertura. El estudio de los linajes filogenéticos del género Chondrina proporcionará datos relevantes para la conservación de su biodiversidad. Hasta 2015, los estudios moleculares sobre Chondrina se basaron exclusivamente en el fragmento del gen COI mitocondrial. Adicionalmente, con este trabajo y mediante análisis molecular multilocus, se ha avanzado en la resolución de la taxonomía y filogenia del género Chondrina en la península ibérica. Se han obtenido secuencias de ADN mitocondrial COI (región de la subunidad I de la citocromo oxidasa), 16S rRNA y ADN nuclear de los espaciadores de transcritos internos 1 y 2 (ITS1-5.8S y 5.8S-ITS2-28S). Como resultado del estudio se presenta una clasificación actualizada del género en la PI recogiendo las modificaciones aportadas por los estudios moleculares y se identifican un total de 11 nuevas especies.
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- 2021
38. Learning Lessons From Inspiration, Despite Complexity, In 'Why Fish Don't Exist'
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Animal taxonomy ,Scientists ,Books ,Earthquakes ,General interest - Abstract
To listen to this broadcast, click here: http://www.npr.org/templates/transcript/transcript.php?storyId=836139237 BYLINE: ARI SHAPIRO ARI SHAPIRO: A new book called 'Why Fish Don't Exist' begins at one of the lowest moments in a [...]
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- 2020
39. History of Animal Collections/Animal Taxonomy
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Andrew Wells
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Animal taxonomy ,Zoology ,Biology - Published
- 2021
40. Robert Koch Institute Researchers Update Current Data on Polyomavirus (Novel Polyomaviruses in Mammals from Multiple Orders and Reassessment of Polyomavirus Evolution and Taxonomy)
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Animal taxonomy ,Physical fitness ,Obesity ,Anopheles ,Phylogeny ,Editors ,Health - Abstract
2019 NOV 2 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Obesity, Fitness & Wellness Week -- Researchers detail new data in polyomavirus. According to news reporting out of [...]
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- 2019
41. The role and impact of Zootaxa in mammalogy in its first 20 years
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Pierre-Henri Fabre, Anderson Feijó, Lionel Hautier, Pablo Teta, Janet K. Braun, Pedro Cordeiro-Estrela, Philippe Gaubert, Marcelo Weksler, Géraldine Veron, Paúl M. Velazco, Institut des Sciences de l'Evolution de Montpellier (UMR ISEM), Centre de Coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement (Cirad)-École Pratique des Hautes Études (EPHE), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université de Montpellier (UM)-Institut de recherche pour le développement [IRD] : UR226-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), École pratique des hautes études (EPHE), and Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université de Montpellier (UM)-Centre de Coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement (Cirad)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut de recherche pour le développement [IRD] : UR226
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Mammals ,0106 biological sciences ,Animal taxonomy ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,Biodiversity ,Biology ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Genealogy ,Country of origin ,Species description ,Taxon ,Geographic origin ,Animals ,Mammalogy ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Periodicals as Topic ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,Taxonomy - Abstract
Zootaxa came as a new and innovative publication medium for taxonomy, amidst a scenario of devaluation of this important biological science. After 20 years, it has ascertained itself as one of the main journals in animal taxonomy. However, the contribution of the journal to the taxonomy of Mammalia (mammals), one of the most studied groups of animals with a long-standing, dedicated spectrum of specialized journals (mammalogy), could have been expected as minor. All the current and former editors of the Mammalia section of Zootaxa analyzed the relative contribution of the journal to the description of new species of mammals since 2001. We also analyzed the contribution of Zootaxa by taxon, geographic origin of taxa, and geographic origin of first authors. The taxonomic methodology of authors in species description is described as well as the temporal trends in publications and publication subjects. We highlight the editors’ picks and eventually, the challenges for the future. We found that Zootaxa has had a significant contribution to mammalogy, being the second journal (the first being Journal of Mammalogy) in terms of number of new species described (76; 10.6% of the new mammalian species described between 2001 and 2020). The majority of the new species were described following an integrative taxonomic approach with at least two sources of data (86%). The analysis of published taxa, their geographic origin, and the country of origin of first authors shows a wide coverage and exhaustive representation, except for the species from the Nearctic. We conclude that Zootaxa has likely responded to a repressed demand for an additional taxonomic journal in mammalogy, with as possible appeals the absence of publication fees and an established publication speed. With 246 articles published in the past 20 years, the Mammalia section of Zootaxa embraces a large spectrum of systematic subjects going beyond alpha taxonomy. The challenges for the future are to encourage publications of authors from the African continent, still poorly represented, and from the palaeontology community, as the journal has been open to palaeontology since its early days.
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- 2021
42. Zooming into the evolution of Atlantic Bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus) using high-throughput sequencing: towards a phylogenomics and population dynamics informed management
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Soto López, Manuel, Arrizabalaga de Mingo, Haritz, Rodríguez Ezpeleta, Naiara, Zoología y biología celular animal, Zoologia eta animalia zelulen biologia, Díaz Arce, Natalia, Soto López, Manuel, Arrizabalaga de Mingo, Haritz, Rodríguez Ezpeleta, Naiara, Zoología y biología celular animal, Zoologia eta animalia zelulen biologia, and Díaz Arce, Natalia
- Abstract
395 p., Existence of contemporary unidirectional trans-Atlantic gene flow, stablishment of a recently originated mixed spawning area, and estimation of stock mixing proportions on feeding grounds in the Atlantic bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus), all relevant for the conservation and management of the species, are revealed from the study of the phylogenetic relationships within the genus Thunnus and the species¿ population structure using Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs) discovered and genotyped through high-throughput sequencing.
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- 2020
43. Preschool children's taxonomic knowledge of animal species.
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Allen, Michael
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ANIMAL classification ,ANIMAL species ,BIOLOGY education ,SCIENCE education ,SOCIOCULTURAL factors ,PHOTOSYNTHESIS - Abstract
Although taxonomic proficiency is a prerequisite for understanding ideas central to biology, previous research has established that learners frequently misclassify animals by not following the tenets of accepted taxonomic rubrics. This has immediate relevance with the recently revised English National Curriculum now requiring concepts of animal classification to be taught to 5-6 year-olds. The current study represents an attempt to explore how preschool children aged 3-5 years classify animals, and patterns in the ways in which their taxonomic knowledge might progress with age were sought to illuminate potential origins of naive conceptions in the early years. A quantitative approach was employed with a sample of 75 children utilising a structured interview method to determine their ideas about the taxonomic labels animal, fish, amphibian, reptile, bird, mammal and insect. Findings revealed common learning trajectories as children's prototypes developed from 3 to 5 years. These trajectories confirmed that the preschool children held many of the same naive conceptions as those previously reported in older learners. Some of these conceptions started to dissipate with age; however, others began to emerge in the older children within the sample, representing a decline in performance with age. This decline is concerning though can be accounted for by contemporary categorization theory, giving support to the view that science misconceptions can emerge in the early years due to natural maturation (cognitive factors), as well as exposure to formal and informal learning experiences (socio-cultural factors). To supplement established conceptual change strategies, which deal with already-formed misconceptions, it is proposed that there be a fresh research emphasis towards conceptual creation where acceptable scientific ideas are seeded at the earliest years of schooling. Accordingly, the role of early years educators would become fundamental to effective science education. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Res Sci Teach 52: 107-134, 2015 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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44. A Novel Reproductive Mode in Frogs: A New Species of Fanged Frog with Internal Fertilization and Birth of Tadpoles.
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Iskandar, Djoko T., Evans, Ben J., and McGuire, Jimmy A.
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FROGS , *FERTILIZATION (Biology) , *AMPHIBIAN reproduction , *TADPOLES , *LIMNONECTES , *BIOLOGICAL evolution , *ZOOLOGY - Abstract
We describe a new species of fanged frog (Limnonectes larvaepartus) that is unique among anurans in having both internal fertilization and birth of tadpoles. The new species is endemic to Sulawesi Island, Indonesia. This is the fourth valid species of Limnonectes described from Sulawesi despite that the radiation includes at least 15 species and possibly many more. Fewer than a dozen of the 6455 species of frogs in the world are known to have internal fertilization, and of these, all but the new species either deposit fertilized eggs or give birth to froglets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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45. Allodaposuchus palustris sp. nov. from the Upper Cretaceous of Fumanya (South-Eastern Pyrenees, Iberian Peninsula): Systematics, Palaeoecology and Palaeobiogeography of the Enigmatic Allodaposuchian Crocodylians.
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Blanco, Alejandro, Puértolas-Pascual, Eduardo, Marmi, Josep, Vila, Bernat, and Sellés, Albert G.
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CROCODILIANS , *CRETACEOUS paleoecology , *CRETACEOUS paleogeography , *REPTILE phylogeny , *REPTILE evolution , *MUDSTONE , *ANIMAL species - Abstract
The controversial European genus Allodaposuchus is currently composed of two species (A. precedens, A. subjuniperus) and it has been traditionally considered a basal eusuchian clade of crocodylomorphs. In the present work, the new species A. palustris is erected on the base of cranial and postcranial remains from the lower Maastrichtian of the southern Pyrenees. Phylogenetic analyses here including both cranial and postcranial data support the hypothesis that Allodaposuchus is included within Crocodylia. The studied specimen suggests little change in postcranial skeleton along the evolutionary history of crocodylians, except for some bone elements such as the axis, the first caudal vertebra and the ilium. The specimen was found in an organic mudstone corresponding to a coastal wetland environment. Thus, A. palustris from Fumanya is the first Allodaposuchus reported in lacustrine-palustrine settings that expand the ecological range for this genus. The S-DIVA palaeobiogeographic reconstruction of ancestral area suggests that early members of Crocodylia rapidly widespread for the Northern Hemisphere landmasses no later than the Campanian, leading the apparition of endemic groups. In that way “Allodaposuchia” represents an endemic European clade probably originated in the Ibero-Armorican domain in the late Campanian and dispersed by the Southern European archipelago prior to the early Maastrichtian. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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46. Testing DNA Barcode Performance in 1000 Species of European Lepidoptera: Large Geographic Distances Have Small Genetic Impacts.
- Author
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Huemer, Peter, Mutanen, Marko, Sefc, Kristina M., and Hebert, Paul D. N.
- Subjects
- *
DNA data banks , *LEPIDOPTERA , *INSECT genetics , *GEOGRAPHICAL distribution of insects , *DNA fingerprinting of insects , *NUCLEOTIDE sequencing - Abstract
This study examines the performance of DNA barcodes (mt cytochrome c oxidase 1 gene) in the identification of 1004 species of Lepidoptera shared by two localities (Finland, Austria) that are 1600 km apart. Maximum intraspecific distances for the pooled data were less than 2% for 880 species (87.6%), while deeper divergence was detected in 124 species. Despite such variation, the overall DNA barcode library possessed diagnostic COI sequences for 98.8% of the taxa. Because a reference library based on Finnish specimens was highly effective in identifying specimens from Austria, we conclude that barcode libraries based on regional sampling can often be effective for a much larger area. Moreover, dispersal ability (poor, good) and distribution patterns (disjunct, fragmented, continuous, migratory) had little impact on levels of intraspecific geographic divergence. Furthermore, the present study revealed that, despite the intensity of past taxonomic work on European Lepidoptera, nearly 20% of the species shared by Austria and Finland require further work to clarify their status. Particularly discordant BIN (Barcode Index Number) cases should be checked to ascertain possible explanatory factors such as incorrect taxonomy, hybridization, introgression, and Wolbachia infections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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47. Cyberdiversity: Improving the Informatic Value of Diverse Tropical Arthropod Inventories.
- Author
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Miller, Jeremy A., Miller, Joshua H., Pham, Dinh-Sac, and Beentjes, Kevin K.
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- *
ARTHROPOD surveys , *BIODIVERSITY , *WILDLIFE conservation , *ARTHROPODA classification , *TROPICAL forests , *GENETIC barcoding , *ARACHNIDA - Abstract
In an era of biodiversity crisis, arthropods have great potential to inform conservation assessment and test hypotheses about community assembly. This is because their relatively narrow geographic distributions and high diversity offer high-resolution data on landscape-scale patterns of biodiversity. However, a major impediment to the more widespread application of arthropod data to a range of scientific and policy questions is the poor state of modern arthropod taxonomy, especially in the tropics. Inventories of spiders and other megadiverse arthropods from tropical forests are dominated by undescribed species. Such studies typically organize their data using morphospecies codes, which make it difficult for data from independent inventories to be compared and combined. To combat this shortcoming, we offer cyberdiversity, an online community-based approach for reconciling results of independent inventory studies where current taxonomic knowledge is incomplete. Participating scientists can upload images and DNA barcode sequences to dedicated databases and submit occurrence data and links to a web site (). Taxonomic determinations can be shared with a crowdsourcing comments feature, and researchers can discover specimens of interest available for loan and request aliquots of genomic DNA extract. To demonstrate the value of the cyberdiversity framework, we reconcile data from three rapid structured inventories of spiders conducted in Vietnam with an independent inventory (Doi Inthanon, Thailand) using online image libraries. Species richness and inventory completeness were assessed using non-parametric estimators. Community similarity was evaluated using a novel index based on the Jaccard replacing observed with estimated values to correct for unobserved species. We use a distance-decay framework to demonstrate a rudimentary model of landscape-scale changes in community composition that will become increasingly informative as additional inventories participate. With broader adoption of the cyberdiversity approach, networks of information-sharing taxonomists can more efficiently and effectively address taxonomic impediments while elucidating landscape scale patterns of biodiversity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
- Full Text
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48. Comparing Multiple Criteria for Species Identification in Two Recently Diverged Seabirds.
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Militão, Teresa, Gómez-Díaz, Elena, Kaliontzopoulou, Antigoni, and González-Solís, Jacob
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- *
IDENTIFICATION of birds , *BIRD conservation , *BIOMETRY , *MORPHOMETRICS , *STABLE isotope analysis , *MITOCHONDRIAL DNA , *SEA birds - Abstract
Correct species identification is a crucial issue in systematics with key implications for prioritising conservation effort. However, it can be particularly challenging in recently diverged species due to their strong similarity and relatedness. In such cases, species identification requires multiple and integrative approaches. In this study we used multiple criteria, namely plumage colouration, biometric measurements, geometric morphometrics, stable isotopes analysis (SIA) and genetics (mtDNA), to identify the species of 107 bycatch birds from two closely related seabird species, the Balearic (Puffinus mauretanicus) and Yelkouan (P. yelkouan) shearwaters. Biometric measurements, stable isotopes and genetic data produced two stable clusters of bycatch birds matching the two study species, as indicated by reference birds of known origin. Geometric morphometrics was excluded as a species identification criterion since the two clusters were not stable. The combination of plumage colouration, linear biometrics, stable isotope and genetic criteria was crucial to infer the species of 103 of the bycatch specimens. In the present study, particularly SIA emerged as a powerful criterion for species identification, but temporal stability of the isotopic values is critical for this purpose. Indeed, we found some variability in stable isotope values over the years within each species, but species differences explained most of the variance in the isotopic data. Yet this result pinpoints the importance of examining sources of variability in the isotopic data in a case-by-case basis prior to the cross-application of the SIA approach to other species. Our findings illustrate how the integration of several methodological approaches can help to correctly identify individuals from recently diverged species, as each criterion measures different biological phenomena and species divergence is not expressed simultaneously in all biological traits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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49. Independent Transitions between Monsoonal and Arid Biomes Revealed by Systematic Revison of a Complex of Australian Geckos (Diplodactylus; Diplodactylidae).
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Oliver, Paul M., Couper, Patrick J., and Pepper, Mitzy
- Subjects
- *
BIOMES , *GECKOS , *NEOGENE Period , *BIOGEOGRAPHY , *ARID regions - Abstract
How the widespread expansion and intensification of aridity through the Neogene has shaped the Austral biota is a major question in Antipodean biogeography. Lineages distributed across wide aridity gradients provide opportunities to examine the timing, frequency, and direction of transitions between arid and mesic regions. Here, we use molecular genetics and morphological data to investigate the systematics and biogeography of a nominal Australian gecko species (Diplodactylus conspicillatus sensu lato) with a wide distribution spanning most of the Australian Arid Zone (AAZ) and Monsoonal Tropics (AMT). Our data support a minimum of seven genetically distinct and morphologically diagnosable taxa; we thus redefine the type species, ressurrect three names from synonymy, and describe three new species. Our inferred phylogeny suggests the history and diversification of lineages in the AAZ and AMT are intimately linked, with evidence of multiple independent interchanges since the late Miocene. However, despite this shared history, related lineages in these two regions also show evidence of broadly contrasting intra-regional responses to aridification; vicarance and speciation in older and increasingly attenuated mesic regions, versus a more dynamic history including independent colonisations and recent range expansions in the younger AAZ. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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50. Evolution of eukaryotes as a story of survival and growth of mitochondrial DNA over two billion years
- Author
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Abhijit Deonath
- Subjects
Statistics and Probability ,Mitochondrial DNA ,Time Factors ,Cell Survival ,Mutant ,Mitochondrion ,Biology ,DNA, Mitochondrial ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Evolution, Molecular ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Eukaryotic cell ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Animal taxonomy ,Applied Mathematics ,Eukaryota ,General Medicine ,Biological Evolution ,Mitochondria ,Eukaryotic Cells ,Evolutionary biology ,Modeling and Simulation ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Mitochondria's significance in human diseases and in functioning, health and death of eukaryotic cell has been acknowledged widely. Yet our perspective in cell biology and evolution remains nucleocentric. Mitochondrial DNA, by virtue of its omnipresence and species-level conservation, is used as a barcode in animal taxonomy. This article analyses various levels of containment structures that enclose mitochondrial DNA and advocates a fresh perspective wherein evolution of organic structures of the eukarya domain seem to support and facilitate survival and proliferation of mitochondrial DNA by splitting containers as they age and by directing them along two distinct pathways: destruction of containers with more mutant mitochondrial DNA and rejuvenation of containers with less mutant mitochondrial DNA.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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