Search results for " fossil"

showing 10 items of 85 documents

Ticket to spawn: Combining economic and genetic data to evaluate the effect of climate and demographic structure on spawning distribution in Atlantic…

2019

Abstract Climate warming and harvesting affect the dynamics of species across the globe through a multitude of mechanisms, including distribution changes. In fish, migrations to and distribution on spawning grounds are likely influenced by both climate warming and harvesting. The Northeast Arctic (NEA) cod (Gadus morhua) performs seasonal migrations from its feeding grounds in the Barents Sea to spawning grounds along the Norwegian coast. The distribution of cod between the spawning grounds has historically changed at decadal scales, mainly due to variable use of the northern and southern margins of the spawning area. Based on historical landing records, two major hypotheses have been put f…

0106 biological sciencesdemography010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesClimate ChangeFisheriesClimate change2306 Global and Planetary Change10125 Paleontological Institute and MuseumFish stock010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences2300 General Environmental Scienceddc:590spawning distributionGadusEnvironmental ChemistryAnimalsPrimary Research Article14. Life underwaterAtlantic Ocean0105 earth and related environmental sciencesGeneral Environmental ScienceGlobal and Planetary ChangebiologyEcologyNorwayReproductionGlobal warmingbiology.organism_classificationPrimary Research ArticlesSpawn (biology)FisheryGeographyHabitatArctic560 Fossils & prehistoric lifeGadus morhua2304 Environmental Chemistrysize truncationgenetic dataeconomic dataAtlantic cod2303 EcologyAnimal DistributionGlobal change biology
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Early cave art and ancient DNA record the origin of European bison

2016

The two living species of bison (European and American) are among the few terrestrial megafauna to have survived the late Pleistocene extinctions. Despite the extensive bovid fossil record in Eurasia, the evolutionary history of the European bison (or wisent, Bison bonasus) before the Holocene (<11.7 thousand years ago (kya)) remains a mystery. We use complete ancient mitochondrial genomes and genome-wide nuclear DNA surveys to reveal that the wisent is the product of hybridization between the extinct steppe bison (Bison priscus) and ancestors of modern cattle (aurochs, Bos primigenius) before 120 kya, and contains up to 10% aurochs genomic ancestry. Although undetected within the fossil re…

0301 basic medicineGeneral Physics and AstronomymegafaunaBison priscusMegafaunahybridizationBison bonasusComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSHolocenePhylogenyMultidisciplinarygeography.geographical_feature_categoryGenomebiologyBisonFossilsQAmerican Bisonfossil recordMitochondrialPleistoceneEuropeCavesvisual_artSequence Analysis[SHS.ARCHEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Archaeology and PrehistoryPleistoceneEvolutionLife on LandScienceBison Pleistocene fossil record mitochondrial genome hybridizationSocio-culturaleZoologySteppe bisonDNA MitochondrialArticleGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyAncientEvolution Molecular03 medical and health sciencesPaleontologyCaveGeneticsPleistocene extinctionsAnimalsDNA Ancientvisual_art.artworkCell NucleusgeographyHuman GenomeMolecularSequence Analysis DNAGeneral ChemistryDNAAurochsbiology.organism_classificationEurpoean BisonBos primigenius030104 developmental biologyAncient DNAmitochondrial genomeAmerican bisonGenome MitochondrialCommentaryCattlePaintings
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Body dimensions of the extinct giant shark Otodus megalodon: a 2D reconstruction

2020

AbstractInferring the size of extinct animals is fraught with danger, especially when they were much larger than their modern relatives. Such extrapolations are particularly risky when allometry is present. The extinct giant shark †Otodus megalodon is known almost exclusively from fossilised teeth. Estimates of †O. megalodon body size have been made from its teeth, using the great white shark (Carcharodon carcharias) as the only modern analogue. This can be problematic as the two species likely belong to different families, and the position of the †Otodus lineage within Lamniformes is unclear. Here, we infer †O. megalodon body dimensions based on anatomical measurements of five ecologically…

0301 basic medicineIsurusfood.ingredientLamna nasusZoologylcsh:MedicineMegalodonPaleontologia10125 Paleontological Institute and MuseumArticleOtodontidae03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinefoodImage Processing Computer-AssistedAnimalsBody Size14. Life underwaterlcsh:ScienceSwimmingLamniformesAllometry1000 MultidisciplinaryMultidisciplinaryMegalodonbiologymorphometricsPalaeontologybody dimensionslcsh:ROtodusbiology.organism_classificationLamnaCarcharodon030104 developmental biology560 Fossils & prehistoric lifeSharksLamniformeslcsh:QIchthyology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryOtodontidae
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Critical appraisal of tubular putative eumetazoans from the Ediacaran Weng'an Doushantuo biota

2015

Molecular clock analyses estimate that crown-group animals began diversifying hundreds of millions of years before the start of the Cambrian period. However, the fossil record has not yielded unequivocal evidence for animals during this interval. Some of the most promising candidates for Precambrian animals occur in the Weng'an biota of South China, including a suite of tubular fossils assigned to Sinocyclocyclicus, Ramitubus, Crassitubus and Quadratitubus, that have been interpreted as soft-bodied eumetazoans comparable to tabulate corals. Here, we present new insights into the anatomy, original composition and phylogenetic affinities of these taxa based on data from synchrotron radiation …

1001ChinaFossils70Eukaryota610 Medicine & healthDoushantuo1100 General Agricultural and Biological Sciences144CyanobacteriaInvertebrates170 Ethics2300 General Environmental ScienceEdiacaran1300 General Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biologyexceptional fossilization2400 General Immunology and Microbiologytubular fossilsAnimals10237 Institute of Biomedical EngineeringDoushantuo; Ediacaran; Tubular fossils; Exceptional fossilizationResearch ArticlesBody PatterningProceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
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First fossil record (Middle Miocene) of the viper shark Trigonognathus Mochizuki and Ohe, 1990, in the Mediterranean realm

2022

The genus Trigonognathus Mochizuki and Ohe, 1990, is a monospecific taxon of `lantern sharks¿ (i.e., family Etmopteridae), a group of small-sized bioluminescent deep-sea chondrichthyans, ranging in mature male specimens between 42¿47 cm total length, and at least 52 cm for females (Ebert et al., 2021). This shark inhabits the upper continental slopes as well as the uppermost slope of seamounts, often at the bottom, at depths ranging between 250¿1000 m, but has been caught at 150 m and 270 m in deep open waters (Mochizuki and Ohe, 1990; Compagno et al., 2005; Ebert et al., 2021). Only two species have been described thus far, the extant species Trigonognathus kabeyai Mochizuki and Ohe, 1990,…

560 Fossils & prehistoric lifePaleontologyPaleontologia10125 Paleontological Institute and Museum
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Smithian (Early Triassic) ammonoid faunas from northwestern Guangxi (South China): Taxonomy and Biochronology.

2008

184 pages; International audience; The highly fossiliferous succession of Smithian (Early Triassic) ammonoids from northwestern Guangxi (South China) provides a key equatorial record, at the boundary between Tethys and Panthalassa. After the end-Permian extinction, ammonoids reached their first major diversity peak during Smithian times, coupled with a marked contrast in their latitudinal distribution. This monograph contains a part of the fundamental taxonomic and biostratigraphic data of a more comprehensive research project addressing patterns of recovery in time and space of Early Triassic ammonoids and other marine clades, in conjunction with global paleoceanographic and paleoclimatic …

560 Fossils & prehistoric life[SDU.STU.PG] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Paleontology10125 Paleontological Institute and Museum[SDU.STU.PG]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Paleontology
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New Smithian (Early Triassic) ammonoids from Crittenden Springs, Elko County, Nevada: implications for taxonomy, biostratigraphy and biogeography.

2010

41 pages; International audience

560 Fossils & prehistoric life[SDU.STU.PG] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Paleontology10125 Paleontological Institute and Museum[SDU.STU.PG]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/PaleontologyComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS[ SDU.STU.PG ] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Paleontology
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Historical biogeography of Melastomataceae: the roles of Tertiary migration and long-distance dispersal

2001

Melastomataceae and Memecylaceae are pantropically distributed sister groups for which an ndhF gene phylogeny for 91 species in 59 genera is here linked with Eurasian and North American fossils in a molecular clock approach to biogeographical reconstruction. Nine species from the eight next-closest families are used to root phylogenetic trees obtained under maximum likelihood criteria. Melastomataceae comprise ∼3000 species in the neotropics, ∼1000 in tropical Asia, 240 in Africa, and 225 in Madagascar in 150-166 genera, and the taxa sampled come from throughout this geographic range. Based on fossils, ranges of closest relatives, tree topology, and calibrated molecular divergences, Mel…

570biologyEcologyMelastomataceaeBiogeographyPlant Sciencebiology.organism_classificationNeogenebiogeography; fossil calibration; long-distance dispersal; Melastomataceae; Memecylaceae; molecular clock; ndhFGondwanaPaleontologySister groupGeneticsBiological dispersalMolecular clockEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMemecylaceaeAmerican Journal of Botany
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Pullneyocoris dentatus gen. et sp. nov. (Hemiptera: Pentatomoidea: Cydnidae), the third representative of the subfamily Amnestinae from mid-Cretaceou…

2020

Abstract A new genus and species of burrower bug, Pullneyocoris dentatus gen. et sp. nov. (Hemiptera: Cydnidae: Amnestinae), is described from amber of northern Myanmar. It is the third representative of this family known from Burmese amber, and besides its autapomorphies, it presents a mixture of characters relevant to the extant Parachilocoris Horvath, 1919 and Pullneya Horvath, 1919. A comparison of this new genus to the two genera already described from the burmite, i.e. Chilamnestocoris Lis J.A., Lis. B. & Heiss, 2018, and Punctacorona Wang, Du, Yao & Ren, 2019 is also provided.

Arthropod syninclusions010506 paleontologyAutapomorphyAmnestinaeSubfamilybiologyPentatomoideaAmber of northern MyanmarPaleontologyZoology010502 geochemistry & geophysicsbiology.organism_classificationPullneyocoris dentatus gen. et sp. nov.01 natural sciencesHemipteraCretaceousBurrower bug fossilGenusMid-Cretaceous Burmese amberAmnestinaePlant syninclusionsCydnidaeCydnidae0105 earth and related environmental sciencesCretaceous Research
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Presence of Naraoia Walcott, 1912 in the middle Cambrian of Europe (Murero, NE Spain).

2018

Este artículo se encuentra disponible en la página web de la revista en la siguiente URL: http://sepaleontologia.es/revista/anteriores/SJP%20(2018)%20vol.%2033/vol.%201/04.pdf The genus Naraoia Walcott, 1912, a Burgess Shale-type fossil known from the lower and middle Cambrian of British Columbia (Canada), Idaho and Utah (USA), as well as from Yunnan and Guizhou provinces (China), is now reported from the middle Cambrian of Murero (Zaragoza, Spain), which is the first record in the Acadobaltic province. The only fragmented specimen found is determined as Naraoia sp., its age being Pardailhania multispinosa Zone (Drumian Stage). This new datum reinforces the hypothesis of the existence of a …

Arthropoda Fossil - Spain - Aragon - Zaragoza (County) - Murero.Presence of Naraoia Walcott 1912 in the middle Cambrian of Europe (Murero NE Spain). ArtículoPaleobiogeography - Cambrian.Geología estratigráfica - Cámbrico.UNESCO::CIENCIES DE LA VIDAInvertebrados fósiles - España - Aragón - Zaragoza (Provincia) - Murero.Invertebrates Fossil - Spain - Aragon - Zaragoza (County) - Murero.Paloebiogeografía - Cámbrico.Geology Stratigraphic - Cambrian.:CIENCIES DE LA VIDA [UNESCO]Artrópodos fósiles - España - Aragón - Zaragoza (Provincia) - Murero.
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