Search results for "Bovidae"

showing 8 items of 8 documents

New Bovid Remains from the Early Pleistocene of Umbria (Italy) and a Reappraisal of Leptobos merlai

2017

The extinct bovid Leptobos is one of the most characteristic elements of Eurasian faunal assemblages during most of the Villafranchian Land Mammal Age (i.e., from the late Pliocene to most of the early Pleistocene). Several species of this genus have been established since the end of XIX Century, but their taxonomic status and phylogenetic relationships remain unclear due to the fact that most of them are described on the basis of scanty material. European species are divided into two groups or lineages. The first includes L. stenometopon, L. merlai, and the poorly known L. furtivus, the second L. etruscus and L. vallisarni. While the last two species are well documented in the Italian earl…

0106 biological sciences010506 paleontologyEarly PleistoceneLeptobosBovidae010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesLeptobos . Bovidae . Early Pleistocene . Villafranchian . ItalyPeninsulaGenusEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarly PleistoceneVillafranchiangeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyVillafranchianSettore GEO/01 - Paleontologia E Paleoecologiabiology.organism_classificationArchaeologyGeographyTaxonItalyLeptoboBovidaeMammal
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Messinian Italian Bovidae revised: paleobiogeographic and biochronological implications

2021

Bovidae from the Messinian localities of Italian Peninsula are poorly known and documented except in the Monticino Quarry record (Brisighella, central Italy), which represents, therefore, a key loc...

0106 biological sciences010506 paleontologybiologyMorphology (biology)Bovidaebiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGeographyEvolutionary biologyBiological dispersalKey (lock)General Agricultural and Biological Sciences0105 earth and related environmental sciencesHistorical Biology
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Comparison of adult liver flukes from highland and lowland populations of Bolivian and Spanish sheep.

2000

A morphological study of adult liver flukes and eggs from sheep in a human fascioliasis endemic zone in the Northern Bolivian Altiplano showed that they belong to the species Fasciola hepatica. An exhaustive morphometric comparison with a F. hepatica population from Spanish sheep was made using image analysis and an allometric model: (y2m - y2)]#x002F;y2 = c[(y1m - y1)/y1]b, where y1 = body surface or body length, y2 = one of the measurements analysed, y1m, y2m = maximum values towards which y1 and y2 respectively tend, and c, b = constants. Only slight allometric differences in worms were observed despite the geographic distance between both Spanish and Bolivian sheep populations and the v…

BoliviaFascioliasisBiometryPopulationHelminthiasisZoologySheep DiseasesBovidaeHepaticamedicineParasite hostingFasciola hepaticaAnimalsHumanseducationeducation.field_of_studySheepbiologyEcologyAltitudeGeneral MedicineFasciola hepaticabiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseLogistic ModelsSpainAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologyAllometryTrematodaJournal of helminthology
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An initial comparative map of copy number variations in the goat (Capra hircus) genome

2010

Abstract Background The goat (Capra hircus) represents one of the most important farm animal species. It is reared in all continents with an estimated world population of about 800 million of animals. Despite its importance, studies on the goat genome are still in their infancy compared to those in other farm animal species. Comparative mapping between cattle and goat showed only a few rearrangements in agreement with the similarity of chromosome banding. We carried out a cross species cattle-goat array comparative genome hybridization (aCGH) experiment in order to identify copy number variations (CNVs) in the goat genome analysing animals of different breeds (Saanen, Camosciata delle Alpi,…

BreedingGenomePolymerase Chain ReactionSettore AGR/17 - Zootecnica Generale E Miglioramento GeneticoMOUSE STRAINSChromosome regionsCapra hircusGOATCopy-number variationANGORA-GOATSGENE-EXPRESSIONGenetics0303 health sciencesComparative Genomic HybridizationGenomeGoatsChromosome Mapping04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesBovine genomeDatabases Nucleic AcidBiotechnologyResearch Articlelcsh:QH426-470DNA Copy Number VariationsSEGMENTAL DUPLICATIONSlcsh:BiotechnologyMolecular Sequence DataBiologyFluorescenceStructural variationPRODUCTION TRAITSBirds03 medical and health sciencesFAMILY BOVIDAEGene mappinglcsh:TP248.13-248.65Sequence Homology Nucleic AcidGeneticsFINE-SCALEAnimalsHumansFalse Positive Reactions030304 developmental biologyCOPY NUMBER VARIATION0402 animal and dairy scienceReproducibility of Results040201 dairy & animal scienceChromosomes MammalianDNA-SEQUENCESSTRUCTURAL VARIATIONlcsh:GeneticsCANDIDATE LOCIcopy number variation goatsCattleComparative genomic hybridizationBMC Genomics
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Coat darkness is associated with social dominance and mating behaviour in a mountain sheep hybrid lineage

2008

Natural hybridization can produce novel traits when morphologically different populations hybridize, and can introduce variation in traits that become associated with sexual selection. Evidence from breeding experiments and genetic markers indicate that the great variation in coat darkness and the unique coat patterns found in Stone's sheep Ovis dalli stonei, populations, have resulted from an ancient hybridization event between thinhorn sheep, O. dalli, and bighorn sheep, O. canadensis. Behavioural evidence gathered in 2003 and 2004 in Yukon Territory, Canada, showed that higher dominance rank was correlated with increasing darkness in rams, and comparatively darker rams were seen more oft…

CoatbiologyZoologyBovidaeSubspeciesbiology.organism_classificationMountain sheepcvg.developerGenetic markerSexual selectionDarknessAnimal Science and ZoologycvgOvisEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAnimal Behaviour
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Capra alba Moyà-Solà, 1987 del Pleistoceno Inferior de la Sierra de Quibas (Albanilla, Murcia, España)

2006

The first palaeontological study of the locality of Quibas dates from the end of the 1990s (Montoya et al., 1999), describing over 60 vertebrate taxa. One of these was a caprine assigned to Capra sp. aff. Capra alba. Recent excavations yielded new remains of this taxon, which permits a more profound study of its affinities and an assignation to Capra alba, without reservation. This assignation is based on the morphological and metrical comparison of the skulls, horn cores, dentition and metapodials from Quibas with those of Capra alba from Venta Micena (Orce Granada).

QE1-996.5GeologyAbanillaUNESCO::CIENCIAS DE LA TIERRA Y DEL ESPACIO::Geología:CIENCIAS DE LA TIERRA Y DEL ESPACIO::Geología [UNESCO]Capra albaArtiodactyla; Bovidae; Capra alba; Pleistoceno Inferior; Sierra de Quibas; Abanilla; MurciaSierra de QuibasBovidaeMurciapleistoceno inferiorPleistoceno InferiorLower PleistoceneArtiodactyla
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A reappraisal of the Early to Middle Pleistocene Italian Bovidae

2013

Abstract During the Quaternary, bovids are common elements in the Italian local faunal assemblages (LFAs). Representatives of Bovini tribe are continuously present, albeit with different lineages. Caprini are sporadically recorded by several genera, and Antilopini are less represented, only during the Early Pleistocene in the middle and early late Villafranchian local faunal assemblages (LFAs). Diversity and ecological role of continental representatives of Italian Bovidae varied with LFAs as well as in faunal units (FUs) throughout the Early and Middle Pleistocene. Species richness and diversity peaked during the early late Villafranchian land mammal age (LMA) and then decreased in the pos…

SystematicBoviniEarly PleistocenebiologyPleistoceneEcologyVillafranchianBovidaeSettore GEO/01 - Paleontologia E Paleoecologiabiology.organism_classificationPeleoecologyPleistoceneGeographyItalyBovidaeMammalEndemismQuaternaryEarth-Surface Processes
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Bovine paramphistomosis in Galicia (Spain): Prevalence, intensity, aetiology and geospatial distribution of the infection

2013

12 páginas, 5 figuras, 4 tablas.

Veterinary medicinehttp://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_2615EpidemiologyBayesian geostatistical modelCattle DiseasesL73 - Maladies des animauxFecesÉtiologieRisk FactorsPrevalenceParasite Egg CountParasite hostingParamphistomatidaebiologyCalicophoron daubneyiGeneral Medicinehttp://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_ded17449ÉpidémiologieRoe deerMaladie des animauxParasitosehttp://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_1038Géostatistiqueshttp://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_3852InfectionL72 - Organismes nuisibles des animauxCalicophoron daubneyiRumenhttp://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_4936Cattle DiseasesTrematode InfectionsBovidaeParamphistomidaehttp://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_15588Paramphistomosisbiology.animalAnimalsParasite Egg CountDairy cattleFeceshttp://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_31996Roe deerGeneral VeterinaryBayes TheoremL70 - Sciences et hygiène vétérinaires - Considérations généralesDistribution spatialeMorbiditébiology.organism_classificationhttp://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_426Spainhttp://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_5579http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_36230Bovidaehttp://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_7273CattleParasitologyVeterinary Parasitology
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