Search results for "Genus"

showing 10 items of 755 documents

Enhancer trap infidelity in Drosophila optomotor-blind

2013

Reporter gene activity in enhancer trap lines is often implicitly assumed to mirror quite faithfully the endogenous expression of the "trapped" gene, even though there are numerous examples of enhancer trap infidelity. optomotor-blind (omb) is a 160 kb gene in which 16 independent P-element enhancer trap insertions of three different types have been mapped in a range of more than 60 kb. We have determined the expression pattern of these elements in wing, eye-antennal and leg imaginal discs as well as in the pupal tergites. We noted that one pGawB insertion (omb (P4) ) selectively failed to report parts of the omb pattern even though the missing pattern elements were apparent in all other 15…

Arthropod AntennaeNerve Tissue ProteinsEyeGenes ReporterEnhancer trapAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsWings AnimalDrosophila (subgenus)EnhancerPromoter Regions GeneticGeneGeneticsReporter genebiologyPupaChromosome MappingPromoterExtremitiesbiology.organism_classificationImaginal discMutagenesis InsertionalEnhancer Elements GeneticImaginal DiscsInsect ScienceDrosophilaT-Box Domain ProteinsDrosophila ProteinResearch Paper
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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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Morphological and molecular characterization of three new parastenocarididae (Copepoda: Harpacticoida) from caves in Southern Italy

2020

We describe three new parastenocaridid: Cottarellicaris sanctiangeli Bruno & Cottarelli sp. nov., Stammericaris vincentimariae Bruno & Cottarelli sp. nov. and Proserpinicars specincola Bruno & Cottarelli sp. nov., collected in the pools of five different caves located in Calabria (Southern Italy). We conducted a phylogenetic analysis based on the mitochondrial COI and ribosomal 18S sequences of C. sanctiangeli sp. nov. and S. vincentimariae sp. nov., and of four more species of Stammericaris and one Proserpinicaris available from literature. Based on the molecular study, the specimens of C. sanctiangeli sp. nov. are clearly separated from the species belonging to the closely-rel…

Arthropoda18S rDNA geneStygofaunaSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaStygofaunaCrustaceanKarstic caveMonophylyCaveGenusAnimaliaParastenocarididaeCladeHarpacticoidaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTaxonomySynapomorphycrustacean COI gene 18S rDNA gene karstic cave evaporitic cave stygofaunageographygeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyPhylogenetic treeBotanyHarpacticoidaBiodiversitybiology.organism_classificationEvaporitic caveCOI geneQL1-991Evolutionary biologyQK1-989ZoologyMaxillopoda
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Notes on the genus Polycoccum (Ascomycota, Dacampiaceae) in Spain, with a key to the species

2003

AbstractComments on and a key to the 13 Polycoccum species known in Spain are presented, including synopses of their world distributions. Amongst these is P. rubellianae sp. nov., a lichenicolous fungus growing on thalli of Caloplaca rubelliana in eastern Spain (Valencia). It has relatively small ascomata, the lower part pale brown, and also small ascospores which are coarsely verrucose and have a thick gelatinous sheath when young. The new species is associated with a Phoma-like anamorph. The identity and systematic position of P. opulentum requires further study as the name has been applied to different species, and the occurrence of P. marmoratum in Spain is in need of confirmation. The …

AscocarpDothidealesbiologyAscomycotaGenusBotanyKey (lock)Lichenbiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCaloplacaThallusThe Lichenologist
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Présence d’Asellides stygobies (Crustacea, Isopoda, Aselloidea) dans la région du Primorye, Sibérie sud-orientale

1993

Two species of anophthalmous, unpigmentedasellids have been found in springs and groundwaters of S.E. Siberia (Primorye region). Asellus (Asellus) primoryensis n. sp. is closelyrelated to the epigean species A. (A.) hilgendorfii Bovallius, 1886, as is the case for all stygobiont Asellus (Asellus) species previously known from the Japanese archipelago. Sibirasellus parpurae n. g., n. sp. is closely related to the microphthalmous species Asellus dentifer Birstein & Levanidov, 1952 from the Ussuri Basin (Khor region), now type-species of the new genus Sibirasellus. These two species show several original characters: body covered by numerous cuticular squamulae, mandibular palp reduced (gla…

Asellusgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectBiogeographyBiologybiology.organism_classificationstygobiont asellidsCoalescent theorytaxonomyFar East and Pacific North AmericaGenusArchipelagoGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesTaxonomy (biology)SubgenusPhyletic gradualismbiogeographyGeneral Environmental Sciencemedia_common
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A molecular phylogeny of bullfinches Pyrrhula Brisson, 1760 (Aves: Fringillidae)

2011

Abstract We present a molecular phylogeny of bullfinches (Pyrrhula Brisson, 1760) based on 2357 bp DNA sequence information of mitochondrial genes (cyt-b, 16S rRNA) and nuclear introns (fib-7, GAPDH-11). The genus is clearly a monophyletic group. Within the limits of Pyrrhula, molecular methods support the subdivision of three main groups: (1) “Southeast-Asian bullfinches” (P. nipalensis and P. leucogenis), (2) “Himalayan bullfinches” (P. aurantiaca, P. erythaca, P. erythrocephala), and (3) “Eurasian bullfinches” (P. pyrrhula s.l.). Within the last group there are four different subgroups: (3a) P. (p.) murina, (3b) P. (p.) cineracea, (3c) P. (p.) griseiventris, and (3d) P. pyrrhula s.str. T…

AsiaPyrrhulaBiogeographyZoologyPinicolaBiologyDNA MitochondrialCoalescent theoryEvolution MolecularMonophylyGenusRNA Ribosomal 16SGeneticsAnimalsMolecular clockMolecular BiologyPhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCell NucleusGenetic VariationSequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationIntronsEuropeMolecular phylogeneticsFinchesMolecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
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Further comments on the origin of oysters

2006

In his comment to our recent paper (Marquez-Aliaga et al. 2005), Hautmann (2006) raises two interesting questions: (a) the ambivalent attachment to the substrate recognized in the species cristadifformis Schlotheim, 1820 and spondyloides Schlotheim, 1820, which we include into the Ostreoidae genus Umbrostrea, is in conflict with the sinistral attachment usually recognized as an autapomorphy of the group and (b) antimarginal ribs are not valid as a character linking Prospondylus acinetus Newell and Boyd, 1970 and early oysters (our proposal of derivation), because they appear in several unrelated families of bivalves. Moreover, Hautmann (2005), finds additional difficulties in accepting our …

AutapomorphySinistral and dextralGenusPaleontologyZoologyInner shellLeft valveOceanographyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesPalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
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Tibial combs in the Cydnidae (Hemiptera: Heteroptera) and their functional, taxonomic and phylogenetic significance

2005

Tibial combs in representatives of the family Cydnidae are described in detail for the first time. The structure was studied in 98 species of 58 genera representing all the subfamilies, among them 16 species were investigated using scanning electron microscopic (SEM) techniques. In addition, Parastrachia japonensis (Scott, 1880) of the family Parastrachiidae, and two species of Dismegistus Amyot and Serville, 1843 (a genus of uncertain systematic position within Pentatomoidea) have also been studied. Morphological terminology is proposed for all the structures connected with tibial combs and the term ‘the tibial comb complex’ is suggested; its functional, taxonomic and phylogenetic signific…

Autapomorphyfood.ingredientbiologyPentatomoideaHeteropteraAnatomybiology.organism_classificationHemipterafoodGenusGeneticsRepartitionAnimal Science and ZoologyParastrachiaCydnidaeMolecular BiologyHumanitiesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research
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Helianthemum scopulicolum (Cistaceae), a new species from Majorca (Balearic Islands, Spain)

1999

Rupicolous plants coming from a single Balearic locality are described as a new species, Helianthemum scopulicolum. The plant is diploid (2n=20) and belongs to Helianthemum subgenus Helianthemum sect. Helianthemum. On morphological grounds, Helianthemum scopulicolum is related to some members of the H. apenninum aggregate, notably H. apenninum s.l., H. asperum and H. violaceum. However, the new species can be distinguished on the basis of leaves green, shining, glabrescent on the adaxial surface, deciduous short bracts, glabrescent inner sepals lacking long setae and pink-purple flowers.

Balearic islandsBractbiologySetagovernment.political_districtPlant ScienceCistaceaebiology.organism_classificationSepalHelianthemumDeciduousBotanygovernmentSubgenusEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNordic Journal of Botany
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Metric discrimination and distribution of the species of Crocidura occuring in Tunisia

1992

A recent paper on the occurrence of the genus Crocidura in Tunisia reports a single specimen identified as C. suaveolens. Therefore a third species, besides C. russula and C. whitakeri would occur in the country. However, the presence of C. suaveolens in North-Africa is controversial and was recently ruled out from the other Maghrebi countries (Algieria and Morocco). During the period 1989-90, 71 specimens of shrews were collected from owls pellets or trapped at Tunisian 12 sites. This material was measured and studied both by classic morphometric and multivariate methods (Fuzzy test, Principal Coordinate Analysis and Generalized Procrustes Analysis), considering also reference samples (C. …

Balearic islandsGenus CrocidurabiologyEcologybusiness.industryShrewGeneralized Procrustes analysisDistribution (economics)government.political_districtbiology.organism_classificationRussulaGeographyCrocidurabiology.animalSingle specimengovernmentAnimal Science and ZoologybusinessEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsActa Theriologica
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