Search results for "PTE"

showing 10 items of 2238 documents

Studies on the effects of Ca2++ and Co++ on the swimming behavior of the blind Mexican cave fish

1992

The hypothesis that the blind cave fish (Astyanax hubbsi) adjusts the level of stimulation to its lateral line system (LLS) by varying its own velocity was examined. When the sensitivity of the LLS sense organs was reduced by lowering the Ca2+ concentration in the water or by adding Co2+ the fish compensated for this by swimming at a higher velocity.

geographyAstyanax hubbsigeography.geographical_feature_categorySense organPhysiologyLateral lineMineralogyZoologyBiologyBehavioral NeuroscienceCaveFish <Actinopterygii>Animal Science and ZoologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Comparative Physiology A
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The Forebrain of the Blind Cave Fish &lt;i&gt;Astyanax hubbsi &lt;/i&gt;(Characidae)

1997

This paper presents a survey of the cell groups in the telencephalon of the teleost Astyanax hubbsi, based on series of transverse sections stained with the Nissl-, Kluver-Barrera and Bodian procedure

geographyAstyanax hubbsigeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyAnatomybiology.organism_classificationCharacidaeBehavioral Neurosciencesymbols.namesakeDevelopmental NeuroscienceCaveForebrainNissl bodysymbolsFish <Actinopterygii>Brain, Behavior and Evolution
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Learning and remembering the environment in the blind cave fishAnoptichthys jordani

1989

1. The swimming behavior of blind cave fish (Anoptichthys jordani) differs in familiar and unfamiliar surroundings. Following release in unfamiliar surroundings, or after alterations of a familiar environment, the fish increase swimming velocity in order to optimize lateral line organ stimulation. Furthermore, they glide along boundary features more often than they do in familiar surroundings. These characteristics of swimming behavior were used to measure the occurrence and duration of exploratory behavior. 2. Fish removed from a familiar environment for as long as 2 days spend less time exploring when returned than when they were initially placed in the environment. After a longer absence…

geographyCommunicationgeography.geographical_feature_categoryPhysiologybusiness.industryfungitechnology industry and agricultureAxis of symmetryFamiliar environmentFisheryBehavioral NeuroscienceCaveFish <Actinopterygii>Animal Science and ZoologybusinessEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeologyJournal of Comparative Physiology A
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Detection of stationary objects by the blind Cave FishAnoptichthys jordani (Characidae)

1981

It was noticed that the blind Mexican Cave Fish repeatedly passes along objects new to it at a short distance. Observations and experiments are reported which support the hypothesis that water movements occurring between the stationary object and the fish as it passes by convey information about the location and possibly the shape of the object, which is detected by the lateral line organ of the fish. Water movements of the expected type were recorded with the help of a model fish equipped with a mechano-electric analogue of a free neuromast.

geographyCommunicationgeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyPhysiologybusiness.industryWater Movementsbiology.organism_classificationShort distanceCharacidaeBehavioral NeurosciencePaleontologyCaveFish <Actinopterygii>Stationary objectAnimal Science and ZoologybusinessEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeologyJournal of comparative physiology
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Terpenoid composition and origin of amber from the Cape York Peninsula, Australia

2014

The terpenoid composition of fossil resin from the Cape York Peninsula, Australia has been analysed by pyrolysis-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (Py-GC-MS) to determine its origin. The pyrolysis products were dominated by cadalene-based C15 bicyclic sesquiterpenoids including some C30–C31 bicadinanes and bicadinenes typical of Class II resin derived from angiosperm plants of Dipterocarpaceae. This observation contrasts with the Araucariaceae (Agathis sp.) source previously suggested for the resin based on Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) analyses. Dipterocarpaceae are not known in Australian vegetation but grow abundantly in Southeast Asia including New Guinea, indicating that the geo…

geographyDipterocarpaceaegeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyEcologyAraucariaceaeVegetationbiology.organism_classificationTerpenoidchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryPeninsulaCapeAgathisBotanyEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)General Earth and Planetary SciencesCadaleneGeologyAustralian Journal of Earth Sciences
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Parasitoids (Hymenoptera) of leaf-spinning moths (Lepidoptera) feeding on Vaccinium uliginosum L. along an ecological gradient in central European pe…

2011

Parasitoids of leaf-spinning Lepidoptera associated with two isolated central European peat bogs were investigated. Five families of parasitoid Hymenoptera (Braconidae, lchneumonidae, Eulophidae, Pteromalidae and Encyrtidae) were recorded. Three categories were recognised: (1) primary parasitoids, (2) facultative hyperparasitoids and (3) obligatory hyperparasitoids. Ten species of Braconidae, five species and seven marked morphospecies among lchneumonidae, and three species of Chalcidoidea were identified. Despite of some niche-specific (but less host-specific) parasitoids, all these hymenopterans are likely to be generalists and none of them were confirmed to be habitat and/or host special…

geographyPeatgeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyEcologyVaccinium uliginosumHymenoptera parasitoids Vaccinium uliginosum peat bogs leaf-spinning moths ecological gradient Ichneumonidae Community revisionWetlandHymenopteraICHNEUMONIDAEbiology.organism_classificationREVISIONCOMMUNITYLepidoptera genitaliaSettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataHabitatInsect ScienceBotanyEcological gradientArtikkelitBog
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Many More Consumers Not Always Induce Stronger Competition: Weaker Interspecific Competition Despite Higher Species Richness in Secondary Feeding Gui…

2021

The species functional structuration (specifically in terms of species richness and average intensity of interspecific competition) is widely varying among species communities and this point is now very well documented in literature. But, what about the species functional structuration within the different feeding guilds that coexist in a same local community – in particular the primary and the secondary feeding guilds? Are there significant differences – or not – between them in this respect? This rather fundamental issue does not seem having been addressed yet, at least using appropriate investigative tools. However, a series of recently published case studies, precisely implementing such…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectInterspecific competitionCoral reefBiologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyCompetition (biology)GuildFish <Actinopterygii>Species richnessGeneral Agricultural and Biological Sciencesmedia_commonAnnual Research &amp; Review in Biology
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Sensory performance of blind Mexican cave fish after destruction of the canal neuromasts.

1990

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryFishesSense OrgansSensory systemGeneral MedicineAnatomyBiologyMotor ActivitySensory receptorBlindnessMechanoreceptorLesionMethylene Bluemedicine.anatomical_structureCavemedicineFish <Actinopterygii>Animalsmedicine.symptomEpidermisEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDie Naturwissenschaften
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&lt;strong&gt;New records of &lt;em&gt;Pseudophatnoma&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;laosana&lt;/em&gt; B. Lis, 1999 (Hemiptera: Tingoidea: Cantacaderidae) fro…

2015

The lace-bug genus Pseudophatnoma was described for P. corniculata from the Riau Archipelago in Indonesia, and because of its morphological characteristics the genus was placed in the subfamily Cantacaderinae of the family Tingidae (Blote 1945).

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categorySubfamilybiologyEcologyMale genitaliabiology.organism_classificationHemipteraTingidaeGenusArchipelagoAnimal Science and ZoologyChinaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsZootaxa
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Towards the identification of a new taphonomic agent: An analysis of bone accumulations obtained from modern Egyptian vulture (Neophron percnopterus)…

2014

This paper presents the results of a study of bones recovered in various current Egyptian vulture (Neophron percnopterus) nests in a Mediterranean region of the Iberian Peninsula. The Egyptian vulture, a diurnal, scavenging, rupicolous bird of prey, is one of four vulture species that currently inhabit the Iberian Peninsula. An analysis of the remains found in the nests confirms that it has a heterogeneous diet that includes remains from human activities (butchery and food production) and the carcasses of dead animals, although it is possible that they also prey on small-sized taxa. The taphonomic study determines these birds' capability of transporting, accumulating and altering bone remai…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryTaphonomyEcologyBird of preyBiologyPrehistòriahumanitiesPredationBeakTaxonPeninsulabiology.animalNeophron percnopterusEarth-Surface ProcessesVulture
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