Search results for "Pipidae"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

The ontogeny of the filter apparatus of anuran larvae (Amphibia, Anura)

1991

The pharynx ofBufo calamita, Rana temporaria andBombina variegata larvae (larval Types IV and III) changes considerably during the latter part of embryonic development. The entodermal regions between the visceral pockets flatten inward to form the anlagen of the filter plates. The ectoderm thrusts forward from the area of the persistent epidermal gills overlying the anlagen of the filter plates. The esophagus pushes dorsolaterally into the pharynx to give rise to the ciliary cushions. Comparison with the development ofXenopus laevis (larval Type I) reveals shared characters: (1) the filter plates are overlapped by the sensory layer of the epiderm and (2) the ciliary grooves are, like the ci…

Gillfood.ingredientbiologyOntogenyPipidaeEctodermAnatomybiology.organism_classificationMucusfoodmedicine.anatomical_structureRanoideaSalientiaYolkembryonic structuresmedicineAnimal Science and ZoologyDevelopmental BiologyZoomorphology
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Identification and potential origin of invasive clawed frogsXenopus(Anura: Pipidae) in Sicily based on mitochondrial and nuclear DNA

2013

African clawed frogs of the widespread polytypic species Xenopus laevis Daudin, 1802 (ranging large parts of sub-Saharan Africa) have been spreading since the 1940s, and have established reproductive populations in Europe, Asia and the Americas, where they can have negative impact as competitors of native amphibians and as disease vectors for chytridomycosis or ranaviruses. Here we use two mitochondrial (cytochrome b, 16S rDNA) and one nuclear (RAG 1: Recombination Associated Gene 1) DNA markers to infer the potential origin of invasive clawed frogs from Sicily that represent the largest invasive population in Europe. Identical mtDNA haplotypes match with those of Xenopus laevis, and Sicili…

Mitochondrial DNAeducation.field_of_studybiologyEcologyCytochrome bPipidaeHaplotypePopulationXenopus laeviXenopusZoologyIntroduced speciesbiology.organism_classificationNuclear DNASouth Africainvasive specieAnimal Science and ZoologyeducationPhylogenetic assignmentSicilyItalian Journal of Zoology
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