Search results for "Siida"

showing 10 items of 11 documents

Pulchrosomapulchrosoma(Trematoda: Cathaemasiidae) in Ringed kingfishers (Megaceryletorquatatorquata) from Iquitos, Peru: with inferences on life-cycl…

2007

In the winter of 2001, four Ringed kingfishers (Megaceryle torquata torquata) were imported from Iquitos, Peru for the zoological garden Faunia in Madrid. Two individuals were necropsied, and infections by the digenean trematode Pulchrosoma pulchrosoma were discovered inside granulomas located in the lung, trachea and coelomic cavity. The life cycle of this trematode species is unknown. In one case the host maintained the parasite infection for at least 5 months, which represents a relatively long prepatency period. Moreover, the body locations in the hosts may suggest that the parasite is able to actively cross the lungs from the coelomic cavity to propagate.

MaleLife Cycle StagesGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologybiologyBird DiseasesEcologyCathaemasiidaeTrematode Infectionsbiology.organism_classificationBirdsMegaceryle torquata torquataFood AnimalsPeruAnimalsCoelomParasite hostingAnimal Science and ZoologyTrematodaTrematodaAvian Pathology
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Habitat-specific ranging patterns of Dian's tarsiers (Tarsius dianae) as revealed by radiotracking

2006

Dian's tarsier Tarsius dianae, one of the smallest primates on earth, is endemic to the central regions of Sulawesi, Indonesia. To evaluate the effects of increasing land use by humans on the ranging patterns of this nocturnal insect hunter, four study plots along a gradient of anthropogenic disturbance were selected for this study. In these plots, 71 tarsiers were captured with mist nets, and 30 of these were fitted with 3.9 g radiotransmitters and subsequently tracked over the course of 2 weeks per animal. The average home ranges were 1.1-1.8 ha in size, with the smallest ranges in slightly disturbed habitat and the largest ranges in a heavily disturbed plantation. These findings coincide…

MalebiologyEcologyHome rangeAnimal Identification SystemsTarsiidaeNocturnalbiology.organism_classificationTarsierCircadian RhythmGeographyHabitatDisturbance (ecology)IndonesiaAbundance (ecology)biology.animalAnimalsAnimal MigrationFemaleAnimal Science and ZoologyPrimateSeasonsEcosystemEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTarsiusAmerican Journal of Primatology
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Etnisyyden rakentuminen kahden saamelaismuseon perusnäyttelyissä

2015

This study examines the construction of ethnicity in the permanent exhibitions of two museums: Siida, the National Museum of the Finnish Sámi and the Nature Centre of Metsähallitus, and Ájtte, the Swedish Mountain and Sámi Museum. The study is motivated by three research questions: What kind of ethnic categories and boundaries do the exhibitions create? How is Sámi ethnicity defined by displaying cultural features? How do the exhibitions depict relationships between the Sámi and other ethnicities, governmental power, the ‘Sámi area’, and nature? The exhibitions are examined in the context of the contemporary public discussion about Sámi ethnicity; the study aims to explain how the two museu…

itserepresentaatiokulttuuriympäristöpuheetninen identiteettiKriittinen diskurssianalyysietnopoliittiset käytännötparadigmanmuutosrepresentaationäyttelykokemuksetmuseotkulttuurierotRuotsin tunturi- ja saamelaismuseo Ájttediscourse analysismuseum exhibitionsnäyttelytoimintasaamelaiskategoriatsaamelaisuusÁjtteetnosentrismiYlä-Lapin luontokeskus SiidaympäristöuhkapuhekonstruktivismiSaamenmaaSiidaethnicityalkuperäiskansatthe Sámikulttuuri-identiteetti
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Evolution to the extreme: origins of the highly modified apical system in pourtalesiid echinoids

2004

The apical system of the genus Pourtalesia displays a plate architecture that falls so far outside that typical of other echinoids that plate homologies remain problematic. A new approach using the Extraxial–Axial Theory (EAT) that develops homologies for the Echinodermata is proposed. The exploration of apical plate patterns throughout ontogenetic sequences shows that the typical holasteroid pattern found in the youngest specimens undergoes a series of disturbances that result in a multiple disjunction accompanied by isolation or disappearance of certain genital plates. We propose a new interpretation of the apical architecture of the genus that agrees with: (1) the plate addition processe…

PaleontologyGenusEvolutionary biologyPourtalesiidaeAnimal Science and ZoologyContext (language use)BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsZoological Journal of the Linnean Society
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The pioneering role of PRDM9 indel mutations in tarsier evolution

2016

PRDM9 is currently the sole speciation gene found in vertebrates causing hybrid sterility probably due to incompatible alleles. Its role in defining the double strand break loci during the meiotic prophase I is crucial for proper chromosome segregation. Therefore, the rapid turnover of the loci determining zinc finger array seems to be causative for incompatibilities. We here investigated the zinc finger domain-containing exon of PRDM9 in 23 tarsiers. Tarsiers, the most basal extant haplorhine primates, exhibit two frameshifting indels at the 5'-end of the array. The first mutation event interrupts the reading frame and function while the second compensates both. The fixation of this allele…

Evolution MolecularINDEL MutationProtein DomainsTarsiidaeAnimalsZinc FingersHistone-Lysine N-MethyltransferaseArticle570 Biowissenschaften570 Life sciencesScientific Reports
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First record of Aplysia dactylomela (Opisthobranchia: Aplysiidae) from the Egadi Islands (western Sicily)

2014

The alien mollusc Aplysia dactylomela is recorded for the first time from the Egadi Islands marine protected area (western Sicily). This species has been widely reported in the Mediterranean and has established populations in Sicily. The presence of a few specimens let us suppose that its occurrence in this area is a recent event and that soon new populations will be sighted in the whole Egadi Islands and on the western and southern coasts of Sicily.

Mediterranean climateEcologybiologySettore BIO/02 - Botanica SistematicaSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaOpisthobranchiaMediterranean Sea western Sicily Egadi Islands marine protected area biological invasions Mollusca Aplysia dactylomelaAlienAplysiidaeAquatic ScienceOceanographybiology.organism_classificationAplysia dactylomelaFisheryMediterranean seaMarine protected areaMolluscaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMarine Biodiversity Records
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Stop and Go - Waves of Tarsier Dispersal Mirror the Genesis of Sulawesi Island.

2015

The Indonesian island of Sulawesi harbors a highly endemic and diverse fauna sparking fascination since long before Wallace's contemplation of biogeographical patterns in the region. Allopatric diversification driven by geological or climatic processes has been identified as the main mechanism shaping present faunal distribution on the island. There is both consensus and conflict among range patterns of terrestrial species pointing to the different effects of vicariant events on once co-distributed taxa. Tarsiers, small nocturnal primates with possible evidence of an Eocene fossil record on the Asian mainland, are at present exclusively found in insular Southeast Asia. Sulawesi is hotspot o…

IndonesiaMolecular Sequence Datalcsh:RTarsiidaeAnimalslcsh:Medicinelcsh:QBiodiversityOceanographylcsh:ScienceResearch Article570 Biowissenschaften570 Life sciencesPLoS ONE
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Rediscovery of the enigmatic solifuges (Arachnida: Solifugae) at Lampedusa Island (Italy)

2018

Solifuges were recorded in Italy for the first time in 1956, on the island of Lampedusa (Strait of Sicily), and classified as Biton ehrenbergi Karsch, 1880 and Biton velox Simon, 1885. More than 60 years later, we carried out the first targeted investigation of these little-known animals. A survey conducted during both spring and autumn 2017 confirmed the presence of solifuges on Lampedusa Island. We identified all specimens as B. velox and not B. ehrenbergi. We concluded that B. ehrenbergi is absent from the island, on the basis of both newly collected data and a re-evaluation of the past records. Morphology and taxonomic position of the examined specimens are discussed in light of the unr…

SolifugaeBitonbiologySettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaZoologyDaesiidaehabitat degradationbiology.organism_classificationGeographyArachnidalcsh:ZoologyAnimal Science and Zoologylcsh:QL1-991LampedusaThe European Zoological Journal
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Elucidating geological and biological processes underlying the diversification of Sulawesi tarsiers.

2009

Because of their exceptionally long independent evolution, a range diminution of their Eocene relatives, and a remarkable subsequent diversification in Southeast Asia, tarsiers are of particular importance to evolutionary primatologists. Little is known, however, on the processes shaping the radiation of these small enigmatic primates—especially on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi, their center of endemism. Geological reconstructions and progress in applying DNA sequence information to divergence dating now provide us with the tools and background to comprehend tarsier dispersal. Here, we describe effects of plate-tectonic movements, Pleistocene sea level changes, and hybridization on the…

mtDNA control regionMost recent common ancestorGeological PhenomenaMultidisciplinaryBase SequenceRange (biology)EcologyBiogeographyMolecular Sequence DataPopulation DynamicsTarsiidaeGenetic VariationBiologyBiological Sciencesbiology.organism_classificationTarsierMitochondriaEvolution MolecularPhylogeographyIndonesiaBiological dispersalAnimalsEndemismPhylogenyBiological PhenomenaProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
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Spermatocyte Chromosomes in Some Species of the Family Aplysiidae (Gastropoda, Opisthobranchia)

1982

SUMMARYCounting spermatocyte bivalents, we have determined the haploid number n = 16 for Aplysia depilans and A. punctata, and n = 17 for A. limacina. We have confirmed n = 17 for Bursatella leachii. Male diakinetic bivalents are probably chiasmatic in all the species examined. The orders Nudibranchia and Notaspidea, possessing haploid values of 13 and 12 chromosomes respectively, seem to be more evolved than the other orders of the sub-class Opisthobranchia.

biologyAplysia depilansBotanyGastropodaGeneticsOpisthobranchiaAplysiidaeLimacinaBursatella leachiiPloidyGeneral Agricultural and Biological Sciencesbiology.organism_classificationNotaspideaCaryologia
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