300 research outputs found

    Reptiles of Rancho Grande and vicinity, Estado Aragua, Venezuela

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    http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/56372/1/MP128.pd

    Ecology of the lizard, 'Ctenotus taeniolatus': interaction of life history, energy storage and tail autonomy

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    A study of the ecology of the lizard, 'Ctenotus taeniolatus' was conducted in the New England Tablelands of NSW, Australia from 1979 to 1982. The two aims of the study were firstly to answer specific questions relating to the life history of 'Ctenotus taeniolatus', and secondly to investigate the significance of the tail, the principal energy storage organ, to that life history. Consequently, questions concerning aspects of habitat selection, food and feeding behaviour, growth, reproduction and energy storage of 'C. taeniolatus' were posed and produced the following results. (i) Lizards used rocks as refuges, where they dug burrows, the shape and depth of which were found to be independent of season or lizard sex. (ii) Lizards were found to be insectivorous, using both sit-and-wait and active foraging feeding behaviours. Adults and juveniles exhibited these behaviours in different ratios. (iii) Lizards hatched at 33 mm SVL and were found to grow to maximum sizes of 75 mm (female) and 70 mm (male), reaching sexual maturity at 52 mm (female) and 43 mm (male), when they were likely to be 2 or perhaps 1 year old. Growth rates and associated growth models are presented. (iv) Females were found to be oviparous, laying 1 to 7 eggs each summer. Spermatogenesis, ovulation and mating all occurred in spring. Clutch size was found to be related to body size. (v) Lizards stored lipid in the general carcass and tail but possessed no abdominal fat bodies. Carcass lipid remained unchanged throughout the year, while tail lipid showed a distinct seasonal cycle in females, males and juveniles with low points occurring at the end of winter and after mating and ovulation. Liver weights, and glycogen and lipid content of the liver also showed seasonal cycles. Further, questions about the significance of the tail to 'C. taeniolatus' produced the following results. (i) Lizards were found to store all of their usable lipids in the tail. (ii) Lipid stores in the tail were found, theoretically and experimentally, to be necessary for survival overwinter and for reproduction. (iii) At most 60% of lizards autotomised the tail. (iv) Lipids within the tail were found to be stored mainly in the proximal end, which only 20% of lizards were found to lose during autotomy. Taken together these results indicated that, because of the practise of economy of autotomy, the probability of lizards being adversely effected by autotomy was very small

    Is Aquatic Life Correlated with an Increased Hematocrit in Snakes?

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    Background: Physiological adaptations that allow air-breathing vertebrates to remain underwater for long periods mainly involve modifications of the respiratory system, essentially through increased oxygen reserves. Physiological constraints on dive duration tend to be less critical for ectotherms than for endotherms because the former have lower mass-specific metabolic rates. Moreover, comparative studies between marine and terrestrial ectotherms have yet to show overall distinct physiological differences specifically associated with oxygen reserves. Methodology/Principal Findings: We used phylogenetically informed statistical models to test if habitat affects hematocrit (an indicator of blood oxygen stores) in snakes, a lineage that varies widely in habitat use. Our results indicate that both phylogenetic position (clade) and especially habitat are significant predictors of hematocrit. Our analysis also confirms the peculiar respiratory physiology of the marine Acrochordus granulatus. Conclusion/Significance: Contrary to previous findings, marine snakes have significantly–albeit slightly–elevated hematocrit, which should facilitate increased aerobic dive times. Longer dives could have consequences for foraging, mate searching, and predation risks. Alternatively, but not exclusively, increased Hct in marine species might also help t

    Phylogeography and invasion history of Aedes aegypti, the Dengue and Zika mosquito vector in Cape Verde islands (West Africa)

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    Aedes-borne arboviruses have spread globally with outbreaks of vast impact on human populations and health systems. The West African archipelago of Cape Verde had its first outbreak of Dengue in 2009, at the time the largest recorded in Africa, and was one of the few African countries affected by the Zika virus epidemic. Aedes aegypti was the mosquito vector involved in both outbreaks. We performed a phylogeographic and population genetics study of A. aegypti in Cape Verde in order to infer the geographic origin and evolutionary history of this mosquito. These results are discussed with respect to the implications for vector control and prevention of future outbreaks. Mosquitoes captured before and after the Dengue outbreak on the islands of Santiago, Brava, and Fogo were analyzed with two mitochondrial genes COI and ND4, 14 microsatellite loci and five kdr mutations. Genetic variability was comparable to other African populations. Our results suggest that A. aegypti invaded Cape Verde at the beginning of the Holocene from West Africa. Given the historic importance of Cape Verde in the transatlantic trade of the 16th-17th centuries, a possible contribution to the genetic pool of the founding populations in the New World cannot be fully discarded. However, contemporary gene flow with the Americas is likely to be infrequent. No kdr mutations associated with pyrethroid resistance were detected. The implications for vector control and prevention of future outbreaks are discussed.publishersversionpublishe

    A Fetal-Maternal Shift of Blood Oxygen Affinity in an Australian Viviparous Lizard, Sphenomorphus quoyii (Reptilia, Scincidae)

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    Compared to adults, the oxygen affinity of blood from fetal Sphenomorphus quoyii is very much higher: P50 is approximately 70 Torr in adults and 30 Torr in nearly full term embryos (PC02= 17 Torr, T=34 degrees C). Following birth, oxygen affinity decreases gradually and adult values are approached after about 15 weeks, with the onset of winter retreat. Electrophoresis revealed a multiple hemoglobin system in both adults and embryos, but there were no apparent differences between them

    Validation and Use of 22Na Turnover to Measure Food Intake in Free-Ranging Lizards

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    As the food intake of free-ranging animals has proved to be difficult to measure by traditional means, the feasibility of using radioactive Na to measure food consumption in a small scincid lizard (Lampropholis guichenoti) was assessed. This technique has previously been used only for several species of mammal. A significant relationship between food intake and Na turnover was found in the laboratory, with Na turnover underestimating intake by 7.6%. The food intake of free-ranging members of a field population was estimated by 22Na turnover to be 9.55, 0.65, 9.39 and 13.75 mg dry weight (day)-1 during autumn, winter, spring and summer respectively. Estimates of assimilated and expended energy from these food intake values agree closely with data reported for other lizards using alternative techniques. This study also describes the technical innovations which were necessary to study lizards weighing less than 1 g; and it suggests that 22Na can provide an easy, reliable and inexpensive means of studying the energetics of many free-living animals

    Health status in non-dystrophic myotonias: close relation with pain and fatigue

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    To determine self-reported health status in non-dystrophic myotonias (NDM) and its relationship to painful myotonia and fatigue. In a cross-sectional study, 32 NDM patients with chloride and 30 with sodium channelopathies, all off treatment, completed a standardised interview, the fatigue assessment scale (FAS), and the 36-item Short-Form Health Survey (SF-36). Beside formal assessment of pain, assessment of painful or painless myotonia was determined. The domain scores of the SF-36 were compared with Dutch community scores. Apart from the relationship among SF-36 scores and (1) painful myotonia and (2) fatigue, regression analyses in both NDM groups were conducted to determine the strongest determinants of the SF-36 domains general health perception, physical component (PCS) and mental component summary (MCS). All physically oriented SF-36 domains in both NDM groups (P ≤ 0.01) and social functioning in the patients with sodium channelopathies (P = 0.048) were substantially lower relative to the Dutch community scores. The patients with painful myotonia (41.9%) scored substantially (P < 0.05) lower on most SF-36 domains than the patients without painful myotonia (58.1%). Fatigued patients (53.2%) scored substantially lower (P ≤ 0.01) on all SF-36 domains than their non-fatigued counterparts (46.8%). The regression analysis showed that fatigue was the strongest predictor for the general-health perception and painful myotonia for the physical-component summary. None of the patients showed below-norm scores on the domain mental-component summary. The impact of NDM on the physical domains of patients’ health status is substantial, and particularly painful myotonia and fatigue tend to impede their physical functioning

    Evolutionary conservation of lampbrush-like loops in drosophilids

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Loopin-1 is an abundant, male germ line specific protein of <it>Drosophila melanogaster</it>. The polyclonal antibody T53-F1 specifically recognizes Loopin-1 and enables its visualization on the Y-chromosome lampbrush-like loop named kl-3 during primary spermatocyte development, as well as on sperm tails. In order to test lampbrush-like loop evolutionary conservation, extensive phase-contrast microscopy and immunostaining with T53-F1 antibody was performed in other drosophilids scattered along their genealogical tree.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>In the male germ line of all species tested there are cells showing giant nuclei and intranuclear structures similar to those of <it>Drosophila melanogaster </it>primary spermatocytes. Moreover, the antibody T53-F1 recognizes intranuclear structures in primary spermatocytes of all drosophilids analyzed. Interestingly, the extent and conformation of the staining pattern is species-specific. In addition, the intense staining of sperm tails in all species suggests that the terminal localization of Loopin-1 and its orthologues is conserved. A comparison of these cytological data and the data coming from the literature about sperm length, amount of sperm tail entering the egg during fertilization, shape and extent of both loops and primary spermatocyte nuclei, seems to exclude direct relationships among these parameters.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Taken together, the data reported strongly suggest that lampbrush-like loops are a conserved feature of primary spermatocyte nuclei in many, if not all, drosophilids. Moreover, the conserved pattern of the T53-F1 immunostaining indicates that a Loopin-1-like protein is present in all the species analyzed, whose localization on lampbrush-like loops and sperm tails during spermatogenesis is evolutionary conserved.</p

    Visually Guided Avoidance in the Chameleon (Chamaeleo chameleon): Response Patterns and Lateralization

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    The common chameleon, Chamaeleo chameleon, is an arboreal lizard with highly independent, large-amplitude eye movements. In response to a moving threat, a chameleon on a perch responds with distinct avoidance movements that are expressed in its continuous positioning on the side of the perch distal to the threat. We analyzed body-exposure patterns during threat avoidance for evidence of lateralization, that is, asymmetry at the functional/behavioral levels. Chameleons were exposed to a threat approaching horizontally from the left or right, as they held onto a vertical pole that was either wider or narrower than the width of their head, providing, respectively, monocular or binocular viewing of the threat. We found two equal-sized sub-groups, each displaying lateralization of motor responses to a given direction of stimulus approach. Such an anti-symmetrical distribution of lateralization in a population may be indicative of situations in which organisms are regularly exposed to crucial stimuli from all spatial directions. This is because a bimodal distribution of responses to threat in a natural population will reduce the spatial advantage of predators
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