4 research outputs found

    Unveiling the cryptic morphology and ontogeny of the Colombian Caiman crocodilus: a geometric morphometric approach

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    Caiman crocodilus is an alligatoroid broadly distributed in the neotropics from Mexico to Brazil, where Colombia is the only country that has the complete subspecies complex distributed in its territory. This species has been the focus of many genetic, ecological and morphological studies. However, these studies are limited to traditional morphology methods or have limitations to examine interspecific variation among the four subspecies reported in Colombia. This is the first study of intraspecific variation in the skull of Caiman crocodilus complex distributed in Colombia, using a two-dimensional approach of geometric morphometric on 122 post-hatching ontogenetic cranial series. Morphological differences between species and changes during ontogeny (snout increases its length and, skull roof and orbits decrease their proportions) that represents part of morphological changes in the cranial ontogeny of crocodilians were found. In the morphospace, there was a significant differentiation of C. crocodilus apaporiensis and C. crocodilus crocodilus from C. crocodilus fuscus and C. crocodilus chiapasius. Results from this study revealed that C. crocodilus apaporiensis is a differentiated group from the global complex as well as that the specimens of C. crocodilus chiapasius collected from Medem in Colombia may be showing cryptic morphology in some traits. © 2019, Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature

    Molecular Phylogenetics of the New-World Crocodylia

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    During the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, there has been a revolution in evolutionary biology. Traditional methods that had been applied to understanding relationships and natural history for hundreds of years have been supplemented (and sometimes replaced) by biochemical and molecular techniques that now allow us to examine the entire genomes of non-model organisms. Herein we review the use of these new technologies as they apply to crocodylians in general and specifically to the New-World members of the Alligatoridae and Crocodylidae. While generally concordant with traditional analyses, in some cases they have permitted cryptic species to be recognized. In addition, they have allowed crocodylian biologists to detect hybridization events between species, both in captivity and in the wild, that would not have been possible before their use. Hybridization may lead to the formation of new species, but it may also allow a common species to “swamp out” a rarer one. Because there appears to be little hybrid dysgenesis between many of the potential hybridizing forms, hybridization is potentially a serious problem for several New-World species

    Memorias del primer Simposio Nacional de Ciencias Agronómicas

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    Primer simposio nacional de Ciencias Agronómicas: El renacer del espacio de discusión científica para el Agro colombiano

    Memorias del primer Simposio Nacional de Ciencias Agronómicas

    No full text
    Primer simposio nacional de Ciencias Agronómicas: El renacer del espacio de discusión científica para el Agro colombiano
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