5 research outputs found

    Récolement et diffusion dans les bases de données spécialisées

    Get PDF
    L’inventaire et le rĂ©colement permettent au personnel de conservation des musĂ©es d’acquĂ©rir une connaissance approfondie des collections et de complĂ©ter les informations qui y sont liĂ©es. Quelles suites donner Ă  cette mission qui reprĂ©sente un investissement considĂ©rable pour les institutions musĂ©ales 

    Jean Hermann, l’holotype et le nĂ©otype de la Couleuvre de Montpellier, <i>Coluber monspessulanus</i> Hermann, 1804 (Reptilia, Squamata)

    No full text
    La Couleuvre de Montpellier, serpent emblĂ©matique du Midi mĂ©diterranĂ©en, est actuellement nommĂ©e Malpolon monspessulanus (Hermann, 1804). Elle a Ă©tĂ© dĂ©crite comme Coluber monspessulanus par Jean Hermann, dans un ouvrage posthume publiĂ© en 1804. Plus de deux siĂšcles aprĂšs cette description, le type unique ou holotype n’a pas Ă©tĂ© identifiĂ© dans les collections du MusĂ©e zoologique de la ville de Strasbourg. Il avait Ă©tĂ© communiquĂ© Ă  Hermann par un mĂ©decin naturaliste de Montpellier, Guillaume Joseph Roubieu. Un nĂ©otype de Coluber monspessulanus est proposĂ© et dĂ©crit. À cette description sont ajoutĂ©es plusieurs donnĂ©es sur les singularitĂ©s, notamment morphologiques, de l’espĂšce.The Montpellier Snake, emblematic snake of the Mediterranean Midi, is currently named Malpolon monspessulanus (Hermann, 1804). It was described as Coluber monspessulanus by Jean Hermann, in a posthumous work published in 1804. More than two centuries later, the single type or holotype was not located in the collections of the MusĂ©e zoologique de la ville de Strasbourg. It had been sent to Hermann by a physician and naturalist of Montpellier, Guillaume Joseph Roubieu. A neotype of Coluber monspessulanus is here proposed and described. To this description are added several data on the peculiarities, especially morphological, of the species.</p

    mai-juin 2014

    No full text
    Le rĂ©colement : un Ă©tat des lieux des collections Les musĂ©ums d’Histoire naturelle sont placĂ©s devant l’obligation – par la loi du 4 janvier 2002 – de procĂ©der, en tant que « MusĂ©es de France », au rĂ©colement dĂ©cennal de leurs collections. Ce numĂ©ro thĂ©matique de La Lettre de l’OCIM, rĂ©alisĂ© grĂące Ă  la collaboration active de Nathalie MĂ©moire, conservateur en chef du patrimoine et directrice du musĂ©um d’Histoire naturelle de Bordeaux, rassemble les contributions des acteurs de cette opĂ©ration d’envergure. Il dresse un premier bilan de ces dix annĂ©es de travail intensif menĂ© par les personnels des musĂ©ums, dĂ©crivant les diffĂ©rentes stratĂ©gies adoptĂ©es, soulignant les difficultĂ©s rencontrĂ©es et la complexitĂ© de la tĂąche Ă  accomplir. Il met Ă©galement en Ă©vidence le rĂŽle jouĂ© par la ConfĂ©rence Permanente des MusĂ©ums de France dans l’élaboration d’une rĂ©flexion collective et d’un vocabulaire commun ainsi que dans le partage et la mutualisation des expĂ©riences. Enfin, il permet de mesurer les bĂ©nĂ©fices du rĂ©colement pour le contrĂŽle de l’état sanitaire des spĂ©cimens et en matiĂšre d’approfondissement des connaissances sur les collections. Serge Lochot, rĂ©dacteur en chef de la Lettre de l'OCI

    Analysis of Polycerate Mutants Reveals the Evolutionary Co-option of HOXD1 for Horn Patterning in Bovidae

    Get PDF
    In the course of evolution, pecorans (i.e. higher ruminants) developed a remarkable diversity of osseous cranial appendages, collectively referred to as 'headgear', which likely share the same origin and genetic basis. However, the nature and function of the genetic determinants underlying their number and position remain elusive. Jacob and other rare populations of sheep and goats are characterized by polyceraty, the presence of more than two horns. Here, we characterize distinct POLYCERATE alleles in each species, both associated with defective HOXD1 function. We show that haploinsufficiency at this locus results in the splitting of horn bud primordia, likely following the abnormal extension of an initial morphogenetic field. These results highlight the key role played by this gene in headgear patterning and illustrate the evolutionary co-option of a gene involved in the early development of bilateria to properly fix the position and number of these distinctive organs of Bovidae

    Analysis of Polycerate Mutants Reveals the Evolutionary Co-option of HOXD1 for Horn Patterning in Bovidae

    Get PDF
    International audienceIn the course of evolution, pecorans (i.e. higher ruminants) developed a remarkable diversity of osseous cranial appendages, collectively referred to as 'headgear', which likely share the same origin and genetic basis. However, the nature and function of the genetic determinants underlying their number and position remain elusive. Jacob and other rare populations of sheep and goats are characterized by polyceraty, the presence of more than two horns. Here, we characterize distinct POLYCERATE alleles in each species, both associated with defective HOXD1 function. We show that haploinsufficiency at this locus results in the splitting of horn bud primordia, likely following the abnormal extension of an initial morphogenetic field. These results highlight the key role played by this gene in headgear patterning and illustrate the evolutionary co-option of a gene involved in the early development of bilateria to properly fix the position and number of these distinctive organs of Bovidae
    corecore