External Morphology (external + morphology)

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Life Sciences


Selected Abstracts


External morphology of a Slovenian population of pumpkinseed Lepomis gibbosus (L.) from a habitat with extreme thermal conditions

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ICHTHYOLOGY, Issue 4 2005
umer
Summary The external morphology and growth variability of morphometric characters of pumpkinseed (n = 141) from an oxbow (River Sava, Slovenia) that receives thermal effluent were examined using triple regression analysis. Differences in external morphology between pumpkinseed from the oxbow and both native North American (River Otonabee, Looncall Lake, Canada) and non-native Central European populations (side arms of the River Danube, Slovakia) were evaluated. Two possible morphotypes among adults were observed, whereas the morphology of juveniles appears rather uniform across geographical location (i.e. Otonabee, Looncall, Danube). This suggests that environmental conditions, i.e. epigenetical information, seem to be responsible for most of variability in pumpkinseed morphology, which represents a function of epigenetical mechanisms. However, further investigation into epigenetical interactions, especially early development, fecundity, number of spawning acts per season, parental care, egg size and age at maturation are necessary to test this hypothesis. [source]


Floral anatomy and systematics of Bretschneidera (Bretschneideraceae)

BOTANICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY, Issue 1 2002
LOUIS P. RONSE DE CRAENE FLS
External morphology and anatomy of the flower and pollen of Bretschneidera sinensis Hemsl. are described to clarify the position of the family Bretschneideraceae relative to the Sapindales and the glucosinolate-producing families. Anatomical and micromorphological characters are investigated and sections are used to understand the structure of the flower. Observation of buds and sections reveal that the flower is obliquely monosymmetric, with the symmetry line running from one petal to a sepal. The upper petal shields the stamens and pistil and becomes positioned apically by the partial resupination of the pedicel. The octomerous androecium is characterized by variable empty positions which are related to the variable insertion of the three carpels. The loss of stamens is linked with a displacement of the remaining stamens. Floral anatomy demonstrates the presence of a nectary extending on the hypanthium from the base of the filaments to the base of the gynoecium. Details of floral anatomy are compared with members of Sapindaceae, Hippocastanaceae, Moringaceae, Akaniaceae, Tropaeolaceae and Capparaceae. Comparison with other characters supports a close relationship with Akaniaceae and Tropaeolaceae in an order Tropaeolales, in concordance with macromolecular results, either at the base of the glucosinolate clade, or in remote connection with the Sapindales. A number of floral anatomical characters with a strong phylogenetic signal are highlighted. © 2002 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2002, 139, 29,45. [source]


Organic,inorganic hybrid mesoporous silicas: functionalization, pore size, and morphology control

THE CHEMICAL RECORD, Issue 1 2006
Sung Soo Park
Abstract Topological design of mesoporous silica materials, pore architecture, pore size, and morphology are currently major issues in areas such as catalytic conversion of bulky molecules, adsorption, host,guest chemistry, etc. In this sense, we discuss the pore size-controlled mesostructure, framework functionalization, and morphology control of organic,inorganic hybrid mesoporous silicas by which we can improve the applicability of mesoporous materials. First, we explain that the sizes of hexagonal- and cubic-type pores in organic,inorganic hybrid mesoporous silicas are well controlled from 24.3 to 98.0,Å by the direct micelle-control method using an organosilica precursor and surfactants with different alkyl chain lengths or triblock copolymers as templates and swelling agents incorporated in the formed micelles. Second, we describe that organic,inorganic hybrid mesoporous materials with various functional groups form various external morphologies such as rod, cauliflower, film, rope, spheroid, monolith, and fiber shapes. Third, we discuss that transition metals (Ti and Ru) and rare-earth ions (Eu3+ and Tb3+) are used to modify organic,inorganic hybrid mesoporous silica materials. Such hybrid mesoporous silica materials are expected to be applied as excellent catalysts for organic reactions, photocatalysis, optical devices, etc. © 2006 The Japan Chemical Journal Forum and Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Chem Rec 6: 32,42; 2006: Published online in Wiley InterScience (www.interscience.wiley.com) DOI 10.1002/tcr.20070 [source]


Gonadal structure analysis of Macrobrachium amazonicum (Heller, 1862) from a wild population: a new insight into the morphotype characterization

AQUACULTURE RESEARCH, Issue 7 2009
Gicelle Maria Farias Da Silva
Abstract The aim of this work is to correlate the histological gonad analysis of adult male Macrobrachium amazonicum of a wild population with morphotypes identified in populations reared in earthen ponds. A total of 500 adult male specimens were collected in the Mosqueiro Island, Municipality of Belém, State of Pará, Brazil. The animals were classified on the basis of body and cheliped colour, second right cheliped spination, total length, cheliped length and weight. The gonads of each morphotype were fixed, processed by histological techniques and stained with haematoxylin and eosin. All four morphotypes, translucent claw (TC), cinnamon claw (CC), green claw 1 (GC1) and green claw 2 (GC2), were identified in the wild population, indicating the same population structure described for cultured animals. The M. amazonicum testes are composed of multiple lobes. The TC gonads showed a population of germ cells in the eccentric portion of the seminiferous tubule and few spermatozoa in the central region. Cinnamon claw males exhibited a large cell population with intense meiotic activity and sparse spermatozoa. Regardless of the different external morphologies of GC1 and GC2, no histological differences were found in their gonads; both had a large number of gametes and similar spermatogenic cell population. Despite the external morphological evidences of the four morphotypes, the histological criteria indicate the existence of only three morphotypes: TC, CC and green claw (GC). [source]


Osteoderm morphology in recent and fossil euphractine xenarthrans

ACTA ZOOLOGICA, Issue 4 2009
C. M. Krmpotic
Abstract The presence of osteoderms within the integument, forming a carapace, is one of the most distinctive features of armadillos with the external morphology of these elements forming the basis of most systematic schemes. This is especially true for fossil taxa, where these elements are most frequent in the palaeontological record. A detailed study of osteoderms from the cephalic shield and different regions of the dorsal armour of Chaetophractus villosus (Euphractinae, Xenarthra) was made and compared to those of the extant genus Dasypus (Dasypodinae, Xenarthra), and the extinct genus ,Eutatus. Three distinct histological zones were recognized: outer and inner zones are thin, formed by regular compact bone, the middle zone is thicker, with large cavities that contain mainly adipose tissue, hair follicles, and sweat and sebaceous glands. The internal structure of ,Eutatus (also a member of Euphractinae) osteoderms is close to that of C. villosus, consistent with the notion that these taxa are phylogenetically closely related. In contrast, Dasypus shows marked differences. Dasypus shows hair follicles associated with both gland types (sweat and sebaceous) and connected to foramina on the external surface. Although not observed in adult C. villosus, it has been documented during embryonic development, only to atrophy later in ontogeny. Furthermore, the presence of red bone marrow is rare in C. villosus, but widespread in Dasypus novemcinctus osteoderms. These results suggest an early split of both subfamilies and support the hypothesis that the Euphractinae are more derived than the Dasypodinae. [source]


Comparative morphology and evolutionary pathways of the mouthparts in spore-feeding Staphylinoidea (Coleoptera)

ACTA ZOOLOGICA, Issue 3 2003
Oliver Betz
Abstract This study surveys the external morphology of the mouthparts in the guild of spore-feeders among the coleopterous superfamily Staphylinoidea, evaluating the influence of different phylogenetic and ecological starting points on the formation of their mouthparts. Our emphasis is on a scanning electron microscope analysis (SEM) of the involved trophic structures in spore-feeding larvae and adults of the Ptiliidae, Leiodidae and Staphylinidae, describing the fine structure of their main functional elements. Functionally, mouthpart structures resemble brushes, brooms, combs, rakes, rasps, excavators, knives, thorns, cram-brushes, bristle troughs, blocks and differently structured grinding surfaces. Their different involvement in the various aspects of the feeding process (i.e. food gathering, transporting, channelling and grinding) is deduced from our SEM analyses plus direct video observations. We infer five different patterns of food transport and processing, discriminating adults of ptiliids, leiodids plus staphylinids (excluding some aleocharines), several aleocharine staphylinids, and the larvae of leiodids and staphylinids. The structural diversity of the mouthparts increases in the order from (1) Ptiliidae, (2) Leiodidae towards (3) Staphylinidae, reflecting the increasing systematic and ecological diversity of these groups. Comparisons with non-spore-feeders show that among major lineages of staphylinoids, shifts from general microphagy to sporophagy are not necessarily constrained by, nor strongly reflected in, mouthpart morphology. Nevertheless, in several of these lineages the organs of food intake and grinding have experienced particular fine-structural modifications, which have undergone convergent evolution, probably in response to specialized mycophagy such as spore-feeding. These modifications involve advanced galeal rakes, galeal or lacinial ,spore brushes' with arrays of stout bristles, reinforced obliquely ventrad orientated prosthecal lobes and the differentiations of the molar grinding surfaces into stout teeth or tubercles. In addition, several staphylinids of the tachyporine and oxyteline groups with reduced mandibular molae have evolved secondary trituration surfaces, which in some aleocharines are paralleled by considerable re-constructions of the labium,hypopharynx. [source]


External Features of the First Instar Larva of Damaster (Coptolabrus) jankowskii jankowskii (Coleoptera; Carabidae)

ENTOMOLOGICAL RESEARCH, Issue 2 2002
Jung Lark KIM
ABSTRACT Larval features of the carabid beetle, Damaster (Coptolabrus) jankowskii jankowskii (Oberthür) were investigated for the first time. For accomplishing the purpose, the adult beetles were collected by pitfall traps in the deciduous forest of Mt. Palgongsan, southern Korea. They have been reared under the laboratory condition of 16L: 8D at 20°C. The first instar larvae were obtained by isolating eggs after oviposition and were kept at the same condition. In the present study, external morphology of the first instar larva of this subspecies are described and its important character states and comparisons with the kin species are also discussed. [source]


External morphology of a Slovenian population of pumpkinseed Lepomis gibbosus (L.) from a habitat with extreme thermal conditions

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ICHTHYOLOGY, Issue 4 2005
umer
Summary The external morphology and growth variability of morphometric characters of pumpkinseed (n = 141) from an oxbow (River Sava, Slovenia) that receives thermal effluent were examined using triple regression analysis. Differences in external morphology between pumpkinseed from the oxbow and both native North American (River Otonabee, Looncall Lake, Canada) and non-native Central European populations (side arms of the River Danube, Slovakia) were evaluated. Two possible morphotypes among adults were observed, whereas the morphology of juveniles appears rather uniform across geographical location (i.e. Otonabee, Looncall, Danube). This suggests that environmental conditions, i.e. epigenetical information, seem to be responsible for most of variability in pumpkinseed morphology, which represents a function of epigenetical mechanisms. However, further investigation into epigenetical interactions, especially early development, fecundity, number of spawning acts per season, parental care, egg size and age at maturation are necessary to test this hypothesis. [source]


Ontogenetic variability in external morphology of bighead goby Neogobius kessleri from the Middle Danube, Slovakia

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ICHTHYOLOGY, Issue 4 2005
V. Ková
Summary Over the last decade, four species of goby have invaded the Middle Danube area, and all of them have spread rapidly. In the early 1990s, bighead goby Neogobius kessleri appeared in the Middle Danube, where it now seems to thrive. Relatively little is known of the environmental biology and ontogeny of this species in its native and non-native ranges. In this paper, preliminary results on the external morphology of bighead goby from the Slovak stretch of the Danube are presented within an ontogenetic context. Patterns of relative growth with no apparent changes at small size suggest direct development in bighead goby, although not as profoundly direct as observed in round goby N. melanostomus. Differences in life history between these two closely related species may have important implications for their success in novel environments, favouring the latter in short term (several years) and the former in long term (decades and longer) perspective. [source]


Trabecular Bone Tissue Strains in the Healthy and Osteoporotic Human Femur,

JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, Issue 10 2003
B Van Rietbergen
Quantitative information about bone tissue-level loading is essential for understanding bone mechanical behavior. We made microfinite element models of a healthy and osteoporotic human femur and found that tissue-level strains in the osteoporotic femoral head were 70% higher on average and less uniformly distributed than those in the healthy one. Introduction: Bone tissue stresses and strains in healthy load-adapted trabecular architectures should be distributed rather evenly, because no bone tissue is expected to be overloaded or unused. In this study, we evaluate this paradigm with the use of microfinite element (,FE) analyses to calculate tissue-level stresses and strains for the human femur. Our objectives were to quantify the strain distribution in the healthy femur, to investigate to what extent this distribution is affected by osteoporosis, to determine if osteoporotic bone is simply bone adapted to lower load levels, and to determine the "safety factor" for trabecular bone. Materials and Methods: ,FE models of a healthy and osteoporotic proximal femur were made from microcomputed tomography images. The models consisted of over 96 and 71 million elements for the healthy and osteoporotic femur, respectively, and represented their internal and external morphology in detail. Stresses and strains were calculated for each element and their distributions were calculated for a volume of interest (VOI) of trabecular bone in the femoral head. Results: The average tissue-level principal strain magnitude in the healthy VOI was 304 ± 185 microstrains and that in the osteoporotic VOI was 520 ± 355 microstrains. Calculated safety factors were 8.6 for the healthy and 4.9 for the osteoporotic femurs. After reducing the force applied to the osteoporotic model to 59%, the average strain compared with that of the healthy femur, but the SD was larger (208 microstrains). Conclusions: Strain magnitudes in the osteoporotic bone were much higher and less uniformly distributed than those in the healthy one. After simulated joint-load reduction, strain magnitudes in the osteoporotic femur were very similar to those in the healthy one, but their distribution is still wider and thus less favorable. [source]


Environmental stress and the costs of whole-organism phenotypic plasticity in tadpoles

JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY, Issue 1 2008
U. K. STEINER
Abstract Costs of phenotypic plasticity are important for the evolution of plasticity because they prevent organisms from shaping themselves at will to match heterogeneous environments. These costs occur when plastic genotypes have relatively low fitness regardless of the trait value expressed. We report two experiments in which we measured selection on predator-induced plasticity in the behaviour and external morphology of frog tadpoles (Rana temporaria). We assessed costs under stressful and benign conditions, measured fitness as larval growth rate or competitive ability and focused analysis on aggregate measures of whole-organism plasticity. There was little convincing evidence for a cost of phenotypic plasticity in our experiments, and costs of canalization were nearly as frequent as costs of plasticity. Neither the magnitude of the cost nor the variation around the estimate (detectability) was sensitive to environmental stress. [source]


New species of Moenkhausia Eigenmann (Characiformes: Characidae) from Rio Xingu and Rio Tapajós basins, Brazil, with comments on a putative case of polymorphic Batesian mimicry

JOURNAL OF FISH BIOLOGY, Issue 10 2009
A. M. Zanata
A new species of Moenkhausia is described from Rio Xingu and Rio Tapajós basins, Brazil. The new species is distinguished from its congeners, except from Moenkhausia moisae, by having more scales in the lateral series, 43,47 (v. 23,41 in the remaining congeners). The new species is distinguished from M. moisae by its colour pattern, which consists of a dark midlateral stripe, and an asymmetrical caudal blotch (inconspicuous or faded in specimens from the Rio Arinos) continuous with the midlateral stripe (v. narrow dark midlateral line and conspicuous, regularly rounded and symmetrical blotch not continuous with the midlateral line). The new species is putatively assumed to be mimetic to Jupiaba apenima, in the Rio Xingu and Rio Teles Pires drainages, and to Jupiaba yarina in the Rio Arinos. The two species of Jupiaba are sympatric and remarkably similar in size, general external morphology and colouration to the new species. A small difference occurs in the colouration between the two species of Jupiaba and is also observed in the two respectively sympatric morphotypes of the new species of Moenkhausia. The occurrence of polymorphic Batesian mimicry is therefore discussed for neotropical freshwater fishes. [source]


Morphological differences between two ecologically similar sympatric fishes

JOURNAL OF FISH BIOLOGY, Issue 10 2009
I. P. Helland
Morphological differentiation and microhabitat segregation of two ecologically similar populations of pelagic planktivorous fishes, Coregonus albula and the smaller Coregonus fontanae, were studied in Lake Stechlin (northern Germany). Both populations performed diel vertical migrations, although C. fontanae was always situated in deeper pelagic water than C. albula both during day and night. Landmark-based geometric morphometrics revealed that sympatric C. albula and C. fontanae differ in external morphology, with main differences found in head length and eye position, as well as in length and width of the caudal peduncle. Moreover, while C. albula has a similar morphology over all sizes, the shape of C. fontanae changes with size. Accordingly, the morphology of the two is most different at smaller size. Although the morphological differences may reflect adaptations to the slightly differing microhabitats of the two populations, there is no conclusive evidence that this correspondence between ecology and morphology is the main mechanism behind the coexistence of the closely related coregonids in Lake Stechlin. [source]


Morphological variability of the Asiatic cyprinid, topmouth gudgeon Pseudorasbora parva, in its introduced European range

JOURNAL OF FISH BIOLOGY, Issue 1 2009
E. Záhorská
To assess the spatial variability in external morphology of non-native populations of topmouth gudgeon Pseudorasbora parva within an ontogenetic context, triple regression analysis (distance-based measurements) was applied to data from eight European populations (two Slovak, four Romanian, one English and one French). The data from Slovakia were also subjected to geometrical analysis (co-ordinates-based measurements) to obtain a more complex picture of the species' overall morphology. Great phenotypic variability was observed, being expressed not only in the formation of different definite phenotypes but also in the manner by which the phenotypes are achieved. Thus, both the definite phenotype and the patterns of development in invasive P. parva may be highly influenced by environmental conditions. Such great morphological (phenotypic) variability is likely to be one of the attributes that make this species such a successful invader. [source]


Description and ontogeny of young Stolephorus baganensis and Thryssa kammalensis, two Engraulididae from Peninsular Malaysia

JOURNAL OF FISH BIOLOGY, Issue 6 2000
V. Sarpéadonti
The morphology of the digestive system was useful to distinguish the larvae of Stolephorus baganensis and Thryssa kammalensis before the full development of their dorsal and anal fins. The relative positions of these fins, the length of the anal fin, and body depth, were good criteria for identifying individuals >10·0 mm LS. For both species, the relative growth of the ten morphometric characters studied was best explained by linear piecewise regressions indicating inflection in allometry at specific standard lengths. Most of these sudden changes in growth rate occurred between 6·9 and 10·0 mm LS for S. baganensis and between 5·8 and 8·9 mm LS for T. kammalensis. Double-centred principal component analysis (PCA) confirmed important changes in the external morphology of both species during this transition period. Prior to this period, the main parameters characterizing the global morphological changes of both species were the length and position of dorsal and anal fins whereas they were body depth and eye diameter (only in S. baganensis) for larger specimens. Complete development of scales did not appear as a suitable criterion to define the end of the larval period, which, instead, was set at the size at which larvae presented an adult-like pigmentation (respectively 35·0 mm LS and 55·0 mm LS in S. baganensis and T. kammalensis). [source]


Comparative morphology of male reproductive systems in Mediterranean blennies (Blenniidae)

JOURNAL OF FISH BIOLOGY, Issue 1 2000
U. Richtarski
The male reproductive organs of 16 species of Mediterranean Blenniidae (Aidablennius sphynx, Blennius ocellaris, Coryphoblennius galerita, Lipophrys adriaticus, L. canevae, L. dalmatinus, L. nigriceps, Parablennius gattorugine, P. incognitus, P. sanguinolentus, P. rouxi, P. tentacularis, P. zvonimiri, Paralipophrys trigloides, Salaria pavo and Scartella cristata) consist of pairs of testes, testicular glands, spermatic ducts, and blind pouches. Three main types of accessory sex organs were found by comparing the external morphology of the male gonads. Differences between species were observed in the volume of the testicular gland in relation to the volume of the testis and in the size and length of the spermatic ducts, and blind pouches. The anatomy of the testicular glands of all species investigated do not differ. Each gland consists of ducts that appear to be tubules which terminate at the testis periphery on one side and at the spermatic duct on the other side. Contrary to previous claims, A. sphynx has no fat body in place of the testicular gland; the gland of this species was not distinguishable from that of the other species investigated. In the Lipophrys species, in P. trigloides, and in B. ocellaris, a transition zone between testis and testicular gland is present. The testicular blind pouches empty into the spermatic ducts, into the ureter, or separately on the genital papilla. In most species, the epithelium has no or low folds, while in S. pavo it possesses high folds that nearly fill the lumen of the blind pouches. The morphological results are discussed in connection with taxonomy, ecology, and behaviour of the fishes. [source]


Functional morphology of the sonic apparatus in the fawn cusk-eel Lepophidium profundorum (Gill, 1863)

JOURNAL OF MORPHOLOGY, Issue 11 2007
Michael L. Fine
Abstract Recent reports of high frequency sound production by cusk-eels cannot be explained adequately by known mechanisms, i.e., a forced response driven by fast sonic muscles on the swimbladder. Time to complete a contraction-relaxation cycle places a ceiling on frequency and is unlikely to explain sounds with dominant frequencies above 1 kHz. We investigated sonic morphology in the fawn cusk-eel Lepophidium profundorum to determine morphology potentially associated with high frequency sound production and quantified development and sexual dimorphism of sonic structures. Unlike other sonic systems in fishes in which muscle relaxation is caused by internal pressure or swimbladder elasticity, this system utilizes antagonistic pairs of muscles: ventral and intermediate muscles pull the winglike process and swimbladder forward and pivot the neural arch (neural rocker) above the first vertebra backward. This action stretches a fenestra in the swimbladder wall and imparts strain energy to epineural ribs, tendons and ligaments connected to the anterior swimbladder. Relatively short antagonistic dorsal and dorsomedial muscles pull on the neural rocker, releasing strain energy, and use a lever advantage to restore the winglike process and swimbladder to their resting position. Sonic components grow isometrically and are typically larger in males although the tiny intermediate muscles are larger in females. Although external morphology is relatively conservative in ophidiids, sonic morphology is extremely variable within the family. J. Morphol., 2007. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Embryonic development of Galloisiana yuasai Asahina, with special reference to external morphology (Insecta: Grylloblattodea)

JOURNAL OF MORPHOLOGY, Issue 2 2005
Toshiki Uchifune
Abstract The embryogenesis of Grylloblattodea, one of the most primitive of the polyneopteran orders, is described using Galloisiana yuasai with special reference to external morphology. The egg membranes are characterized by an endochorion crossed by numerous vertical aeropyles and a fairly thin vitelline membrane, features shared by Mantophasmatodea. The inner layer formation is of the fault type. Serosal elements in the amnioserosal fold differentiate into hydropylar cells, to function in water absorption together with specialized amniotic structures, i.e., an amniotic strand and a thickened amnion. The germ band is of the short germ type. The germ band immerses deep into the yolk after its full elongation along the egg surface, and in this respect blastokinesis closely resembles that of Mantophasmatodea. The embryological features, i.e., those on egg membranes and blastokinesis, may suggest a closer affinity of Grylloblattodea and Mantophasmatodea. Appendages, ectodermal invaginations, and sternal and pleural sclerites are discussed in the light of serial homology, to provide a new basis for elucidating the insect body plan. Appendages are divided into the proximal coxopodite and distal telopodite, the former being divided further into the subcoxa and coxa. Subcoxal and coxal elements are identified in the mandible as well as in the abdominal appendages. The subcoxa is divided into the epimeron and episternum by the pleural suture in thoracic segments. Likewise, in the abdominal segments the subcoxa is divided into two, although the homologs of the epimeron and episternum are not sclerotized, and in the labial segment the subcoxal derivative or the postmentum is divided into the submentum and mentum. Two coxal endites bulge out from the medial side of the gnathal appendages. The mandibular molar and incisor, maxillary lacinia and galea, and labial glossa and paraglossa are serially homologous with each other. In the thoracic segments the original embryonic sternum or "protosternum" is largely replaced by subcoxal elements, and merely remains as a small anterior presternum and a posterior spinasternum. A major part of the venter is represented by the derivatives of the episternum such as an extensive basisternum, katepisternum, and trochantin and the medial element of the epimeron. The pleuron is derived from the episternal elements or the anepisternum and preepisternum, which bears a spiracle in the mesothorax and metathorax, and the lateral element of the epimeron. The homolog of the preepisternum in the prothorax is the cervical sclerite, but with no spiracle developed. A median ventral invagination arises in the thoracic segments as a spina, and the homolog of the spina develops into the eversible sac in the first abdominal segment. J. Morphol. © 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


TAXONOMIC REEXAMINATION OF 17 SPECIES OF NITELLA SUBGENUS TIEFFALLENIA (CHARALES, CHAROPHYCEAE) BASED ON INTERNAL MORPHOLOGY OF THE OOSPORE WALL AND MULTIPLE DNA MARKER SEQUENCES,

JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY, Issue 1 2005
Hidetoshi Sakayama
In an attempt to reconstruct the natural taxonomic system for Nitella, 17 species of Nitella subgenus Tieffallenia were reexamined using SEM observations of the internal morphology of the oospore wall (IMOW) and phylogenetic analyses of 4553 base pairs from multiple DNA markers (atpB, rbcL, psaB, and ITS-5.8S rRNA genes). Our SEM observations identified three types of IMOW: homogeneous (HG), weakly spongy (W-SG), and strongly spongy (S-SG) types. Based on differences in the IMOW, species with reticulate or tuberculate oospore wall ornamentation in the external morphology of the oospore wall (EMOW) were subdivided into two distinct groups (characterized by the HG or S-SG types of IMOW, respectively), which were robustly separated from each other in our molecular phylogenetic analyses. In our molecular phylogeny, the subgenus Tieffallenia consisted of four robust monophyletic groups,three clades of the HG type and a spongy (S-SG and W-SG) type clade,that were characterized by differences in the IMOW and EMOW. In addition, our SEM observations and sequence data verified the distinct status of five species (N. japonica Allen, N. oligospira A. Braun, N. vieillardii stat. nov., N. imperialis stat. nov., and N. morongii Allen) that R. D. Wood had assigned as infraspecific taxa. Moreover, our SEM observations of the IMOW also suggested that N. megaspora (J. Groves) Sakayama originally identified by LM includes at least two distinct species, characterized by W-SG and S-SG types of IMOW, respectively. [source]


Comparison of Development and Larval Growth of Four Venerid Clams

JOURNAL OF THE WORLD AQUACULTURE SOCIETY, Issue 2 2005
Young-Baek Hur
The development and larval morphology of four venerid calms, Ruditapes philippinarum, Mactra veneriformis, Cyclina sinensis, and Meretrix lusoria, which cohabit the intertidal zone in western coastal Korea, were compared using laboratory culture techniques. At 87 ,m, the fertilized eggs of C. sinensis and M. lusoria were the largest and at 53 ,m, those of M. veneriformis were the smallest. D-shaped larvae of M. lusoriu were the largest and those of M. veneriformis were the smallest measuring at 135 ,m and 89 ,m, respectively. D-shaped larvae of R. philippinarum and M. lusoria had symmetrical shoulder angles and an elliptical ventral form, in contrast to the asymmetrical shoulder angles and round ventral forms of M. veneriformis and C. sinensis. In general, pediveliger larvae of all species in the study were yellow, but those of M. veneriforks and C sinenis were a more pronounced yellow. In between the early D-shaped and pediveliger stage, 7 and 17 d elapsed for M. lusonia and C. sinensis larvae, respectively. In the early larval stages for all species, the sheU length was longer than the height. However, shell length and height later became approximately the same size in all species except R. philippinarum, which exhibited a flat shape. These results indicate that for these four venerid clams, the different characteristics in larval growth and external morphology provide the evidence necessary for larval identification of natural seed production despite the fact that they spawn concurrently in the intertidal zone. [source]


New species of the diatom genus Fryxelliella (Bacillariophyta), Fryxelliella pacifica sp. nov., from the tropical Mexican Pacific

PHYCOLOGICAL RESEARCH, Issue 3 2008
David U. Hernández-Becerril
SUMMARY During phytoplankton monitoring of coasts off Salina Cruz, Oaxaca, in the tropical Mexican Pacific, a new species, Fryxelliella pacifica sp. nov., was found and is described in this paper. The species is solitary, with cells of medium size, discoid with three relatively large ocelli on the valve face, located close to the margins (3,5 areolae from the margins) and placed symmetrically. Significantly, it possesses the morphological characters that distinguish the genus Fryxelliella from related genera: the presence of the ,circumferential marginal tube' (siphon marginalis), the external subcircular or subtriangular apertures at the valve margins, and the ,juxtaposed rectangular plates' in the valve mantle. The species that appears to be the most closely related is Fryxelliella floridana Prasad, an extant species and the type of the genus. However Fryxelliella pacifica differs from it (i) the size and shape of the cell; (ii) the size, location and structure of the ocelli (which additionally are not elevated); (iii) the shape and density of the subcircular to subtriangular marginal apertures; (iv) the external morphology of the rimoportulae (short process, two concentric tubes with the outer tube tip as a crown); and (v) it is marine rather than brackish. Externally the rimoportulae have a rather complex structure of two concentric tubes: the exterior tube has a tip divided like a crown. In spite of the fact this species was found in plankton samples, it is considered to inhabit sandy sediments (epipsammic) or as tychoplanktonic. [source]


Evolutionary genetics of genital size and lateral asymmetry in the earwig Euborellia plebeja (Dermaptera: Anisolabididae)

BIOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY, Issue 1 2010
YOSHITAKA KAMIMURA
Male genitalia show several evolutionary characteristics, including rapid morphological divergence between closely related species and low within-species phenotypic variability. In addition, genital asymmetry is widespread despite the essentially bilaterally symmetric external morphology of insects. Several hypotheses, such as sexual selection and lock-and-key hypotheses, have been proposed to explain these characteristics of genital evolution. Although these hypotheses provide different predictions about the genetic basis of variation in genitalia, detailed quantitative genetic studies have been conducted in only three insect taxa: heteropterans, dung beetles (Scarabaeidae), and drosophilid flies. For an anisolabidid earwig, Euborellia plebeja, characterized by paired elongated intromittent organs, we estimated the heritabilities and genetic correlations of genital laterality, size of genitalia, and body size. No statistically significant additive genetic, dominance, maternal, or common environmental effects were detected for genital laterality (readiness to use either the left or the right intromittent organ). This result lends further support to the general rule that the direction of antisymmetric variations is randomly determined by non-genetic factors. Irrespective of the restricted phenotypic variation in genitalia compared with body size (allometric slope < 1), as observed in previous studies for other insects, these two traits showed a similar level of genetic variation, measured as the narrow sense heritability (h2) and the coefficient of additive genetic variation (CVA). Comparison suggests the causes of interspecific differences in genetic variability/correlation structures were developmental processes (holo- or hemimetabolous) and/or mode of sexual selection. © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 101, 103,112. [source]


Acoustic and Morphological Differentiation in the Frog Allobates femoralis: Relationships with the Upper Madeira River and Other Potential Geological Barriers

BIOTROPICA, Issue 5 2008
Pedro Ivo Simões
ABSTRACT We studied patterns of call acoustics and external morphological differentiation in populations of the dart-poison frog Allobates femoralis occurring in forested areas along a 250-km stretch of the upper Madeira River, Brazil. Multivariate analyses of variance using principal components representing shared acoustic and morphological parameters distinguished three groups in relation to call structure and external morphology: (1) populations belonging to a two-note call morphotype; (2) populations with four-note calls inhabiting the left riverbank; and (3) populations with four-note calls inhabiting the right riverbank. Our results report a case of Amazonian anuran diversity hidden by current taxonomy and provide evidence for the upper Madeira River being a boundary between distinct populations of A. femoralis, and suggest a new taxonomic interpretation for these groups. Samples that did not fit into the general differentiation pattern and the existence of a well-defined contact zone between two morphotypes on the left riverbank indicate that mechanisms complementary to river-barrier hypotheses are necessary to explain the phenotypic differentiation between populations. Our study shows that at least one anuran species shows congruence between population differentiation and separation by a large Amazonian river, as documented for birds and mammals. Conservation efforts should not consider the taxon now known as A. femoralis as a homogeneous entity. There is much within-taxon variability, which can be probably explained partly by the existence of cryptic species, partly by geological barriers and part of which currently has no obvious explanation. RESUMO Estudamos padrões de diferenciação em acústica de cantos e morfologia externa em populações da rã-venenosa Allobates femoralis em áreas de floresta ao longo do alto Rio Madeira, Estado de Rondônia, Brasil, utilizando dados de 19 pontos de coleta estabelecidos em um trecho de 250 km do rio. Dois morfotipos distintos foram encontrados na área de estudo. Um, com cantos de anúncio constituídos por 2 notas, ocorre apenas na porção superior da margem esquerda do Rio Madeira, alcançando uma zona de contato com o segundo morfotipo à jusante, onde não há qualquer barreira de dispersão aparente na atualidade. O segundo morfotipo, com cantos constituídos por 4 notas, ocorre em ambos os lados do rio. Análises de variância multivariadas usando componentes principais representando parâmetros acústicos e morfológicos apontaram três grupos distintos em relação à estrutura dos cantos e morfologia externa: (1) populações pertencentes ao morfotipo com cantos de 2 notas; (2) populações pertencentes ao morfotipo com cantos de 4 notas da margem esquerda; e (3) populações pertencentes ao morfotipo de 4 notas da margem direita. Nossos resultados apontam um caso de diversidade de anuros amazônicos mascarada pela taxonomia atual e fornece evidências sobre o papel do Rio Madeira como um limite entre populações diferenciadas da espécie, sugerindo uma Re-interpretação taxonômica destes grupos. Amostras que não se encaixam no padrão geral de diferenciação e a existência de uma zona de contato bem definida entre dois morfotipos na margem esquerda indicam que mecanismos complementares à hipóteses de rios como barreiras são necessários para explicar a diferenciação fenotípica de Allobates femoralis. Nosso estudo mostra que ao menos uma espécie de anuro apresenta congruência entre diferenciação populacional e sua separação por um grande rio amazônico, como já documentado para aves e mamíferos. Esforços de conservação não deveriam considerar o táxon Allobates femoralis como uma entidade homogênea. Há uma grande variabilidade dentro deste táxon, o que pode ser provavelmente explicado em parte pela existência de espécies crípticas, em parte por barreiras geológicas e em parte por mecanismos ainda desconhecidos. [source]


The morphology and affinities of Geranium sections Lucida and Unguiculata

BOTANICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY, Issue 4 2004
P. F. YEO FLS
Descriptions of the external morphology of six species of Geranium are presented to match those published by the author previously for the six species of the related sections Anemonifolia and Ruberta. It is proposed to merge Anemonifolia with Ruberta and to re-define sections Lucida and Unguiculata, the first containing G. lucidum, G. glaberrimum and G. lasiopus, and the second G. macrorrhizum and G. dalmaticum, while G. cataractarum is placed in Ruberta. G. lasiopus is a plant of vertical and overhanging cliffs and has adaptations to keep the seeds within the habitat, whereas G. glaberrimum, from the same area of Turkey, occurs on step-crevice and lacks these arrangements. For the species covered earlier, additional notes are provided for most, including reports on variation in G. robertianum in England, Taiwan and China. Attention is drawn to the informal term tangle-strands for bundles of long clinging hairs borne by dormant stages of some plants and animals. Scanning electron micrographs of the mericarp surface of all 12 species and a list of specimen citations of interspecific hybrids are presented. © 2004 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2004, 144, 409,429. [source]


Segmental nature of the porcine liver and its potential as a model for experimental partial hepatectomy,

BRITISH JOURNAL OF SURGERY (NOW INCLUDES EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SURGERY), Issue 4 2003
F. G. Court
Background: In-depth knowledge of pig liver anatomy allows potential research into segmental liver resections and hepatic regeneration, as well as liver transplantation techniques. The segmental anatomy, however, remains largely unknown. This study aimed to delineate the segmental anatomy of the porcine liver in comparison with that of the human. Methods: The segmental anatomy of the porcine liver was determined using acrylic injection casting of ex vivo pig livers, allowing the arterial, venous and biliary supply to be visualized directly. This was correlated using multi-slice computed tomography (CT) and three-dimensional reconstructions. Results: Although the external morphology of the porcine liver differs from that of the human, the segmental anatomy is remarkably similar in term of its vascularity and biliary tree. Conclusion: Acrylic casting of the porcine liver accurately delineates the vascular and biliary anatomy, and is a useful tool for performing experimental liver surgery. The similarities between porcine and human segmental anatomy allow domestic swine to be used as a comparable model. Three-dimensional CT reconstructions can also accurately visualize the anatomy and may be used to perform virtual surgery, or to assess segmental volumes. Copyright © 2003 British Journal of Surgery Society Ltd. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]