نتایج جستجو برای: turtle

تعداد نتایج: 6020  

2015
Christina M. Davy Anne G. Kidd Chris C. Wilson Andrew R. Mahon

Environmental DNA (eDNA) is a potentially powerful tool for detection and monitoring of rare species, including threatened native species and recently arrived invasive species. Here, we develop DNA primers for a suite of nine sympatric freshwater turtles, and use it to test whether turtle eDNA can be successfully detected in samples from aquaria and an outdoor pond. We also conduct a cost compa...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 1970
S Y Chow D Kunze A M Brown D M Woodbury

Cl(-) and K(+) activities in the follicular lumen and the intraluminal potential of the same lumen were measured simultaneously with specific liquid ion-exchanger and 3 M KCl microelectrodes, respectively, in turtle thyroid glands. The Cl(-) equilibrium potential between the thyroid interstitium and the lumen calculated from the measured Cl(-) activities was higher than the directly measured in...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2009
Jérémy Anquetin Paul M Barrett Marc E H Jones Scott Moore-Fay Susan E Evans

The discovery of a new stem turtle from the Middle Jurassic (Bathonian) deposits of the Isle of Skye, Scotland, sheds new light on the early evolutionary history of Testudinata. Eileanchelys waldmani gen. et sp. nov. is known from cranial and postcranial material of several individuals and represents the most complete Middle Jurassic turtle described to date, bridging the morphological gap betw...

Journal: :Biology letters 2013
Bo Zhao Teng Li Richard Shine Wei-Guo Du

A recent study demonstrated that the embryos of soft-shelled turtles can reposition themselves within their eggs to exploit locally warm conditions. In this paper, we ask whether turtle embryos actively seek out optimal thermal environments for their development, as do post-hatching individuals. Specifically, (i) do reptile embryos move away from dangerously high temperatures as well as towards...

Journal: :Journal of cerebral blood flow and metabolism : official journal of the International Society of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism 1993
M A Pérez-Pinzón P L Lutz T J Sick M Rosenthal

Contrary to what is found in most vertebrates, the brains of certain turtle species maintain ATP levels and ion homeostasis and survive prolonged anoxia. The hypothesis tested here is that the release of adenosine and its binding to A1 receptors are essential for this anoxic tolerance. Studies were conducted in the isolated turtle cerebellum, which did release adenosine to the extracellular spa...

2017
J L Crespo-Picazo D García-Parraga F Domènech J Tomás F J Aznar J Ortega J M Corpa

BACKGROUND Diseases associated to external parasitosis are scarcely reported in sea turtles. During the last decades several organism have been documented as a part of normal epibiont community connected to sea turtles. The copepod Balaenophilus manatorum has been cited as a part of epibiont fauna with some concern about its parasitic capacity. This study serves three purposes, i.e. (i) it shed...

2017
Francesc Domènech Jesús Tomás José Luis Crespo-Picazo Daniel García-Párraga Juan Antonio Raga Francisco Javier Aznar

Species of Balaenophilus are the only harpacticoid copepods that exhibit a widespread, obligate association with vertebrates, i.e., B. unisetus with whales and B. manatorum with marine turtles and manatees. In the western Mediterranean, juveniles of the loggerhead sea turtle, Caretta caretta are the only available hosts for B. manatorum, which has been found occurring at high prevalence (>80%) ...

2017
Melissa Wilson Sayres

Sex chromosomes evolve differently from autosomes because natural selection acts distinctly on them given their reduced recombination and smaller population size. Various studies of sex-linked genes compared with different autosomal genes within species support these predictions. Here, we take a novel alternative approach by comparing the rate of evolution between subsets of genes that are sex-...

Journal: :Remote Sensing 2012
Rebecca Barker Douglas J. King

Blanding’s turtle (Emydoidea blandingii) is a threatened species under Canada’s Species at Risk Act. In southern Québec, field based inventories are ongoing to determine its abundance and potential habitat. The goal of this research was to develop means for mapping of potential habitat based on primary habitat attributes that can be detected with high-resolution remotely sensed imagery. Using e...

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