نتایج جستجو برای: ruminantia

تعداد نتایج: 53  

Journal: :Molecular biology and evolution 1994
D Graur D G Higgins

The transition in the cetaceans from terrestrial life to a fully aquatic existence is one of the most enduring evolutionary mysteries. Resolving the phylogenetic relationships between Cetacea and the other orders of eutherian mammals may provide us with important clues to the origin of whales and may help us date the evolutionary transition to aquatic life. Previous paleontological and molecula...

2002
K. WITTER

Witter K. , I . Mí‰ek: Time Programme of the Early Tooth Development in the Domestic Sheep (Ovis aries, Ruminantia). Acta Vet. Brno 1999, 68: 3-8. The knowledge of a generally valid pattern of odontogenesis is a prerequisite for the identification of diseases and developmental anomalies in the oral cavity of domestic animals and man. The sheep is a very interesting model species for the investi...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2005
Jean-Renaud Boisserie Fabrice Lihoreau Michel Brunet

The origin of late Neogene Hippopotamidae (Artiodactyla) involves one of the most serious conflicts between comparative anatomy and molecular biology: is Artiodactyla paraphyletic? Molecular comparisons indicate that Cetacea should be the modern sister group of hippos. This finding implies the existence of a fossil lineage linking cetaceans (first known in the early Eocene) to hippos (first kno...

2016
Zhengfei Wang Shixia Xu Kexing Du Fang Huang Zhuo Chen Kaiya Zhou Wenhua Ren Guang Yang

Although cetaceans (whales, porpoises, and dolphins) have multi-chambered stomachs, feeding habits of modern cetaceans have dramatically changed from herbivorous to carnivorous. However, the genetic basis underlying this dietary switch remains unexplored. Here, we present the first systematic investigation of 10 digestive enzymes genes (i.e., CYP7A1, CTRC, LIPC, LIPF, PNLIP, PGC, PRSS1, SI, SLC...

2017
Jan Frohlich Svatava Kubickova Petra Musilova Halina Cernohorska Helena Muskova Roman Vodicka Jiri Rubes

The Cervidae family comprises more than fifty species divided into three subfamilies: Capreolinae, Cervinae and Hydropotinae. A characteristic attribute for the species included in this family is the great karyotype diversity, with the chromosomal numbers ranging from 2n = 6 observed in female Muntiacus muntjak vaginalis to 2n = 70 found in Mazama gouazoubira as a result of numerous Robertsonia...

Journal: :Molecular biology and evolution 1997
E Douzery E Randi

The mitochondrial control region (CR) sequence, also known as the D-loop, has been determined for six Cervidae (Artiodactyla, Ruminantia): the red and fallow deers (subfamily Cervinae), the brocket deer and two roe deers (subfamily Odocoileinae), and the Chinese water deer (Hydropotinae). These new sequences have been aligned with available cervid and bovid orthologues. Comparative analyses ind...

Journal: :FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology 2010
Maria B Padua Andrés A Kowalski Miryan Y Cañas Peter J Hansen

Uterine serpins (USs), designated as SERPINA14, are expressed in the endometrium in response to progesterone. All species identified as having USs exhibit epitheliochorial placentation and are in the Ruminantia and Suidae orders of the Laurasiatheria superorder. The objective was to identify US genes in species within and outside Laurasiatheria and evaluate whether evolution of the US gene was ...

2011
Juan L. Cantalapiedra Manuel Hernández Fernández Jorge Morales

The resource-use hypothesis proposed by E.S. Vrba predicts that specialist species have higher speciation and extinction rates than generalists because they are more susceptible to environmental changes and vicariance. In this work, we test some of the predictions derived from this hypothesis on the 197 extant and recently extinct species of Ruminantia (Cetartiodactyla, Mammalia) using the biom...

Journal: :Systematic biology 2001
C A Matthee J D Burzlaff J F Taylor S K Davis

A total of 7,806 nucleotide positions derived from one mitochondrial and eight nuclear DNA segments were used to provide a robust phylogeny for members of the order Artiodactyla. Twenty-four artiodactyl and two cetacean species were included, and the horse (order Perissodactyla) was used as the outgroup. Limited rate heterogeneity was observed among the nuclear genes. The partition homogeneity ...

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