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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
201

Growth, development and visual ontogeny of two temperate reef teleosts Pagrus auratus, (Sparidae) and Forsterygion varium, (Tripterygiidae)

Pankhurst, Patricia Melva January 1991 (has links)
Growth, development and behaviour were examined in artificially reared larval Pagrus auratus and Forsterygion varium, from the time of hatching. Yolk-sac larval P.auratus hatched at a small size (2.00mm SL), without functional eyes, mouth or digestive tract, and for three days spent long periods at rest. Growth was initially rapid but slowed by 3 days as yolk reserves neared depletion. By days 4-5, the mouth had opened, eyes were functional, yolk was depleted, and a rudimentary gut had formed. Larvae were now able to maintain a horizontal swimming mode and were actively searching for and attacking prey. First feeding was observed in some larvae. Growth was retarded during the transition from endogenous to exogenous nutrition and then increased as feeding proficiency improved. Yolk-sac F.varium hatched at a larger size (4.78mm SL), with functional eyes and jaws. Larvae were able to maintain a horizontal swimming mode from hatching. First feeding was observed from the first day after hatching. F.varium larvae grew steadily from the time of hatching. Ocular morphology was examined in larval, juvenile and adult P.auratus and F.varium. There was a 96 fold increase in eye size, from 0.23mm diameter in a 4 day old larval P.auratus (3.4mm SL) to a maximum diameter of 22mm in an adult of 333mm body length. F.varium displayed a 26 fold increase in eye size, from 0.28mm diameter in the smallest larva (5.00mm SL) to a maximum eye diameter of 7.2mm in a 11gmm long adult. Larval fish had pure cone retinae, however putative rod precursor cells were present from hatching in F.varium and from 18 days in P.auratus. Juvenile and adult fish had duplex retinae with cones arranged in a square mosaic in which 4 twin cones surround a central single cone. Hypertrophy of cone ellipsoids with increasing eye size, resulted in maintenance of a closely packed array in fishes of all sizes. The appearance of retinomotor movements was coincident with the development of a duplex retina in both species. Theoretical spatial acuity (calculated as a function of cone spacing and focal length of the lens) was poor in the smallest larval fish (2° 1' and 1° 8' minimum separable angle in 4 and 1 day old P.auratus and F.varium respectively) but improved to asymptotic values in adults (3'- 4', and 9' in P.auratus and F.varium respectively). Behavioural acuity (determined using the optokinetic response) of 4 day old larval P.auratus (37° 30') and 1 day old F.varium (29°) was very much lower than histological estimates. Behavioural acuity improved to 8° 8' in 16 day old P.auratus and 4° 18' in 14 day old F.varium, but did not attain theoretical estimates for fish of that size (55' and 54'). A rudimentary retractor lentis muscle was first apparent in larval fish 1 week after hatching, and was coincident with the formation of a posterior lental space. Presumably larval fish eyes were incapable of accomodative lens movements until this time. A relative measure of Matthiessen's ratio (distance from lens centre to boundary of the pigmented retinal epithelium/lens radius) measured histologically, decreased from 4.2 and 2.7 in 3 day old P.auratus and newly hatched F.varium, to 2.2 and 2.3 in larvae 22 and 16 days of age respectively. This suggests that growth of the retina and lens were not symmetrical in the eyes of very small larval fish. If Matthiessen's ratio holds for little eyes, then they will initially be strongly myopic. This may account in part for the mismatch between behavioural and theoretical acuity. Perceptive distances of first feeding larval P.auratus and F.varium, estimated for prey items equal in dimensions to maximum jaw widths, were very small (0.2mm and 0.4mm for prey 0.15mm and 0.2mm in size respectively), but increased with increasing body size to 2.1mm and 4.0mm for prey 0.3mm in size, at 16 and 14 days of age respectively. These data have implications for larval feeding in the wild.
202

The ecology, population dynamics, and energetics of some soft shore molluscs

Larcombe, M. F. (Michael Francis) January 1971 (has links)
Introduction. In the past thirty years studies of community and population ecology of marine soft-shore invertebrates have increased, both in number and in depth, A good knowledge is building up of the interactions of benthic invertebrates with their physical and biotic environments. (Boughey, 1967; Green, 1968; Nancock and Simpson, 1962;) This thesis examines the ecology, population dynamics, and energetics of some common intertidals soft-shore molluscs, having particular concern with the range of variation that is possible in one parameter for different populations of the same species. Similar work has not been frequently attempted for molluscs, although there is some information available from syntheses of the work of different authors on the same species.(Bullock, 1955; Dehnel, 1955; Fretter and Graham, 1962; Hyman, 1967 ; Prosser , 1955; Wilbur and Yonge, 1966;) Most authors have concentrated either on the ecology of a species, or on the population dynamics of one population, or perhaps on the influence of one environmental factor, such as temperature, on one parameter, such as growth rate; rarely has there been a study of the interaction of several environmental factors with several population parameters . (Wilbur and Owen, 1964;)
203

The Benthic Ecology of the Entrance to the Whangateau Harbour, Northland, New Zealand

Grace, Roger V. January 1972 (has links)
The Ecology of the entrance to the Whangateau Harbour Northland New Zealand 1. General Introduction 1.1 Aims of this work. The broad object of this work has been to improve understanding of shallow water marine environments and their faunal associations. To this end, information has been integrated from a number of specific investigations which were: 1. To examine the benthic macrofauna associated with sedimentary deposits, in an area with steep environmental gradients and associated complexity of faunal distributions. 2. To identify and describe the major benthic marofaunal associations, using both classical “intuitive" methods and more objective statistical methods employing computer techniques. 3. To investigate the hydrological and sedimentary features of the local environment, as a background to the faunal investigations. 4. To relate the distribution of the fauna and associations ;a selected environmental parameters, with particular reference to the grain-size characteristics of the sediments. 5. To relate the faunal associations to similar associations elsewhere in New Zealand and overseas. 6. To investigate the relationships between the living fauna and the dead remains of organisms found in the sediments, with the view to providing information which may be usefull to paleaecologists. 7. To try to portray certain aspects of the underwater environment difficult to appreciate by means other than diving.
204

Stochastic modelling of rat invasions among islands in the New Zealand archipelago

Miller, Steven Duncan January 2008 (has links)
This project was formulated with the purpose of advancing knowledge of the invasion dynamics of rats within archipelagos in New Zealand. The concentration on islands reflected the conservation focus of this project - islands are the last refuges for many native New Zealand species that cannot survive in the wild on the mainland. This project can be divided into four areas: 1. Data collection: There was no intent for innovation here, but a deeper understanding of the environments in which rats are born, breed, migrate, and die was developed. 2. Development of tools for data exploration: • A user-friendly point-and-click graphical interface for the R program was designed to allow any user to easily explore simple genetic characteristics of the data. • A novel method for exploring the genetic similarity between individuals was developed and showcased with real data, proving successful in cases of both high and low genetic differentiation, and in detecting likely individual migrants. 3. Improvement of a method for estimating migration: • An attempt was made to improve the Markov chain Monte Carlo procedure underlying this method. • The migration model used by the method was significantly improved, so that it could cope with any level of migration. Previously, results from situations where migration rates were high were invalid. 4. Investigated topics of ecological interest: • Field measurements of rats were used to show that Norway rats tend to have larger masses than ship rats, southern rats are generally larger than northern rats, but the effect on mass of living on an island as opposed to the mainland depends on the latitude. It was also shown that relative tail length is a good species discriminator. • Multiple paternity was confirmed for both Norway and ship rats. This breeding characteristic might form part of the explanation for why rats are such successful invaders. During the project, case studies involving rats on Big South Cape Island, Great Barrier Island and in the Bay of Islands were used to highlight the methods developed, and provided some unexpected and fascinating results.
205

Species identity, genetic diversity, and molecular systematic relationships among the Ziphiidae (beaked whales)

Dalebout, Merel Louise January 2002 (has links)
Beaked whales (family Ziphiidae) are one of the least known of all mammalian groups. The majority of species have been described from only a handful of specimens. Found in deep ocean waters, these species are widespread and often sexually dimorphic. Little is known of intra-specific variation in morphology, and many species are very similar in external appearance. A reference database of mitochondrial DNA sequences was compiled for all 20 recognised ziphiid species to aid in species identification. All reference sequences were derived from validated specimens, which were often represented only by bone or teeth. DNA was obtained from this ‘historic’ material using ‘ancient’ DNA methods. For three species, holotypes were sampled. Phylogenetic analyses using this database led to the discovery of a new, previously unrecognised species of beaked whale (Mesoplodon perrini), new specimens of Longman's beaked whale (Indopacetus pacificus), a species known previously from only two partial skulls and the synonymy of a third (M. traversii = M. bahamondi). Phylogenetic reconstructions based on sequence data from three mitochondrial and two nuclear loci (total, 2815 bp) using neighbour joining, parsimony, and maximum likelihood methods, resolved many of the sister-species relationships in this group. Inferred relationships among Mesoplodon beaked whales indicated that cranial and tooth morphology may be far more variable between closely related species than previously assumed. No support was found for a linear-progression of tooth form as suggested by Moore (1968) in his phenetic evaluation of relationships among the Ziphiidae. The geographic distribution of Mesoplodon species with similar or divergent tooth morphology is likely due to a combination of sexual selection and selection for species recognition. Both hypotheses predict similar patterns, such as dissimilar tooth morphology among species with sympatric or parapatric distributions. However, only sexual selection appears to offer an explanation for why there are so many Mesoplodon beaked whales. Investigation of mtDNA diversity among a number of beaked whale species indicated that nucleotide diversity was generally lower in this group than in other wide-ranging oceanic cetaceans. The cause of this low diversity was not clear but may be indicative of overall low abundance. Particularly low levels of diversity were found in Baird's beaked whale Berardius bairdii , Arnoux's beaked whale B. arnuxii and the northern bottlenose whale Hyperoodon ampullatus. Strong geographic structure in haplotype frequencies was observed among a worldwide sample of Cuvier's beaked whales Ziphius cavirostris. / Subscription resource available via Digital Dissertations only.
206

Phenotypic characterisation of the tremor mutant and AAV mediated aspartoacylase gene transfer in the rat model of Canavan disease

McPhee, Scott William John January 2004 (has links)
The doctoral studies described in this thesis involve the phenotypic characterization of the tremor rat, an animal model of Canavan disease, and a proof of principle gene transfer study in this model. The phenotype of the tremor rat is examined at the genetic, molecular, cellular, neurochemical, physical and behavioural levels, and tremor mutants are described within the context of Canavan disease. Tremor mutants appear to share many phenotypes with both human patients and to the knock-out mouse model. The deletion of aspartoacylase results in a total loss of the capacity to metabolize N-acetyl-aspartate to acetate and aspartate in brain, leading to elevations in brain N-acetyl-aspartate levels, changes in cell and tissue morphology, and physical and behavioural deficits including mild akinesia and loss of normal motor coordination and balance. Parallel to this work was the development of a gene transfer approach to treat Canavan disease, involving Adeno-associated virus mediated delivery of aspartoacylase to the mammalian central nervous system. Gene transfer was undertaken in tremor rat mutants, and analysis was made of gene expression and function as well as the effect of aspartoacylase expression on improving the phenotypic deficits observed in mutant animals. Gene expression was observed at the RNA and protein level, with recombinant protein observed in cell soma and processes. Although not significant the data suggested a trend of decreased NAA levels after aspartoacylase transfer in comparison to animals injected with a vector encoding green fluorescent protein. Improvement was noted in the rotorod phenotype with mutant animals receiving aspartoacylase gene transfer performing better at tests of balance and coordinated locomotion than animals receiving a control vector. The study provided evidence that Adeno-associated virus mediated aspartoacylase gene transfer to the brain improves some of the deficits in tremor mutants, and supports the rationale of human gene transfer for Canavan disease. / Subscription resource available via Digital Dissertations only.
207

Effect of some external factors on root hair demography in Trifolium repens L. and Lolium perenne L.

Care, Debbie Anne January 1999 (has links)
Light microscopy, low ionic strength solution culture and image analysis methods were used to make detailed measurements on root hair populations of different genotypes of white clover (Trifolium repens L.) and ryegrass (Lolium perenne L.). A model of root hair population structure was developed and validated that will facilitate research on root hairs of these species. Diagrams were drawn of the root hair length and frequency on entire root systems. The distributions of root hairs on these diagrams often differed from textbook diagrams of root hairs because root hair length and frequency varied considerably along the root axis. The key issue examined was the response at species, population and genotype levels of root hair populations perturbed by aluminium and phosphate, and the implications of these responses for our understanding of the strategies adopted by plants growing in stressful environments. Demographic growth analysis gave the best understanding of the mechanisms of root hair population response to genetic variability, resource depletion and environmental perturbation. Root hair length seemed to be controlled by the individual root hair. However the number of root hairs appeared to be controlled by the root. Therefore it is the root that controls the distribution of the hairs on the root, and how this distribution is modified by perturbation. Root hair populations were shown to have strategies that were similar to their shoot system growth strategies-guerrilla for clover, phalangeal for ryegrass. The root and root hair systems, and shoot systems also demonstrated similar characteristics when the r and K strategy model was applied. At an ecosystem level, clover and ryegrass occupied the same orthogonal in the CSR (competitive-stress-ruderal) model. Therefore at a larger scale, these plants are able to coexist, but they do this by having different strategies at a species level. / Subscription resource available via Digital Dissertations only.
208

Cooperative breeding in the skuas of the Chatham Islands

Hemmings, Alan Dudley January 1995 (has links)
Cooperative breeding, widely reported in birds, is found in <1–5% of territories in some populations of the Brown skua, Catharacta lonnbergi. In the New Zealand region, up to 30-50% of skua territories may be occupied by trios or larger groups. This study examines its occurrence at the Chatham Islands, east of New Zealand. Here 16% of territories are occupied by trios and 2% by groups. All members of skua trios and groups participate in sexual and other breeding activity, and the associations arc thus communal. Sexual discrimination of breeding birds by morphometric measurements shows that all communal groups known since 1978-79 have been polyandrous. These groups are long-lived associations, some of which are known to have persisted for at least 14 years. Trios are as long-lived and stable as pairs, and birds on communal territories do not move from them even when an appropriate-sex space becomes available on an adjacent pair territory. The members of trios are not close kin. All members of communal associations participate in territorial defence and chick rearing. In trios, the males appear to be equals, although in any one year the actual paternity of offspring may reside with only one of them. Overall reproductive success for Chatham Island skuas is high, for both pairs and communal groups, compared with other populations. However, communal trios and groups have lower reproductive success than pairs even over a l0 year period, particularly when considered on a per adult basis. Furthermore, no improvement in chick ‘quality’ is discernible. Unusually for skuas, the breeding population at the Chatham Islands is non-migratory. Skuas are present on their breeding territories during the winter, and exhibit characteristic territorial and agonistic behaviours, albeit at lower intensity than during the breeding season. It is suggested that communal breeding in this skua population is not adaptive per se, but a secondary consequence of year-round residence. This is a departure from the conventional resolution of communal breeding. Residence is facilitated by benign climatic conditions and year-round prey availability. When territory space becomes available outside the breeding season, in a small number of cases more than a pair of skuas are able to establish themselves. Thereafter, trios and larger groups persist and behave in the same manner as pairs. The flux between trios and pairs when birds are lost is determined, in part, by the sex of that bird. Thus a trio which loses its one female will ‘acquire’ a replacement female and persist as a trio, whereas a trio which loses one of its two males will thereafter continue as a pair. Keywords: Cooperative breeding, communal breeding, polyandry, Stercorariidae, skuas, skua trios, skua behaviour, skua breeding, Chatham Islands / Chapter 1 previously published as: Cooperative breeding in the Skuas (Stercorariidae): History, distribution and incidence. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand 24: 245-260 (1994). Publisher version available at http://www.royalsociety.org.nz/Site/publish/Journals/jrsnz/1994/default.aspx / Chapter 2 previously published as: Winter territory occupation and behaviour of Skuas at the Chatham Islands, New Zealand. Emu 90: 108-113 (1990). Publisher version available at http://www.publish.csiro.au/nid/96.htm / Chapter 3 previously published as: Communually breeding Skuas: Breeding success of pairs, trios and groups of Catharacta lonnbergi on the Chatham Islands, New Zealand. Journal of Zoology, London 218: 393-405 (1989). The definitive version is available at www.blackwell-synergy.com
209

Population dynamics of juvenile snapper (Pagrus auratus) in the Hauraki Gulf

Francis, Malcolm, 1954- January 1992 (has links)
The population dynamics of juvenile snapper, Pagrus auratus, were investigated in the Hauraki Gulf, north-eastern New Zealand, between 1982 and 1990. Attention focused on age and growth, temporal and spatial variation in abundance, and recruitment. Daily increment formation was validated in the sagittae of snapper up to about 160 days old. Increment width varied with time of year, and snapper age, and increments were not resolvable with a light microscope during winter. Increment counts inside a prominent metamorphic mark showed that larval duration was 18-32 days, and was inversely related to water temperature. Spawning dates were back-calculated from increment counts in settled juveniles, and ranged from September to March with a peak in November-January. The onset of spawning was temperature dependent. Fast-growing snapper had smaller sagittae than slow-growing snapper, indicating an uncoupling of otolith and somatic growth. Snapper gonads differentiated first as ovaries during the second year of life, and then some juveniles changed sex to become males during their third year. Sex change occurred before maturity, so snapper are functionally gonochoristic. Growth was slow during the larval phase, but increased rapidly after metamorphosis to about 0.6-0.9 mm.day-1. From the first winter, growth followed a well-defined annual cycle, with little or no growth during winter, and linear growth of 0.16-0.43 mm.day-1 during spring-autumn for 0+/1+ and 1+/2+ snapper. Snapper grew faster at higher temperatures. Trawl catch rates were affected by numerous gear and environmental factors, but probably provided reasonable estimates of snapper relative abundance. Recommendations are made for improving snapper trawl survey procedures. There was a strong annual abundance cycle in the Kawau region, peaking in spring, and declining to a minimum in winter. Snapper were patchily distributed at a spatial scale of 1-2 km, probably because of preference for specific micro-habitats. Year class strength of 1+ snapper varied 17-fold over seven years, and was strongly positively correlated with autumn sea surface temperature during the 0+ year. The strengths of the 1991 and 1992 year classes are predicted to be below average, and extremely weak, respectively.
210

Panbiogeography: a cladistic approach

Page, Roderic D.M. (Roderic Dugald Morton) January 1990 (has links)
This thesis develops a quantitative cladistic approach to panbiogeography. Algorithms for constructing and comparing area cladograms are developed and implemented in a computer program. Examples of the use of this software are described. The principle results of this thesis are: (1) The description of algorithms for implementing Nelson and Platnick's (1981) methods for constructing area cladograms. These algorithms have been incorporated into a computer program. (2) Zandee and Roos' (1987) methods based on "component-compatibility" are shown to be flawed. (3) Recent criticisms of Nelson and Platnick's methods by E. O. Wiley are rebutted. (4) A quantitative reanalysis of Hafner and Nadler's (1988) allozyme data for gophers and their parasitic lice illustrates the utility of information on timing of speciation events in interpreting apparent incongruence between host and parasite cladograms. In addition the thesis contains a survey of some current themes in biogeography, a reply to criticisms of my earlier work on track analysis, and an application of bootstrap and consensus methods to place confidence limits on estimates of cladograms.

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