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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.
1

The evolutionary persistence of the gynogenetic Amazon molly, Poecilia formosa /

Dries, Laurie Ann, January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2000. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 241-258). Available also in a digital version from Dissertation Abstracts.
2

Comparative Study of Dentition Among Species of Poecilia (Pisces)

Lewis, Steven R., Rasch, Ellen M., Hossler, Fred E., Kalbfleisch, John H., Monaco, Paul J. 01 January 1999 (has links)
Many studies in the genus Poecilia have focused on reproductive and genetic characteristics of Poecilia formosa, the Amazon molly, and its sympatric species P. latipinna and P. mexicana. The research literature of Poecilia dentition has been limited to general tooth morphology. Essentially absent are comparative analyses of dentition patterns and total numbers of teeth. The current study uses dentition analysis as a method to compare species in the genus Poecilia and to address some taxonomic issues related to these fish. The study focused on fish from the areas of southern Texas and northeastern Mexico. Through the use of scanning electron microscopy, the lower jaws of Poecilia spp were examined to determine total numbers of outer and inner teeth. In addition, the differences in distribution patterns of the inner teeth were recorded and compared. Statistical analyses were performed to determine which comparisons were significant. This study reveals several observations: 1) variations in the numbers of outer and inner teeth exist in some of these fish with respect to site of collection; 2) differences in total teeth numbers and dentition patterns were found both interspecifically and intraspecifically; and 3) in addition, dentition analysis provided evidence regarding the origin of P. formosa. This study supports the current notion that P. latipinna, the proported paternal component, and P. mexicana limantouri, the purported maternal component, are the progenitor species of P. formosa. Two unresolved taxonomic questions were addressed through dentition analysis. First, the present study supports the exclusion of the triploid associate of P. formosa as a separate species from P. formosa. Second, this study shows a significant difference in the number of inner teeth and in dentition patterns between P. mexicana limantouri and P. mexicana mexicana. Such differences, in addition to previously known distinguishing characteristics, should prompt careful consideration of whether or not these taxa deserve specific status or retention of their current subspecific status.
3

Cytogenetics of Bisexual/Unisexual Species of Poecilia. VI. Additional Nucleolus Organizer Region Chromosomal Clones of Poecilia Formosa (Amazon Molly) From Texas, With a Survey of Chromosomal Clones Detected in the Amazon Molly

Sola, Luciana, Galetti, Pedro M., Monaco, Paul J., Rasch, Ellen M. 01 January 1997 (has links)
This study reports the results of different staining techniques on the chromosomes of two Poecilia formosa lineages, providing evidence of two additional nucleolus organizer region (NOR) chromosomal clones in this gynogenetic fish. A comparative analysis of chromosomal clones detected in the Amazon molly, along with their frequency and distribution in different collecting sites, is also presented, and clonal heterogeneity resulting from chromosome changes is discussed.
4

Muscle Protein Phenotypes and the Probable Evolutionary Origin of a Unisexual Fish, Poecilia Formosa, and Its Triploid Derivatives

Monaco, Paul J., Rasch, Ellen M., Balsano, Joseph S., Turner, Bruce J. 01 January 1982 (has links)
Several species‐specific proteins have been identified by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) of skeletal muscle extracts from the diploid gynogen, Poecilia formosa, its related triploid unisexuals, and their sympatric, bisexual species, P. mexicana and P. latipinna. These water‐soluble, low molecular weight proteins (7,000‐13,000) comigrate with a fraction of purified rabbit parvalbumin on nondenaturing gels and show staining properties similar to rabbit parvalbumins. The electrophoretic patterns of these muscle proteins provide a set of distinctive phenotypic markers for each of the host species involved in naturally occurring breeding complexes with P. mexicana × P. latipinna show no evidence of sexual dimorphisms. Furthermore, the hybrid phenotypes are those that would be predicted from appropriate combinations of parental alleles at three gene loci. The patterns found by PAGE for several generations of pedigreed stocks of P. formosa show strictly matroclinous inheritance of a characteristic muscle protein phenotype and coupled with the electrophoretic patterns of several enzymic proteins reflect the probable hybrid origin of this diploid unisexual. Finally, paternal contributions by P. mexicana to the hybrid genome of triploid unisexuals are clearly demonstrated by comparative analyses of muscle protein phenotypes for P. formosa and its contemporary host species. Our identification of distinctive phenotypic markers in the muscle proteins of several poeciliid species involved in unisexual‐bisexual breeding complexes provides an important new tool for further studies on the adaptive significance of unisexuality, hybridization, and fixed heterozygosity in the evolutionary biology of these fishes.

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