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Structure and seasonal variation of the male reproductive organs of Vipera berus (L.) ...Volsøe, H. January 1944 (has links)
Thesis--Copenhagen. / At head of title: H. Volsøe. Each plate accompanied by leaf with descriptive letterpress. "Reprinted from Spolia zoologica musei Hauniensis v." "Dansk resumé": p. [159]-172. "List of literature": p. [151]-157.
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Connectivité fonctionnelle chez Vipera berus (Linnaeus, 1758), une espèce peu dispersante et aux mœurs discrètes : caractérisation des flux de gènes à fine échelle spatiale au sein d’un paysage contrasté / Functional connectivity in Vipera berus (Linnaeus, 1758), an elusive species with a low dispersal : characterisation of gene flow at fine spatial scale within a constrated landscapeFrançois, Donatien 28 January 2019 (has links)
Face à l’effet des changements d’utilisations de sol sur la dispersion des espèces, des actions ont récemment été menées au niveau des régions françaises pour favoriser et maintenir la connectivité. L’objectif de cette étude a donc été de quantifier la connectivité chez une espèce modèle menacée en Europe occidentale : la vipère péliade (V. berus). Ses mœurs discrètes ont nécessité pour mesurer sa dispersion d’utiliser une approche indirecte basée sur l’individu et des outils moléculaire. Ainsi, les flux de gènes de V. berus ont été analysés à fine échelle spatiale (10 × 7 km²) sur un site d’étude (A0) constitué de deux secteurs paysagers contrastés (A1/A2), à la fois par l’utilisation des sols et leur stabilité temporelle (instable/stable). La différenciation génétique sur A0 est faible et surtout associée à un fort patron d’isolement par la distance (IBD). La dispersion est donc limitée spatialement chez V. berus (dispersion natale ≤ 500 m) et liée aux mâles à l’âge adulte. De plus, les flux de gènes sont aussi expliqués par l’hétérogénéité du paysage : (i) par les prairies (A0), l’urbanisation (A1) les pelouses et boisements (A2), (ii) particulièrement à 300 m autour des individus parmi les étendues spatiales testées (100-500 m) et (iii) plus par l’agencement spatial que le type et la quantité des taches d’habitats. Ces résultats innovants contribuent à (i) la réflexion sur la stratégie de conservation pour V. berus et (ii) souligner la diversité des facteurs à considérer dans l’étude et le maintien de la connectivité à une plus vaste échelle spatiale (patrons et processus de dispersion, échelles spatio-temporelles). / Face to the impact of land-use changes on species dispersal, decisions were recently conducted at French regional scale to favour and to maintain connectivity. The aim of this work was to quantified connectivity for a model species threatened in Western Europe : the common European adder (V. berus). Its secretive behaviour required to use an indirect and individual-based approach to measure its dispersal thanks to molecular techniques. Thus, V berus gene flow were analysed at fine spatial scale (10 × 7 km²) on a study site (A0) made up of two sub-areas with contrasting landscapes (A1/A2), both by land use and their temporal stability (instable/stable). Genetic differentiation on A0 is weak and mainly associated with a strong isolation-by-distance (IBD) pattern. Dispersal is therefore spatially limited in V. berus (natal dispersal ≤ 500m) and related to males concerning adults. Moreover, gene flow is also influenced by landscape heterogeneity : (i) by meadow (A0), urbanisation (A1) and dry grassland and forests (A2), (ii) particularly at 300m around individuals among spatial extent tested (10-500m) and (iii) more by the spatial configuration than the type and quantity of habitat patches. These innovative results contribute to (i) reflection about conservation strategies for V. Berus et (ii) underly the diversity of factors to consider in studying and maintaining connectivity at a more large spatial scale (dispersal pattern and process, spatio-temporal scales).
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Phylogeography of the Adder, <i>Vipera berus</i>Carlsson, Martin January 2003 (has links)
<p>The phylogeography of a wide ranging temperate species, the adder, <i>Vipera berus</i>, was investigated using several genetic tools, with special emphasis on the post-glacial colonisation pattern of Fennoscandia. The area was colonised from two directions by adder populations representing different glacial refugia. The two populations meet in three places and the main contact zone is situated in Northern Finland. The two other contact zones are the result of dispersal across the Baltic Sea to the Umeå archepelago and South-Western Finland. Asymmetrically distributed nuclear genetic variation compared to mitochondrial DNA in the northern contact zone suggests a skewed gene flow from the east to the west across the zone. This pattern might reflect differences in dispersal among sexes and lineages, or may be accounted for by a selective advantage for nuclear variation of eastern origin among Fennoscandian adders.</p><p>The phylogeographic pattern for adders across the entire species range was addressed by sequencing part of the mitochondrial genome and scoring microsatellite markers. The adder can be divided into three major genetic groups. One group is confined to the Balkan peninsula harbouring the distribution range of <i>V. b. bosniensis</i>. A second, well differentiated group is restricted to the Southern Alps. These two areas have probably served as refugia for adders during a number of ice ages for the adders. The third group is distributed across the remainder of the species’ range, from extreme Western Europe to Pacific Russia and can be further divided into one ancestral group inhabiting the Carpathians refugial area, and three more recent groups inhabiting areas west, north and east of the Alps. The adder provides an example of a species where the Mediterranean areas are housing endemic populations, rather than the sources for post-glacial continental colonisation. Continent-wide colonisation has instead occurred from up to three cryptic northern refugia. </p>
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Phylogeography of the Adder, Vipera berusCarlsson, Martin January 2003 (has links)
The phylogeography of a wide ranging temperate species, the adder, Vipera berus, was investigated using several genetic tools, with special emphasis on the post-glacial colonisation pattern of Fennoscandia. The area was colonised from two directions by adder populations representing different glacial refugia. The two populations meet in three places and the main contact zone is situated in Northern Finland. The two other contact zones are the result of dispersal across the Baltic Sea to the Umeå archepelago and South-Western Finland. Asymmetrically distributed nuclear genetic variation compared to mitochondrial DNA in the northern contact zone suggests a skewed gene flow from the east to the west across the zone. This pattern might reflect differences in dispersal among sexes and lineages, or may be accounted for by a selective advantage for nuclear variation of eastern origin among Fennoscandian adders. The phylogeographic pattern for adders across the entire species range was addressed by sequencing part of the mitochondrial genome and scoring microsatellite markers. The adder can be divided into three major genetic groups. One group is confined to the Balkan peninsula harbouring the distribution range of V. b. bosniensis. A second, well differentiated group is restricted to the Southern Alps. These two areas have probably served as refugia for adders during a number of ice ages for the adders. The third group is distributed across the remainder of the species’ range, from extreme Western Europe to Pacific Russia and can be further divided into one ancestral group inhabiting the Carpathians refugial area, and three more recent groups inhabiting areas west, north and east of the Alps. The adder provides an example of a species where the Mediterranean areas are housing endemic populations, rather than the sources for post-glacial continental colonisation. Continent-wide colonisation has instead occurred from up to three cryptic northern refugia.
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Milano, 1262 - 1322: Due segni di un potere nuovo / Milan, 1262-1322. Two signs of a new powerZANINETTA, PAOLO 03 April 2009 (has links)
Gli affreschi della "sala di giustizia" della rocca di Angera e l'emblema della "vipera" viscontea sono le due più cospicue reliquie della campagna propagandistica posta in atto dalla parentela tra il volgere del XIII e gli inizi del XIV per rinsaldare la dominazione appena stabilita su Milano. / The frescoes in the "hall of justice" of the Rocca in Angera and the symbol of the "viper" are the main relics of the propaganda promoted by Ottone, Matteo and Azzo Visconti at the beginning of their seigneurship over Milan.
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