National Repository of Grey Literature 2 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
Population and geographic variation in long-winged bats (Miniopterus) in the western Palaearctic
Šrámek, Jan ; Benda, Petr (advisor) ; Hanák, Vladimír (referee)
In this study the sexual and geographical variations in the genus Miniopterus were deeply investigated, using multidisciplinary analysis (morphometric cranial, dental, fenetic and shape analysis; molecular analysis of mt gene ND2). Different populations from western Palearctic and adjacent regions were analysed: Miniopterus schreibersii (Morocco, West Europe, Pannonia, Balkans, Crete, Near East, Middle East), Miniopterus natalensis (Yemen, Ethiopia) a Miniopterus inflatus (Ethiopia). Extensove samples of Miniopterus schreibersii were tested and existence of sexual dimorphism in cranial constitution was showed: males had generally bigger and relatively higher, shorter and narrower skulls than females; female mandibles were generally bigger than the male ones, females showed also more robust and larger teeth than males. On the other hand, males had markedly bigger canines and relatively higher P4 (in relation to other premolares). The sexes also deiffered in shape of P4 and upper molars. According to the interpopulation variation found, Miniopterus schreibersii samples from West Europe, Pannonia, Balkans, Crete, Sicily, Georgia, coastal Turkish and Moroccan areas belong most probably to the subspecies M. s. schreibersii (Kuhl, 1817). The samples from Afganistan, Iran, Azerbaijan, and from localities...
Morphometric analysis of sex differences in four species of lizards
NERAD, Pavel
Morphometric analysis identified differences in body size of selected species of reptiles. For comparison ANOVA and ANCOVA tests were used. For Pachydactylus bibroni males are larger sex in these factors: length and width of the head absolutely, the absolute difference in the length and width of the body, tail length and tail width. For Cosymbotus platyurus is also the absolute difference in the size of all body parts in favor of males. This difference is the same as Pachydactylus bibroni. In Riopa fernandi males are larger in the length and width, head length and width of the body and tail width. The female is larger in the length of the tail. In Takydromus sexlineatus no difference between the sexes in the length and width of the head and tail length were found, but the absolute difference in the length and width of the body in favor of females. The male has a larger base of the tail than females.

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