National Repository of Grey Literature 4 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Dental phenotype variation in voles during the present glacial cycle
Putalová, Tereza ; Horáček, Ivan (advisor) ; Kuneš, Petr (referee)
The phenotype dynamics of arvicolid rodents during the terminal stages of the Vistualian glacial and the earliest Holocene was investigated with aid of a detailed morphometric analyses of extensive dental material from three sedimentary series of that age. The particular attention was paid to the record from a section in Býčí skála cave, Moravian karst, which demonstrated details of the Pleistocene/Holocene transition (12.4-8.4 ky BP) with extraordinary resolution. It revealed that dramatic rearrangements in community structure were accompanied by significant rearrangements of the phenotype dynamics in all arvicolid species. Despite some trends specific for particular species, some common features were identified as well. One of them was a rapid turnover in phenotype structure by the end of Younger Dryas, at time of the Preboreal event. (11.7-11 ky BP), the other was associated with the extensive shifts in community structure and habitat diversity at terminal stage of the Preboreal (9.7-9.3 ky). The core arvicolid species of Preboreal communities, Clethrionomys glareolus, Microtus arvalis, M.agrestis and Arvicola terrestris, exhibited repeated fluctuations during that stage (ll-9,3 ky BP) both in abundance and phenotype characteristics, supposedly related to serial invasion events during that time....
Morfologické znaky a populačně-genetická struktura kokcidií parazitujících u hrabošovitých hlodavců; objasnění původu isosporových infekcí u hrabošovitých hlodavců
TREFANCOVÁ, Aneta
The first part of the thesis concerns phylogenetic relationships of eimerian coccidia from arvicoline rodents based on nuclear 18S rRNA, and mitochondrial COI and COIII genes, as well as morphological and morphometrical analyses of the eimerian oocysts. Population-genetic structure of eimerian coccidia was also analyzed and haplotype networks were constructed. The second part of the thesis is based on elucidation of the origin of infections of arvicoline rodents with Isospora spp. using three different approaches - phylogenetic analyses (18S rRNA, COI, and COIII genes), morphological and morphometrical data, and experimental infections. Techniques of field parasitology, laboratory methods of parasitological examination, molecular-genetic diagnostics, phylogeny, and taxonomy were used in the course of both parts of the study.
Dental phenotype variation in voles during the present glacial cycle
Putalová, Tereza ; Horáček, Ivan (advisor) ; Kuneš, Petr (referee)
The phenotype dynamics of arvicolid rodents during the terminal stages of the Vistualian glacial and the earliest Holocene was investigated with aid of a detailed morphometric analyses of extensive dental material from three sedimentary series of that age. The particular attention was paid to the record from a section in Býčí skála cave, Moravian karst, which demonstrated details of the Pleistocene/Holocene transition (12.4-8.4 ky BP) with extraordinary resolution. It revealed that dramatic rearrangements in community structure were accompanied by significant rearrangements of the phenotype dynamics in all arvicolid species. Despite some trends specific for particular species, some common features were identified as well. One of them was a rapid turnover in phenotype structure by the end of Younger Dryas, at time of the Preboreal event. (11.7-11 ky BP), the other was associated with the extensive shifts in community structure and habitat diversity at terminal stage of the Preboreal (9.7-9.3 ky). The core arvicolid species of Preboreal communities, Clethrionomys glareolus, Microtus arvalis, M.agrestis and Arvicola terrestris, exhibited repeated fluctuations during that stage (ll-9,3 ky BP) both in abundance and phenotype characteristics, supposedly related to serial invasion events during that time....
The influence of life history and cooperativeness on sibling discrimination in three species of voles and time of separation necessary for its disappearance
BRIXOVÁ, Lenka
This thesis is composed of two parts. In the first one, sibling discrimination in juveniles of three vole species (Microtus arvalis, M.guentheri, and M.brandti) was compared in order to assess which of the hypotheses proposed for the occurrence of kin discrimination best fits the observed differences in vole behaviour. The second part uses the same three vole species to assess which of them has the most developed capacity to remember its siblings after a period of time spent in separation and whether this capacity can be explained by some of the proposed hypotheses.

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