نتایج جستجو برای: turtle

تعداد نتایج: 6020  

Journal: :Environmental entomology 2007
James K Wetterer Lawrence D Wood Chris Johnson Holly Krahe Stephanie Fitchett

Ants known for attacking and killing hatchling birds and reptiles include the red imported fire ant (Solenopsis invicta Buren), tropical fire ant [Solenopsis geminata (Fabr.)], and little fire ant [Wasmannia auropunctata (Roger)]. We tested whether sea turtle nest placement influenced exposure to predaceous ants. In 2000 and 2001, we surveyed ants along a Florida beach where green turtles (Chel...

2010
J. Gilbert

This study was designed to observe young children working with a turtle robot on five Logo tasks. Eighteen children (mean age 7 years 3 months) attempted the tasks individually and then in one of three gender pairs: boy-boy, girl-girl or boy-girl. The results of the study revealed that initially the boy-boy pairs completed the tasks using the least amount of moves, in less time and with fewer e...

2016
Shaleyla Kelez Ximena Velez-Zuazo Aldo S. Pacheco Alex Ford

Hybridization among sea turtle species has been widely reported in the Atlantic Ocean, but their detection in the Pacific Ocean is limited to just two individual hybrid turtles, in the northern hemisphere. Herein, we report, for the first time in the southeast Pacific, the presence of a sea turtle hybrid between the green turtle Chelonia mydas and the hawksbill turtle Eretmochelys imbricata. Th...

Journal: :Veterinary ophthalmology 2008
Denise K Brudenall Ivan R Schwab Kerstin A Fritsches

OBJECTIVE The Leatherback sea turtle is the largest extant reptile and the sole member of the family Dermochelyidae. Here, the eye of this critically endangered marine turtle was investigated to determine the anatomy, optics, and optical sensitivity. ANIMALS STUDIED Three Leatherback sea turtles, Dermochelys coriacea. RESULTS The eye is small in proportion to body size of the adult compared...

Journal: :The American journal of physiology 1991
C J Doll P W Hochachka P B Reiner

The responses of turtle and rat cortical pyramidal neurons to various pharmacological treatments were measured using intracellular recordings. Turtle neurons survived both anoxia and pharmacological anoxia for 180 min with no noticeable effect. Rat pyramidal neurons responded with a loss in membrane resistance, followed by a transient hyperpolarization, and a subsequent depolarization to a zero...

2014
Jacqueline E. Moustakas-Verho Roland Zimm Judith Cebra-Thomas Netta K. Lempiäinen Aki Kallonen Katherine L. Mitchell Keijo Hämäläinen Isaac Salazar-Ciudad Jukka Jernvall Scott F. Gilbert

The origin of the turtle shell over 200 million years ago greatly modified the amniote body plan, and themorphological plasticity of the shell has promoted the adaptive radiation of turtles. The shell, comprising a dorsal carapace and a ventral plastron, is a layered structure formed by basal endochondral axial skeletal elements (ribs, vertebrae) and plates of bone, which are overlain by kerati...

Journal: :Evolution; international journal of organic evolution 1994
Brian W Bowen Naoki Kamezaki Colin J Limpus George R Hughes Anne B Meylan John C Avise

Restriction-site analyses of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from the loggerhead sea turtle (Caretta caretta) reveal substantial phylogeographic structure among major nesting populations in the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific oceans and the Mediterranean sea. Based on 176 samples from eight nesting populations, most breeding colonies were distinguished from other assayed nesting locations by diagnostic...

2015
Martha L. Baena Federico Escobar Gonzalo Halffter Juan H. García–Chávez Jodie L. Rummer

Omorgus suberosus (Fabricius, 1775) has been identified as a potential predator of the eggs of the turtle Lepidochelys olivacea (Eschscholtz, 1829) on one of the main turtle nesting beaches in the world, La Escobilla in Oaxaca, Mexico. This study presents an analysis of the spatio-temporal distribution of the beetle on this beach (in areas of high and low density of L. olivacea nests over two a...

Journal: :Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology 2007
Rebecca L Lewison Larry B Crowder

Although some sea turtle populations are showing encouraging signs of recovery, others continue to decline. Reversing population declines requires an understanding of the primary factor(s) that underlie this persistent demographic trend. The list of putative factors includes direct turtle and egg harvest, egg predation, loss or degradation of nesting beach habitat, fisheries bycatch, pollution,...

Journal: :Journal of virology 2005
Rebecca J Greenblatt Sandra L Quackenbush Rufina N Casey Joel Rovnak George H Balazs Thierry M Work James W Casey Claudia A Sutton

Fibropapillomatosis (FP) of marine turtles is an emerging neoplastic disease associated with infection by a novel turtle herpesvirus, fibropapilloma-associated turtle herpesvirus (FPTHV). This report presents 23 kb of the genome of an FPTHV infecting a Hawaiian green turtle (Chelonia mydas). By sequence homology, the open reading frames in this contig correspond to herpes simplex virus genes UL...

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