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The component communities of intestinal helminths in carp, Cyprinus carpio, were investigated in six lakes in the highland of Yunnan province of southwest China. The species compositions of the communities were poor, and the degree of similarity was low between the communities. The helminth species richness of the communities was related to the lake area. The island theory may provide a good explanation for the species compositions of the helminth communities, although the fauna composition of the lakes may be the major determinant of the species compositions. However, introduction and colonization may have also played a role in determining the species richness at lease in some of the six lakes, for example in Lugu lake where C. carpio, an introduced fish was infected with Bothriocephalus sp. As these lakes are ecologically and geographically isolated and some species of fish are lake-specific, it is suggested that host-parasite coevolution may also be important in determining the parasite species compositions.
The new neopterygian fish taxon Luoxiongichthys hyperdorsalis gen. et sp. nov. is established on the basis of five specimens from the second member of the Guanling Formation (Anisian, Middle Triassic) from Daaozi Quarry, Luoping, Yunnan Province, Southwest China. The new taxon is characterized by the following characters: triangular body outline with a distinct apex located between skull and dorsal fin; free maxilla; slender preopercular almost vertical; three suborbitals; at least eight strong branchiostegals with tubercles and comb−like ornamentation on the anterior margin; clavicles present; two postcleithra; ganoid scales covered by tubercles and pectinate ornamentation on the posterior margin with peg−and−socket structure; hemiheterocercal tail slightly forked. Comparison with basal actinopterygians reveals that the new taxon has parasemionotid−like triangular symplectics, but a semionotid opercular system. Cladistic analysis suggests that this new genus is a holostean, and either a basal halecomorph or basal semionotiform.
Linguliform brachiopods were important components of early Cambrian benthic communities. However, exceptionally preserved soft parts in Cambrian linguliform brachiopods are extremely sparse, and the most important findings are from the early Cambrian Chengjiang Konservat Lagerstätte of Kunming, southern China. Here we describe the first record of preserved soft−part anatomy in a linguliform brachiopod from the early Cambrian Guanshan fauna (Wulongqing Formation, Palaeolenus Zone); a unit which is considerably younger than the Chengjiang fauna. The well preserved soft anatomy include linguliform pedicles, marginal setae and, in a few cases, an intact lophophore imprint. The pedicle has pronounced surface annulations, with its proximal−most part enclosing the apex of the ventral pseudointerarea; the pedicle is up to 51 mm long, corresponding to more than 4 times the sagittal length of the shell, and 12% of the maximum valve width. In details of their preservation, these new fossils exhibit striking similarities with the linguliforms from the older Chengjiang fauna, and all specimens are preserved in a compressed state as flattened impressions. The new linguliform has an elongate oval to subtriangular shell and an elongate triangular ventral pseudointerarea; the pedicle emerged from an apical foramen through a poorly preserved internal pedicle tube. The new linguliform is most similar to the mostly organic−shelled siphonotretoid−like brachiopod Acanthotretella spinosa, recently described from the classic middle Cambrian Burgess Shale Konservat Lagerstätte, British Columbia, Canada. The new species Acanthotretella decaius sp. nov. is described; it differs from A. spinosa in having a slightly thicker pedicle, and a larger and more rigid, probably partly mineralised shell, indicating that the mostly organic shell of A. spinosa may represent a secondary reduction of shell mineralisation. However, the spine−like setae of the new species are unfortunately poorly preserved only at the margin of the shell, but the new species is referred tentatively to the Superfamily Siphonotretoidea. The occurrence of A. decaius in the Guanshan fauna is the first lower Cambrian (Series 2, early Stage 4) record of both Acanthotretella and siphonotretoids, and it represents the first description of a lophophore and digestive tract from the siphonotretoid lineage.
The mRNA differential display technique was applied to investigate the differences in gene expression in the muscle tissue between black-boned and ordinary (“normal”) sheep. The gene that was differentially expressed was identified through semi-quantitative RT-PCR, and its complete cDNA sequence was then obtained using the rapid amplification of cDNA ends (RACE) method.The nucleotide sequence of the gene was not found homologous with any sheep gene described so far. Sequence prediction analysis revealed that the open reading frame of the gene encodes a protein of 763 amino acids, highly homologous with the hydroxyacyl-coenzyme A dehydrogenase/3-ketoacyl-coenzyme A (HADHA) of bovine (98%), pig (90%), sumatran orangutan (87%), human (87%), chimpanzee (87%), mouse (83%) and rat (82%) – so that it can be defined as sheep HADHA gene. This novel sheep gene was finally assigned to GeneID: 100192316. Phylogenetic tree analysis revealed that the sheep HADHA gene is genetically closely related to the HADHA gene of cattle. Tissue expression analysis indicated that the sheep HADHA is also differentially expressed In different tissues of black-boned sheep. The present study established the primary foundation for further research on the HADHA gene in sheep.
A new genus Sinosaurichthys of the Saurichthyidae with three new species, S. longipectoralis, S. longimedialis, and S. minuta, are described and compared with Saurichthys. The new genus is represented by more than a hundred almost complete skeletons, collected from the strata corresponding to the Upper Member of the Guanling Formation (Pelsonian, Anisian, Middle Triassic) of two localities: Yangjuan of Panxian County, Guizhou Province, and Dawazi of Luoping, Yunnan Province, China. Sinosaurichthys differs from Saurichthys in having an unusual dermal pectoral girdle, high insertion of pectoral fin, relatively dorsally positioned axial skeleton in the abdominal region, and in the absence of branchiostegal rays. These differences are supposed to reflect the different life styles between the two genera. Sinosaurichthys, like the extant needlefish, probably has a better ability for cruising in surface water than Saurichthys. In addition, these species of Sinosaurichthys are compared, and their morphological differences also probably reflect individual adaptations for different habitats at the two localities.
The brachiopod fauna of the Middle Ordovician (upper Darriwilian) Shihtzupu Formation in the Weixin area, northeastern Yunnan Province, southwestern China, comprises 16 genera and 18 species, including one new genus (Halirhachis) and five new species (Glyptorthis sarcina, Protoskenidioides weixinensis, Halirhachis leonina, Leptellina spatiosa, and Leptestiina veturna). Cluster and principal component analyses of the latest Arenigian–mid−Caradocian faunas of the Upper Yangtze Platform with selected faunas of similar age from other palaeoplates or terranes indicate that the Weixin brachiopods have closest faunal affinities to those of the typical Shihtzupu Formation in Guizhou Province and the Naungkangyi Group of Burma (Myanmar). During latest Arenigian–mid−Caradocian times, the brachiopods of the Upper Yangtze Platform, Sibumasu, and Chu−Ili palaeogeographical regions constituted a distinct faunal province, characterized by a large number of endemic taxa as well as regionally widespread genera such as Saucrorthis, Martellia, and Yangtzeella. This brachiopod faunal province has very low similarity coefficients with the coeval brachiopod faunas of Laurentia and Avalonia.
Five Tachydromia species are reported from Yunnan province: two species were previously known from Thailand: T. thaica Shamshev et Grootaert, 2005 and T. terricoloides Shamshev et Grootaert, 2005. Three species are described as new for science: T. mengyangensis sp. nov., T. menglunensis sp. nov. and T. yunnanensis sp. nov. A key to the ten known species of China is given.
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