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1.
PLoS One ; 15(12): e0243932, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33315909

RESUMO

Across the tropics, large-bodied mammals have been affected by selective logging in ways that vary with levels of timber extraction, collateral damage, species-specific traits and secondary effects of hunting, as facilitated by improved access through logging roads. In Peninsular Malaysia, 3.0 million hectares or 61 percent of its Permanent Reserved Forests is officially assigned for commercial selective logging. Understanding how wildlife adapts and uses logged forest is critical for its management and, for threatened species, their conservation. In this study, we quantify the population status of four tropical ungulate species in a large selectively logged forest reserve and an adjacent primary forest protected area. We then conduct finer scale analyses to identify the species-specific factors that determine their occurrence. A combined indirect sign-camera trapping approach with a large sampling effort (2,665 km and 27,780 trap nights surveyed) covering a wide area (560 km2) generated species-specific detection probabilities and site occupancies. Populations of wild boar were widespread across both logged and primary forests, whereas sambar and muntjac occupancy was lower in logged forest (48.4% and 19.2% respectively), with gaur showing no significant difference. Subsequent modelling revealed the importance of conserving lower elevation habitat in both habitat types, particularly <1,000 m asl, for which occupancies of sambar, muntjac and gaur were typically higher. This finding is important because 75 percent (~13,400 km2) of Peninsular Malaysia's Main Range Forest (Banjaran Titiwangsa) is under 1,000 m asl and therefore at risk of being converted to industrial timber plantations, which calls for renewed thinking around forest management planning.


Assuntos
Conservação dos Recursos Naturais , Espécies em Perigo de Extinção , Agricultura Florestal , Mamíferos/fisiologia , Animais , Biodiversidade , Bovinos , Ecossistema , Florestas , Malásia , Cervo Muntjac/fisiologia , Especificidade da Espécie , Clima Tropical , Gravação em Vídeo
2.
Curr Biol ; 28(9): 1344-1356.e5, 2018 05 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29706521

RESUMO

Chromosome missegregation during mitosis or meiosis is a hallmark of cancer and the main cause of prenatal death in humans. The gain or loss of specific chromosomes is thought to be random, with cell viability being essentially determined by selection. Several established pathways including centrosome amplification, sister-chromatid cohesion defects, or a compromised spindle assembly checkpoint can lead to chromosome missegregation. However, how specific intrinsic features of the kinetochore-the critical chromosomal interface with spindle microtubules-impact chromosome segregation remains poorly understood. Here we used the unique cytological attributes of female Indian muntjac, the mammal with the lowest known chromosome number (2n = 6), to characterize and track individual chromosomes with distinct kinetochore size throughout mitosis. We show that centromere and kinetochore functional layers scale proportionally with centromere size. Measurement of intra-kinetochore distances, serial-section electron microscopy, and RNAi against key kinetochore proteins confirmed a standard structural and functional organization of the Indian muntjac kinetochores and revealed that microtubule binding capacity scales with kinetochore size. Surprisingly, we found that chromosome segregation in this species is not random. Chromosomes with larger kinetochores bi-oriented more efficiently and showed a 2-fold bias to congress to the equator in a motor-independent manner. Despite robust correction mechanisms during unperturbed mitosis, chromosomes with larger kinetochores were also strongly biased to establish erroneous merotelic attachments and missegregate during anaphase. This bias was impervious to the experimental attenuation of polar ejection forces on chromosome arms by RNAi against the chromokinesin Kif4a. Thus, kinetochore size is an important determinant of chromosome segregation fidelity.


Assuntos
Centrômero , Segregação de Cromossomos , Cromossomos de Mamíferos , Cinetocoros , Microtúbulos/fisiologia , Mitose , Cervo Muntjac/fisiologia , Animais , Células Cultivadas , Fibroblastos/citologia , Fibroblastos/metabolismo , Fuso Acromático
3.
Dokl Biol Sci ; 474(1): 110-113, 2017 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28702724

RESUMO

The alarm call acoustic structure and nonlinear vocal phenomena of the Indian sambar (Rusa unicolor) and northern Indian muntjac (Muntiacus vaginalis) have been analyzed in detail as well as their vocal behavior in response to mobbing humans under natural conditions of southern Vietnam. The alarm calls of sambars, tonal barks separated by large intervals, were produced by animals standing on the place and gazing at a potentially dangerous object. Muntjacs flee off in danger and produced a series of dull barks interrupted with short intervals from a distance. The alarm call frequencies were characterized for sambars and muntjacs. The results of our study have been compared with the published data on alarm calls of other Cervidae species.


Assuntos
Acústica , Cervo Muntjac/fisiologia , Vocalização Animal/fisiologia , Animais , Vietnã
4.
J Vis Exp ; (83): e50855, 2014 Jan 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24430673

RESUMO

Reeves' muntjac deer (Muntiacus reevesi) are a small cervid species native to southeast Asia, and are currently being investigated as a potential model of prion disease transmission and pathogenesis. Vertical transmission is an area of interest among researchers studying infectious diseases, including prion disease, and these investigations require efficient methods for evaluating the effects of maternal infection on reproductive performance. Ultrasonographic examination is a well-established tool for diagnosing pregnancy and assessing fetal health in many animal species(1-7), including several species of farmed cervids(8-19), however this technique has not been described in Reeves' muntjac deer. Here we describe the application of transabdominal ultrasound to detect pregnancy in muntjac does and to evaluate fetal growth and development throughout the gestational period. Using this procedure, pregnant animals were identified as early as 35 days following doe-buck pairing and this was an effective means to safely monitor the pregnancy at regular intervals. Future goals of this work will include establishing normal fetal measurement references for estimation of gestational age, determining sensitivity and specificity of the technique for diagnosing pregnancy at various stages of gestation, and identifying variations in fetal growth and development under different experimental conditions.


Assuntos
Cervo Muntjac/fisiologia , Prenhez/fisiologia , Ultrassonografia Pré-Natal/veterinária , Abdome/diagnóstico por imagem , Animais , Feminino , Gravidez , Ultrassonografia Pré-Natal/métodos
5.
Theriogenology ; 81(3): 403-6, 2014 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24220360

RESUMO

Previous studies have shown that despite having a clear seasonal fluctuation in fecal testosterone concentration, the significantly lower testosterone levels found in velvet stags of the nonseasonal breeder muntjac (Muntiacus sp.) apparently did not stop their spermatogenesis as in other deer species. In the present study, in vitro cultivated Leydig cells isolated from adult stags of three native deer species of Taiwan were treated with androstenedione, with or without adding human chorionic gonadotropin. Results showed that, unlike the two seasonal breeders, sika deer (Cervus nippon) and sambar deer (Rusa unicolor), Leydig cells of velvet muntjac had no dramatic reduction in or even maintained the full capability of their testosterone productivity compared with the hard-antlered stage. The decrease in fecal testosterone level observed earlier in muntjac during the velvet period was probably due to a reduction of number of Leydig cells. These results support the hypothesis that testosterone production in muntjac during its velvet period might never be low enough to trigger the quiescent phase of the reproduction cycle.


Assuntos
Cervo Muntjac/metabolismo , Testosterona/metabolismo , Androstenodiona/farmacologia , Animais , Gonadotropina Coriônica/farmacologia , Fezes/química , Células Intersticiais do Testículo/efeitos dos fármacos , Masculino , Cervo Muntjac/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Cervo Muntjac/fisiologia , Reprodução , Comportamento Sexual Animal , Espermatogênese
6.
PLoS One ; 6(4): e19255, 2011 Apr 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21559438

RESUMO

The muntjacs (Muntiacus, Cervidae) have been extensively studied in terms of chromosomal and karyotypic evolution. However, little is known about their meiotic chromosomes particularly the recombination patterns of homologous chromosomes. We used immunostained surface spreads to visualise synaptonemal complexes (SCs), recombination foci and kinetochores with antibodies against marker proteins. As in other mammals pachytene was the longest stage of meiotic prophase. 39.4% of XY bivalents lacked MLH1 foci compared to less than 0.5% of autosomes. The average number of MLH1 foci per pachytene cell in M. reevesi was 29.8. The distribution of MLH1 foci differed from other mammals. On SCs with one focus, the distribution was more even in M. reevesi than in other mammals; for SCs that have two or more MLH1 foci, usually there was a larger peak in the sub-centromere region than other regions on SC in M. reevesi. Additionally, there was a lower level of interference between foci in M. reevesi than in mouse or human. These observations may suggest that the regulation of homologous recombination in M. reevesi is slightly different from other mammals and will improve our understanding of the regulation of meiotic recombination, with respect to recombination frequency and position.


Assuntos
Pareamento Cromossômico , Cervo Muntjac/genética , Recombinação Genética , Animais , Mapeamento Cromossômico , Cariotipagem , Masculino , Meiose , Microscopia de Fluorescência/métodos , Modelos Genéticos , Cervo Muntjac/fisiologia , Ploidias , Análise de Sequência de DNA , Espermatócitos/citologia , Testículo/metabolismo
7.
Ecol Appl ; 19(4): 854-63, 2009 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19544729

RESUMO

Myriad tropical vertebrates are threatened by overharvest. Whether this harvest has indirect effects on nonhunted organisms that interact with the game species is a critical question. Many tropical birds and mammals disperse seeds. Their overhunting in forests can cause zoochorous trees to suffer from reduced seed dispersal. Yet how these reductions in seed dispersal influence tree abundance and population dynamics remains unclear. Reproductive parameters in long-lived organisms often have very low elasticities; indeed the demographic importance of seed dispersal is an open question. We asked how variation in hunting pressure across four national parks with seasonal forest in northern Thailand influenced the relative abundance of gibbons, muntjac deer, and sambar deer, the sole dispersers of seeds of the canopy tree Choerospondias axillaris. We quantified how variation in disperser numbers affected C. axillaris seed dispersal and seedling abundance across the four parks. We then used these data in a structured population model based on vital rates measured in Khao Yai National Park (where poaching pressure is minimal) to explore how variation in illegal hunting pressure might influence C. axillaris population growth and persistence. Densities of the mammals varied strongly across the parks, from relatively high in Khao Yai to essentially zero in Doi Suthep-Pui. Levels of C. axillaris seed dispersal and seedling abundance positively tracked mammal density. If hunting in Khao Yai were to increase to the levels seen in the other parks, C. axillaris population growth rate would decline, but only slightly. Extinction of C. axillaris is a real possibility, but may take many decades. Recent and ongoing extirpations of vertebrates in many tropical forests could be creating an extinction debt for zoochorous trees whose vulnerability is belied by their current abundance.


Assuntos
Anacardiaceae , Ecossistema , Hylobates , Cervo Muntjac , Sementes , Animais , Comportamento Alimentar , Hylobates/fisiologia , Modelos Biológicos , Cervo Muntjac/fisiologia , Densidade Demográfica , Crescimento Demográfico , Tailândia
8.
Zoology (Jena) ; 110(4): 261-70, 2007.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17614268

RESUMO

This study investigates the validity of current theory for predicting ecological and allometric effects on space use, social structure and mating systems of poorly known solitary cervids, based on a comparative analysis of radio-telemetry data on hog deer Axis porcinus (N=32) and Indian muntjac Muntiacus muntjak (N=28). The larger and sexually size-dimorphic hog deer inhabit highly productive alluvial floodplains, where resource distribution is patchy and spatiotemporally unpredictable. As predicted for this species, site fidelity was low and range sizes varied among sex and age groups and among seasons. Hog deer were probably non-territorial, as home range sizes seemed too large to be exclusive when taking into account their high population density. Extensive movements of adult males during the rut implied "roaming" as a mating strategy. The smaller, forest-dwelling and sexually size-monomorphic muntjacs inhabit a more uniform and stable habitat. As predicted, muntjacs exhibited higher site fidelity than hog deer, and no seasonal variations in home range sizes. Adults exhibited relatively large home range overlap, both inter- and intrasexually. Hence, strict territoriality did not occur, but their well-defined home ranges and high site fidelity indicated some form of site-specific dominance. In conclusion, habitat characteristics were appropriate predictors of home range sizes and site fidelity. Body mass appeared to be a suitable predictor of intraspecific patterns in space use but a poor predictor of interspecific patterns, probably due to a confounding effect of habitat productivity.


Assuntos
Cervos/fisiologia , Ecossistema , Cervo Muntjac/fisiologia , Reprodução/fisiologia , Comportamento Sexual Animal/fisiologia , Comportamento Espacial , Animais , Tamanho Corporal/fisiologia , Feminino , Masculino , Densidade Demográfica , Dinâmica Populacional , Estações do Ano , Especificidade da Espécie , Telemetria/veterinária , Territorialidade
9.
Vet Res Commun ; 31(7): 801-8, 2007 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17294264

RESUMO

Haematological and serum biochemical values of clinical significance that could serve as reference data for deer kept in captivity were measured for chital (Axis axis) and barking deer (Muntiacus muntjak). The venous blood from four each of chital and barking deer (n = 8) reared in semi-captivity was collected after proper restraint of the animals. The mean blood haemoglobin, packed cell volume, total erythrocyte count and total leukocyte count of all the eight deer of the two species were 15.90 +/- 0.44 g/dl, 51.44 +/- 0.60%, 20.83 +/- 0.57 x 10(6)/microl and 2.37 +/- 0.20 x 10(3)/microl. Serum total protein, albumin, bilirubin, cholesterol and blood urea nitrogen irrespective of species were 6.83 +/- 0.19 g/dl, 3.90 +/- 0.11 g/dl, 0.33 +/- 0.08 mg/dl, 106.81 +/- 3.59 mg/dl and 24.79 +/- 2.11 mg/dl, respectively. Serum enzyme activities indicative of liver function such as alanine transaminase (ALT) and aspartate transaminase (AST) were 30.38 +/- 4.67 units/ml and 42.88 +/- 5.97 units/ml, respectively. The serum calcium and phosphorus levels of all the eight deer were 10.27 +/- 0.36 mg/dl and 8.31 +/- 0.68 mg/dl, respectively. This is the first report on baseline values in barking deer. The distribution of haematological and serum biochemical values was fairly normal, suggesting that the mean values could be representative of normal values for two different deer species.


Assuntos
Cervos/sangue , Animais , Animais de Zoológico/sangue , Animais de Zoológico/fisiologia , Análise Química do Sangue/métodos , Análise Química do Sangue/veterinária , Cervos/fisiologia , Eritrócitos/citologia , Feminino , Testes Hematológicos/veterinária , Masculino , Cervo Muntjac/sangue , Cervo Muntjac/fisiologia , Valores de Referência
10.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 101(35): 12928-33, 2004 Aug 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15322275

RESUMO

Telomeres are defining structural elements of all linear chromosomes, yet information concerning the timing of their replication in higher eukaryotes is surprisingly limited. We developed an approach that allowed a study of telomere replication patterns of specific mammalian chromosomes. In the Indian muntjac (Muntiacus muntjac), replication timing between respective telomeres of homologous chromosomes was highly coordinated, but no such synchrony was evident for p- and q-arm telomeres of the same chromosome. This finding contrasts with the coordinated timing of both ends of each chromosome in yeast. Also in contrast to yeast, where replication of all telomeres is confined to late S phase, we found specific telomeres in Indian muntjac chromosomes that replicated early in S and other telomeres that replicated later. Finally, replication timing of some but not all telomeres was influenced by telomere length. Knowledge of telomere replication timing represents a first step toward understanding the relationship between telomere replication and telomerase action. The approach, which we call replicative detargeting fluorescence in situ hybridization, is widely applicable to different species and genetic loci.


Assuntos
Replicação do DNA/fisiologia , Telômero/genética , Animais , Feminino , Hibridização in Situ Fluorescente , Cervo Muntjac/genética , Cervo Muntjac/fisiologia , Fase S/fisiologia , Telômero/fisiologia
11.
Cell Struct Funct ; 26(6): 705-18, 2001 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11942629

RESUMO

We constructed stable mammalian cell lines in which human heterochromatin protein HP1alpha and kinetochore protein CENP-A were differentially expressed as fusions to red (RFP-HP1) and green fluorescent proteins (GFP-CENP-A). Heterochromatin localization of RFP-HP1 was clearly shown in mouse and Indian muntjac cells. By preparing mitotic chromosome spreads, the inner centromere localization of RFP-HP1 was observed in human and Indian muntjac cells. To characterize its molecular behavior in living mitotic cells, time-lapse images of RFP-HP1 were obtained by computer-assisted image analyzing system, mainly with mouse cells. In G2 phase, a significant portion of RFP-HP1 diffused homogeneously in the nucleus and further dispersed into the cytoplasm soon after the nuclear membrane breakdown, while some remained in the centromeric region. Simultaneous observations with GFP-CENP-A in human cells showed that RFP-HP1 was located just between the sister kinetochores and then aligned to the spindle midzone. With the onset of anaphase, once it was released from there, it moved to the centromeres of segregating chromosomes or returned to the spindle equator. As cytokinesis proceeded, HP1alpha was predominantly found in the newly formed daughter nuclei and again displayed a heterochromatin-like distribution. These results suggested that, although the majority of HP1alpha diffuses into the cytoplasm, some populations are retained in the centromeric region and involved in the association and segregation of sister kinetochores during mitosis.


Assuntos
Autoantígenos , Proteínas Cromossômicas não Histona/metabolismo , Proteínas Luminescentes/metabolismo , Mitose/fisiologia , Proteínas Recombinantes de Fusão/metabolismo , Animais , Células Cultivadas , Proteína Centromérica A , Homólogo 5 da Proteína Cromobox , Proteínas Cromossômicas não Histona/genética , Cromossomos/genética , Cromossomos/metabolismo , Proteínas de Fluorescência Verde , Humanos , Indicadores e Reagentes/metabolismo , Proteínas Luminescentes/genética , Camundongos , Microscopia de Fluorescência , Microscopia de Vídeo , Cervo Muntjac/fisiologia , Proteínas Recombinantes de Fusão/genética , Fatores de Tempo , Transfecção , Proteína Vermelha Fluorescente
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