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1.
Zool Stud ; 56: e39, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31966238

ABSTRACT

Soto Florencia Anabella, Grandi María Florencia, García Néstor Aníbal, Crespo Enrique Alberto, and Dans Silvana Laura (2017) Mass strandings represent a valuable source of information, especially when it comes to difficult-to-access pelagic species, such as Globicephala melas edwardii. We collected reproductive organs from 27 female pilot whales stranded in Caleta Malaspina, Chubut, Argentina. Our main objective was to analyze reproductive parameters of female long- finned pilot whales in the southern hemisphere. To achieve this, we studied age and reproductive status in order to approximate age and body length at sexual maturity, breeding interval, and fertility of this subspecies. The maturity state was determined by recording different ovulation bodies obtained from histological sections and by assessing the presence of milk in the mammary glands and a fetus, and we concluded that 5 of the females were immature and 22 were mature females. Finding mature females in different reproductive states (resting, in lactation, pregnant, or pregnant and in lactation) along with the great variety of fetus sizes would indicate that copulation and birth are not governed by seasonality. Age at sexual maturity was 8 years old and length at sexual maturity would reach 365.50 cm. The annual pregnancy rate was constant with age for mature females at 0.41 ovul / year, with a breeding interval of 2.4 years. The average fertility varied between 0.19 and 0.21. All the parameters are within the estimated range for females of the North Atlantic subpopulation, except for the breeding interval, which was significantly lower than estimates for the northern subspecies. This study could be limited because all individuals come from a single mass stranding. While this study allowed us to reach some conclusions about the reproductive biology of female G. melas edwardii in the Southwestern Atlantic Ocean, further studies are needed to fully comprehend the behavior and biology of this species.

2.
Folia Parasitol (Praha) ; 59(4): 264-71, 2012 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23327007

ABSTRACT

Breizacanthus aznari sp. n. is described from the banded cusk-eel Raneya brasiliensis (Kaup) (Ophidiiformes: Ophidiidae) from the Patagonian coast in Argentina. Breizacanthus Golvan, 1969 is currently composed of five species (including the new species) and is characterised by the absence of trunk spines; a short cylindrical proboscis with two types of hooks and lemnisci longer than the proboscis receptacle. Breizacanthus aznari is clearly distinguished from B. chabaudi Golvan, 1969 by having 12 longitudinal rows of hooks on the proboscis, instead of 16-18. The new species resembles B. golvani Gaevskaya et Shukhgalter, 1984, B. irenae Golvan, 1969, and B. ligur Paggi, Orecchia et Della Seta, 1975, all possessing 12 longitudinal rows of hooks. However, B. aznari differs from B. golvani in having 4-5 large hooks per row (vs. 8-9) and larger eggs. The new species can be distinguished from B. irenae by the shorter body size of females, the different range of numbers of large hooks of males (4-5 and 5-6, respectively), the smaller maximum number of small hooks of females (3 and 4, respectively), and the shorter lemnisci. Breizacanthus aznari differs from B. ligur by the smaller body length of females, the smaller maximum body length of males, the different range of numbers of large hooks of males (4-5 and 5-6, respectively), and smaller lemnisci. This is the first record of a species of Breizacanthus from fishes of the order Ophidiiformes and from the Southern Hemisphere. Comparative data on species of Euzetacanthus Golvan et Houlin, 1964 and Breizacanthus are also provided.


Subject(s)
Acanthocephala/isolation & purification , Acanthocephala/ultrastructure , Fish Diseases/parasitology , Helminthiasis, Animal/parasitology , Acanthocephala/classification , Animals , Argentina , Atlantic Ocean/epidemiology , Female , Fish Diseases/epidemiology , Fishes , Helminthiasis, Animal/epidemiology , Male
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