129 resultados para CAMARON TITI
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Presenta los resultados del seguimiento de la pesquería del recurso langostino tití, también conocido como camarón tití; el cual se convirtió en un recurso ocasional para la zona de Supe y Huacho, durante el Fenómeno El Niño de 1997-98. El recurso, que se distribuye desde Sinaloa (México) hasta Paita (Perú), se convirtió en uno de los pilares de la pesquería artesanal adquiriendo importancia comercial local.
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Como resultado de un estudio de aproximadamente dos años en cinco ríos de la Costa Central y Sur del Perú, se presenta información biológico-pesquera de Cryphiops caementarius Molina 1872 (Natantia, Palaemonidae), comprendiendo aspectos de su distribución, bionomía y ciclo vital, población, explotación y manejo. Se hace una descripción y análisis de cada uno de estos aspectos, así como de las condiciones ambientales presentes en los diferentes ríos estudiados.
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Puteanus
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Colbertinus
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Colbertinus
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Colbertinus
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Colbertinus
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Five species of titi monkey (Callicebus brunneus, Callicebus caligatus, Callicebus cinerascens, Callicebus donacophilus, and Callicebus moloch) were recorded in surveys of primate populations at 26 sites throughout the Brazilian state of Rondonia. The distribution of the two species, C. cinerascens and C. donacophilus (recorded in the state for the first time), appeared to be related to that of non-forest ecosystems, the former in the cerrado woodlands, and the latter in gallery forests of the Guapore grasslands. The results of the surveys also indicate that C. brunneus has a more restricted distribution in southern Rondonia than was previously thought, whereas C. moloch is more widespread. However, the ecological factors that determine species distribution in the south of the state remain unclear on the basis of the available data. All species were observed in small social groups of no more than five individuals, which are typical of the genus, generally in the middle and lower forest strata.
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The color vision of most platyrrhine primates is determined by alleles at the polymorphic X-linked locus coding for the opsin responsible for the middle- to long-wavelength (M/L) cone photopigment. Females who are heterozygous at the locus have trichromatic vision, whereas homozygous females and all males are dichromatic. This study characterized the opsin alleles in a wild population of the socially monogamous platyrrhine monkey Callicebus brunneus (the brown titi monkey), a primate that an earlier study suggests may possess an unusual number of alleles at this locus and thus may be a subject of special interest in the study of primate color vision. Direct sequencing of regions of the M/L opsin gene using feces-, blood-, and saliva-derived DNA obtained from 14 individuals yielded evidence for the presence of three functionally distinct alleles, corresponding to the most common M/L photopigment variants inferred from a physiological study of cone spectral sensitivity in captive Callicebus. Am. J. Primatol. 73:189-196, 2011. (C) 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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Met index in vol. 4.