Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 14-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

SIBLING SPECIES OF ARTEMIA: A LIGHT AND ELECTRON MICROSCOPIC SURVEY OF THE MORPHOLOGY OF THE FRONTAL KNOBS. PART II

SIBLING SPECIES OF ARTEMIA: A LIGHT AND ELECTRON MICROSCOPIC SURVEY OF THE MORPHOLOGY OF THE... and As to the distribution ofArtemia in Italy, the Adriatic Sea coast (Margherita di Sa- voia, Comacchio, Cervia) is generally col- onized by A. parthenogenetica (Barigozzi, 1934, 1935, 1974, 1980), while along the Tirrenian coast (Sicily, Latium, Sardinia) the bisexual Artemia predominates with the exception of Santa Gilla salterns (Cagliari), where A. parthenogenetica occurs as well (Barigozzi, 1974, 1980; Stefani, 1960, 1964). Furthermore, in San Bartolomeo salterns (Cagliari), nowadays no longer existing, a mixture of A. persimilis and A. tunisiana was detected (Halfer-Cervini et al., 1967; Halfer-Cervini et al., 1968; Piccinelli and Prosdocimi, 1968; Piccinelli et al., 1968). Recently (Mura, 1987) a number of new localities for Artemia have been recorded for Sardinia and a comprehensive study as to the chromosome number and species identification is now in progress by prof. Barigozzi's and Battaglia's teams in Milano and Padua, respectively. The first results (Baratelli et al., 1988) indicate for Carloforte and Sant'Antioco populations (Province of Cagliari), in spite of a certain heteroploidy of the latter, that they all correspond morphologically to the same species and are of the "salina" type, as the species was once named (Barigozzi, 1974). Nonetheless, since further investi- gation is needed in order to http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of Crustacean Biology Brill

SIBLING SPECIES OF ARTEMIA: A LIGHT AND ELECTRON MICROSCOPIC SURVEY OF THE MORPHOLOGY OF THE FRONTAL KNOBS. PART II

Loading next page...
 
/lp/brill/sibling-species-of-artemia-a-light-and-electron-microscopic-survey-of-gSVUEey9ao

References (0)

References for this paper are not available at this time. We will be adding them shortly, thank you for your patience.

Publisher
Brill
Copyright
Copyright 1989 by Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands
ISSN
0278-0372
eISSN
1937-240X
DOI
10.1163/193724089X00395
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

and As to the distribution ofArtemia in Italy, the Adriatic Sea coast (Margherita di Sa- voia, Comacchio, Cervia) is generally col- onized by A. parthenogenetica (Barigozzi, 1934, 1935, 1974, 1980), while along the Tirrenian coast (Sicily, Latium, Sardinia) the bisexual Artemia predominates with the exception of Santa Gilla salterns (Cagliari), where A. parthenogenetica occurs as well (Barigozzi, 1974, 1980; Stefani, 1960, 1964). Furthermore, in San Bartolomeo salterns (Cagliari), nowadays no longer existing, a mixture of A. persimilis and A. tunisiana was detected (Halfer-Cervini et al., 1967; Halfer-Cervini et al., 1968; Piccinelli and Prosdocimi, 1968; Piccinelli et al., 1968). Recently (Mura, 1987) a number of new localities for Artemia have been recorded for Sardinia and a comprehensive study as to the chromosome number and species identification is now in progress by prof. Barigozzi's and Battaglia's teams in Milano and Padua, respectively. The first results (Baratelli et al., 1988) indicate for Carloforte and Sant'Antioco populations (Province of Cagliari), in spite of a certain heteroploidy of the latter, that they all correspond morphologically to the same species and are of the "salina" type, as the species was once named (Barigozzi, 1974). Nonetheless, since further investi- gation is needed in order to

Journal

Journal of Crustacean BiologyBrill

Published: Jan 1, 1989

There are no references for this article.