scholarly journals [Columba livia domestic breed, invasive entity also alien for Italy]

2019 ◽  
Vol 88 (2) ◽  
pp. 3-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giovanni Boano ◽  
Fabio Perco ◽  
Marco Pavia ◽  
Natale Emilio Baldaccini

[The Rock Dove (Columba livia) is a polytypic species originally confined to coastal and inland cliffs of western Palaearctic and northern Ethiopian regions and to those of Indian subcontinent. The present distribution is confused by extensions of range through hybridization with feral stock, which have determined its diffusion in geographical areas and environments that are very different and distant from the original ones, with a naturalized distribution now virtually cosmopolitan. Besides a substantial number of domestic breeds reared and maintained in this state, Columba livia is now represented by the original wild populations, generally in decline, and by feral populations, originated from abandoned or escaped domestic individuals. These populations developed above all, but no exclusively, in the cities, starting from the end of the XVIII century, with a further significant increase during the second post-war period, In this work, after having examined and discussed the distribution of the species resulting from the Pleistocene fossil findings and from the historical ornithological literature, we advance the hypothesis that wherever there are free-living populations showing phenotypic, biometric or genetic characteristics different from the wild morphotype, it is legitimate to consider these populations as an alien complex of domestic origin, to be controlled by culling and, when possible, eradicated. On the side-lines of this work, the Authors hope for a reconsideration of Italian names of this species.] [Article in Italian]

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dimitri Giunchi ◽  
Nadia Mucci ◽  
Daniele Bigi ◽  
Chiara Mengoni ◽  
N. Emilio Baldaccini

AbstractColumba livia is a wild bird whose domestication has led to a large number of pigeon breeds. The occasional loss or straying of domestic birds determined the origin of feral pigeons, which are now widespread all around the world. In this study, we assumed that the main contribution to feral populations is provided by domestic breeds reared in the same areas. We tested this hypothesis by analysing the variability of 12 microsatellite loci in nine Italian feral populations sampled in areas with different intensities of breeding and selecting domestic breeds. We included in the analysis samples belonging to domestic lineages commonly bred in Italy The pattern of geographic differentiation of feral populations turned out to be rather complex and only partially explained by the geographic distance between populations. This pattern can be understood only when the domestic breeds were included in the analysis. In particular, feral populations located in regions with a long-lasting tradition of pigeon breeding showed a high level of admixture with domestic breeds, in particular with Racing Homer and Piacentino. Ferals from Bolzano, Venice and Sassari were characterized by unique genetic components, almost all of which are not shared by other feral populations and by the considered domestic breeds. Our results further emphasize the complex origin of feral populations which can be properly investigated only by considering the pool of domestic pigeons bred in the considered area and their past and present distribution.


Zootaxa ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 4948 (3) ◽  
pp. 301-335
Author(s):  
MAJID TAVAKOLI ◽  
ASADOLLAH HOSSEINI-CHEGENI ◽  
GRAHAM N. STONE ◽  
SEYED E. SADEGHI ◽  
R. J. ATKINSON ◽  
...  

We provide a checklist of the gall wasps (Hymenoptera: Cynipidae: Cynipinae) of Iran, and place these records in a biogeographical perspective on three spatial scales, comprising (i) the Western Palaearctic, (ii) Western Asia (Turkey, the southern Caucasus and the Middle East) and (iii) regions within Iran. We present distribution and biological data for 121 species in 24 genera, representing nine of the 12 known cynipid gall wasp tribes. The most species–rich tribe in Iran is the oak gall wasp tribe Cynipini, with 74 species and 11 genera. Cynipid species richness is highest in the central and northern Zagros, with a distinctively different fauna in the forests along the southern shores of the Caspian Sea. Of the species found in Iran, 63 have distributions that extend westwards far into Europe, and can be considered Western Palaearctic species. Twenty four species comprise a distinct eastern component within the Western Palaearctic, with distributions that include Iran and some or all of Turkey, the Middle East and the Caucasus. Twenty one species are apparently endemic to Iran, with distinct Zagros and Caspian components. We highlight biological and phylogeographic processes that may underlie these patterns. 


Zootaxa ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4722 (4) ◽  
pp. 371-380
Author(s):  
TRIDIP KUMAR DATTA ◽  
KELOTH RAJMOHANA

Polkepsilonema arabicensis sp. n. is discovered from the coralline sand of Lakshadweep island, located off the south-western coast of India. The species differs from other congeners by its unique combination of characters: presence of fine spines along the body curvatures, 5–6 rows of bisinuous ambulatory setae, male with two clusters of ventral copulatory thorns and 14 subcephalic sensilla. The novel species is the fourth discovery of the genus and first record from the coastal areas of Indian subcontinent. A key to species level is provided. 


2018 ◽  
pp. 7-20
Author(s):  
Michael Balk ◽  

The paper provides a bibliographic overview of Tibetan literary works published in both the People’s Republic of China and by Tibetans in India after the Second World War. The basis for the observations presented here are the holdings of the Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin (Berlin State Library), which has a relatively comprehensive Tibetan collection from the said period. It can be seen that literary works in the modern sense can only be observed to a considerable extent in China in the 1980s. This emerging modern Tibetan literature seems to be closely linked to the reception and publication of epic literature of the Gesar genre. In the 1990s, the new literary movement, which emerged in particular from the Amdo region, spread to the Indian subcontinent among exiled Tibetans, as the publication figures show. In addition, the article provides a general overview of literary works that have been translated from other languages into Tibetan, as well as an overview of the main publishers of the People’s Republic.


Author(s):  
Julian M. Simpson

Chapter 2 connects the history of the NHS to the history of the British empire and post-war migration. The arrival in Britain of the South Asian medical graduates who became GPs was the product of a very specific post-imperial context that existed in the forty years following the establishment of the NHS. The post-war migration of doctors was not a spontaneous or new phenomenon-it is linked to the long history of British medicine in South Asia and is an amplification of longstanding imperial flows of doctors to Britain. Medicine on the Indian subcontinent had been fundamentally shaped by its imperial past. Conversely, in a growing NHS, their labour offered a solution to the staffing needs of the new organisation, particularly in junior posts, in unpopular specialties and in industrial areas. There was a time lag between the formal end of empire and the dismantling of its legacies such as the freedom of doctors to move to Britain and their ability to gain recognition for their qualifications. This explains how between the 1940s and the 1980s South Asian doctors came to take on such an important role in the British healthcare system.


2006 ◽  
Vol 147 (4) ◽  
pp. 599-604 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mariusz Kasprzak ◽  
Tomasz Hetmański ◽  
Ewa Kulczykowska

Parasitology ◽  
1964 ◽  
Vol 54 (1) ◽  
pp. 105-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Mykytowycz

The incidence and prevalence of coccidia have been studied in populations of free-living red kangaroos, Megaleia rufa, and grey kangaroos, Macropus canguru, in four geographically distinct areas in Australia.Two new species of Eimeria—E. wilcanniensis and E. toganmainensis—are described from M. rufa, and five—E. cunnamullensis, E. gungahlinensis, E. purchasei, E. kogoni, and E. hestermani—from M. canguru.The incidence of coccidia ranged from 6 to 14% in populations of M. rufa and from 26 to 70% in M. canguru. The susceptibility of the animals to coccidia was analysed in relation to the tibia length. Red kangaroos with tibia approximately 360 mm. long and corresponding to an age of about 12 months were found to be most susceptible. No clinical cases of coccidiosis were seen in the field.Special thanks are due to the owners or managers of the properties on which the kangaroos were sampled; to members of the staff of the Regional Pastoral Laboratory ‘Gilruth Plains’ for their assistance in sampling, and to Messrs E. R. Hesterman, C. Kogon, and D. Purchase, who assisted in the field and the laboratory. Three species of Eimeria have been named after them in acknowledgement of their work. Messrs B. V. Fennessy and J. H. Calaby of this Division kindly read the manuscript.I wish to thank Dr G. B. Sharman for his permission to work with captive kangaroos in Canberra, and Mr E. Slater who took the photographs.


2020 ◽  
Vol 44 (4) ◽  
pp. 877-881
Author(s):  
Carolina Caetano dos Santos ◽  
Sara Patron da Motta ◽  
Natália Soares Martins ◽  
Andrios da Silva Moreira ◽  
Natália Nachtigall Al-Alam ◽  
...  

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