Creole cattle from northwestern Mexico has high genetic diversity in the locus DRB3.2

Author(s):  
I.G. Fernández ◽  
I. Leyva-Baca ◽  
F. Rodríguez-Almeida ◽  
R. Ulloa-Arvizu ◽  
J.G. Ríos-Ramírez ◽  
...  

SummaryThe objective of this study was to determine the genetic diversity of creole cattle in northwestern Mexico using the BoLA-DRB3.2 locus of the Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC). A total of 56 creole cattle were sampled from five communities; in the state of Chihuahua (Cerocahui, Guadalupe y Calvo and Cuauhtémoc) and in the state of Baja California Sur (La Paz and Mulegé). The BoLA-DRB3.2 locus was genotyped by PCR-RFLP assay. Thirty-nine alleles were identified, out of which 14 had not been previously reported. The average level of inbreeding in all populations analyzed wasFIS= 0.09 (P< 0.0001), but only two populations (Cerocahui and Guadalupe y Calvo) showed an excess of homozygotes (P< 0.05). The breed differentiation in all populations studied wasFSC= 0.068 (P< 0.0001). The smallest genetic distance was between La Paz and Mulegé (0.022); but Mulegé presented smaller distances (0.028–0.053) with the populations of La Paz (0.071–0.083) and with Chihuahua. Baja California Sur populations are grouped in a separate branch than Chihuahua populations. We conclude that creole cattle from Baja California Sur and Chihuahua show high genetic diversity in the locus BoLA-DRB3.2.

Plant Disease ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 94 (10) ◽  
pp. 1266-1266 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Cardenas-Conejo ◽  
G. Arguello-Astorga ◽  
A. Poghosyan ◽  
J. Hernandez-Gonzalez ◽  
V. Lebsky ◽  
...  

Chile peppers are among the most common and important crops in the State of Baja California Sur, Mexico, where diverse varieties of this crop are annually cultivated. The “chile ancho” (Capsicum annuum L. var. ancho poblano) is one of the most popular hot peppers that is exported fresh to the United States. During a survey in December of 2007 in an experimental field of the CIBNOR in El Carrizal, one of the principal farm districts in the state, a high incidence of yellowing, stunted growth with shortened internodes, foliage discoloration, malformation and crinkle, abortion of flowers, and reduction in size and quantity of fruit were noted in chile ancho. Symptoms and the presence of large populations of whiteflies in the field suggested a possible viral etiology of disease. The symptoms of disease were successfully transmitted by grafting from field plants to tomato and pepper test plants. Samples from both field and test plants were analyzed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and molecular techniques. SEM study revealed groups of geminate particles characteristic of begomoviruses (Geminiviridae) in phloem tissue of randomly selected symptomatic plants (four field and two test plants). Total DNA from 12 symptomatic plants (eight naturally infected and four test plants) was obtained by a modified Dellaporta method and analyzed by PCR using the begomovirus universal primers prRepDGR (2) and prC889 (3). Amplicons of ~1.4 kb were obtained from all plant samples and PCR products from four of them were cloned into pGEM-T Easy vector (Promega, Madison, WI) and subsequently analyzed by restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) using EcoRI and HinfI. Two distinct restriction fragment patterns were observed among the cloned PCR products, indicating the occurrence of at least two viruses in the infected plant tissues. The four examined samples contained the same two begomoviruses according to the RFLP analysis data. The complete sequence of the genomic component A of those viruses was determined by PCR amplification of viral DNA with universal, degenerate primers previously described (2), the subsequent cloning of overlapped PCR products, and sequencing. The full-length DNA-A sequence was assembled and compared with viral sequences available at the GenBank database using BlastN and the ClustalV alignment method (MegAlign; DNASTAR, Madison, WI). The 2,781-bp complete genome sequence of one co-infecting monopartite begomovirus (Accession No. HM459851) displayed the highest identity (99%) with Tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV), isolate Guasave, Sinaloa (Accession No. FJ609655). The 2,609-bp DNA-A sequence of the second begomovirus exhibited the highest nucleotide identity (96%) with Tomato chino La Paz virus (ToChLPV)-[Baja California Sur] (Accession No. AY339619). The presence of TYLCV in this region of Mexico had not been previously reported nor was ToChLPV detected in pepper until now. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a mixed infection of pepper plants with TYLCV and a bipartite begomovirus in Baja California Peninsula. Since the high frequency of recombination events observed in begomovirus mixed infections involving TYLCV (1), it would be important to monitor the possible emergence of ToChLPV-TYLCV recombinants with higher potential virulence. References: (1) S. García-Andrés et al. Virology 365:210, 2007. (2) A. Mauricio-Castillo et al. Plant Dis. 91:1513, 2007. (3) S. D. Wyatt and J. K. Brown. Phytopathology 86:1288, 1996.


GeoHazards ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-15
Author(s):  
Miguel Angel Imaz-Lamadrid ◽  
Jobst Wurl ◽  
Ernesto Ramos-Velázquez ◽  
Jaqueline Rodríguez-Trasviña

Floods are amongst the most frequent and destructive type of disaster, causing significant damage to communities. Globally, there is an increasing trend in the damage caused by floods generated by several factors. Flooding is characterized by the overflow of water onto dry land. Tropical cyclones generate floods due to excess water in rivers and streams and storm surges; however, the hazard of both phenomena is presented separately. In this research we present a methodology for the estimation of flood hazards related to tropical cyclones, integrating runoff and storm surge floods. As a case study, we selected the south-western suburbs of the city of La Paz, the capital of the state of Baja California Sur in northwest Mexico. The city has experienced in recent years an expansion of the urban area. In addition, there is an infrastructure of great importance such as the transpeninsular highway that connects the capital with the north of the state, as well as the international airport. Our results indicate that urban areas, agricultural lands, as well as the air force base, airport, and portions of the transpeninsular highway are in hazardous flood areas, making necessary to reduce the exposure and vulnerability to these tropical cyclone-related events. A resulting map was effective in defining those areas that would be exposed to flooding in the face of the impact of tropical cyclones and considering climate change scenarios, which represents an invaluable source of information for society and decision-makers for comprehensive risk management and disaster prevention.


Plant Disease ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 89 (12) ◽  
pp. 1360-1360 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. J. Holguín-Peña

Vascular wilting diseases have become one of the most serious diseases of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) throughout the Baja California Peninsula. Since the winter of 2004, a disease with symptoms characteristic of those caused by a Fusarium species has been observed in commercial fields near La Paz and Todos Santos in the state of Baja California Sur (BCS). Symptoms include typical one-sided wilting and dark brown vascular discoloration. Upper stem tissues and wilted seedlings were disinfested by immersion in a 1.0% aqueous solution of sodium hypochlorite for 2 min, rinsed in sterile water, and placed on Komada's medium (pH 6.8) at 22 ± 3°C. After 72 h, hyphal growth was recovered and subcultured on carnation leaf agar and potato dextrose agar and incubated at 25°C in 12-h light/dark cycles. Identification was based on colony morphology, conidial characteristics, and molecular techniques. White cottony mycelium, reddish coloration of the medium, ovoid two-celled macroconidia, and large macroconidia, all characteristic of F. oxysporum, were observed (2). Polymerase chain reaction and restriction fragment length polymorphisms with restriction enzymes EcoRI, RsaI, and HaeIII were used to characterize 24 isolates (sampled during January 2005) from La Paz (Fol-LaP) as formae speciales lycopersici and assigned to vegetative compatibility group 0030 (1). Confirmation of pathogenicity and race determination for the Fol-LaP isolates were as described previously (3). Mexican isolates of races 2 and 3 (one each) were included as positive controls. Conidial suspensions of 7 × 105 CFU/ml were used to inoculate differential tomato cvs. Bonny Best (Millington Co., universally susceptible), Tequila F1 (Vilmorin, race 1 resistant), Rio Grande (Harris Moran, race 1 and 2 resistant), and Sebring (Rogers, race 1, 2, and 3 resistant). Plants at the first true-leaf stage were inoculated by dipping their roots in the conidial suspension. Inoculated seedlings were transplanted into pots containing a sterile 5:1:1 mixture of sand/vermiculite/soil (v/v/v) and maintained in the greenhouse at 25 to 28°C under natural daylight. An equal number of plants of each cultivar dipped in water were used as controls. The experimental design was a completely randomized type with six replications (pots) containing four seedlings per pot. The test was done twice. The most susceptible plants inoculated by root-dipping developed typical symptoms of wilt, slight vein clearing on outer leaflets, stunting, dark brown vascular discoloration, and death. F. oxysporum was recovered from all symptomatic plants, whereas noninoculated tomato seedlings showed no symptoms. According to differential infection and symptomatology observed on infected cultivars, 62.5% of the isolated strains were identified as race 2, 25% as race 3, and 12.5% as an undetermined race isolated from Sebring. The presence of race 3 in BCS has important epidemiological implications since it has been reported on tomato in Sinaloa (4). The potential spread of the pathogen on introduced transplants represents a risk to tomato crops on the peninsula. To our knowledge, this is the first report of F. oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici race 3 in the state of BCS, Mexico. References: (1) G. Cai et al. Phytopathology 93:1014, 2003. (2) P. E. Nelson et al. Fusarium species. Pennsylvania State University Press, University Park, 1983. (3) B. A. Summerell et al. Plant Dis. 87:117, 2003. (4) J. G. Valenzuela-Ureta et al. Plant Dis. 80:105, 1996.


2018 ◽  
pp. 175-199
Author(s):  
Lorella Castorena Davis ◽  
Arely Madai Martínez Valencia

El objetivo de este artículo es analizar la persistencia de la división tradicional del trabajo doméstico. La escasa valoración de las actividades de reproducción de la vida, como la maternidad, y el cuidado y atención a otras personas, sumada a condiciones de marginalidad, derivan en un incremento de las cargas de trabajo y reducen las probabilidades de empoderamiento de las mujeres. Asimismo la mala distribución de recursos como el agua, junto con su escasez y deficiente calidad, se tornan en obstáculos para alcanzar la igualdad de género. El vínculo teórico entre género, institucionalismo y marginalidad, así como la selección del caso de estudio, representan los aportes más relevantes de este trabajo, en tanto permiten mostrar el impacto que el funcionamiento de la institución encargada de la distribución del agua tiene sobre las mujeres, en la medida que refuerza el hábito y la norma cultural que las responsabiliza de resolver el abasto de agua al interior de sus hogares. Se analiza la problemática de género que enfrentan mujeres jefas de familia respecto al agua de uso doméstico en cinco colonias marginadas de la ciudad de La Paz, en las que se aplicó un total de 42 cuestionarios gracias a los cuales se concluyó que las mujeres jefas de hogares marginados además de la sobrecarga de trabajo doméstico y de cuidados derivados del abasto insuficiente y deficiente de agua que provee el organismo operador, deben enfrentar los costos derivados tanto del conjunto de diligencias cotidianas que realizan para garantizar que el agua que reciben alcance para satisfacer sus necesidades mínimas, como del gasto que representa el consumo de agua embotellada proveniente de las plantas purificadoras locales o de barrio.


2020 ◽  
Vol 32 ◽  
pp. e1296
Author(s):  
Pedro Daniel Molina Pfennig ◽  
Arturo González-Baheza

El objetivo del trabajo es evaluar el índice de aptitud de los municipios de Baja California Sur para la instalación de concentradores fotovoltaicos. La metodología propone un modelo de aptitud que incorpora seis indicadores socioambientales explícitos en términos espaciales con asignación de su contribución diferenciada o pesos por medio de análisis multicriterio. Los resultados muestran que la irradiación horizontal anual promedio en Baja California Sur es de 6.19 kW h/m2/día en el periodo 1998-2014. De la superficie total en el estado, 5.25% es viable para la instalación de concentradores fotovoltaicos. Comondú, Mulegé y La Paz presentaron los mayores valores de aptitud. Los indicadores predominantes del modelo son la red carretera, la red eléctrica y las zonas con pendientes de ˂4°. El estudio se limitó a analizar la influencia de los indicadores socioambientales en la ubicación de sistemas de concentradores fotovoltaicos. La metodología podría replicarse en otras regiones para facilitar la toma de decisiones. Los resultados sugieren que los tres municipios de Baja California Sur mencionados son los más favorables en términos socioambientales para la instalación de dichos concentradores.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (61) ◽  
Author(s):  
Emanuel Junco Carlón ◽  
Humberto Gonzalez Rodriguez ◽  
Jose Angel Armenta Quintana ◽  
Israel Cantu Silva ◽  
Andres Eduardo Estrada Castillon ◽  
...  

El objetivo del presente estudio fue determinar la composición florística del matorral sarcocaule del desierto sonorense en un área de 800 ha dentro de una propiedad ejidal ubicada en los límites de la ciudad de La Paz, Baja California Sur. El muestreo se realizó durante la época de lluvias (septiembre-noviembre de 2018) y a finales de la épocade sequía (mayo-agosto de 2019), por medio de 20 cuadrantes de 5 m × 5 m. Se identificaron 29 especies de 1 634 individuos, entre las dos temporadas y se consideraron las variables de altura y diámetro de copa de cada ejemplar por especie, para determinar abundancia (Ar), dominancia (Dr), frecuencia (Fr), índice de valor de importancia (IVI) y los índices de Shannon para la diversidad de especies (H´) e índice de Margalef para la riqueza de especies (S´). Durante la época de lluvias, se observó a Jatropha cinerea como dominante Dr=7.15 % y con mayor IVI (10.7 %);  Turnera diffusa fue la más abundante con Ar=3.2. En cambio, para la temporada seca, fue Prosopis articulata la especie dominante Dr=9.29 y con mayor IVI (12.51 %); Mammillaria armillata fue la más abundante, con Ar=4.56. Los índices de (H’) y (S’) durante la época de lluvias fueron 3.36 y 8.09, respectivamente, con diferencia entre ellos (p≤0.05) al compararlos con los de la temporada seca (2.88 y 4.88, respectivamente), debido a la ausencia de taxones y disminución del número de individuos, en relación con la época húmeda.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document