Developmental Asynchrony in the Acquisition of Subject Properties in Child L2 English and Spanish

2016 ◽  
Vol 23 (4) ◽  
pp. 387-406
Author(s):  
Elisabet Pladevall-Ballester
2007 ◽  
Vol 19 (7) ◽  
pp. 831 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. L. Linklater

Many sex allocation mechanisms are proposed but rarely have researchers considered and tested more than one at a time. Four facultative birth sex ratio (BSR) adjustment mechanisms are considered: (1) hormone-induced conception bias; (2) sex-differential embryo death from excess glucose metabolism; (3) sex-differential embryo death from embryo–uterine developmental asynchrony; and (4) pregnancy hormone suppression and resource deprivation. All mechanisms could be switched on by the corticoadrenal stress response. A total of 104 female rhinoceroses (Rhinocerotidae), translocated from 1961 to 2004 at different stages of gestation or conceived soon after arrival in captivity, were used to test for a reversal in BSR bias as evidence for the action of multiple sex-allocation mechanisms. Translocation induced a statistically significant BSR reversal between early gestation (86% male births from 0 to 0.19 gestation) and mid-gestation (38% male from 0.2 to 0.79 gestation). Captivity also induced a strongly male-biased (67% male) BSR for conceptions after arrival in captivity. The results indicate the action of at least two sex-allocation mechanisms operating in sequence, confirm the important role of sex-differential embryo death around implantation and of stress in sex allocation, and lend support to suggestions that sex-differential glucose metabolism by the preimplantation embryo likely plays a role in facultative BSR adjustment.


Modularity is a new term, but some associated ideas have been with us for a long time. Animals like bryozoans, traditionally recognized as colonial, would all be considered modular at this meeting. It has also been realized for a long time that reproduction can be asexual and produce individuals that differ only from developmental asynchrony or environmental effects. The concept of metamerism is likewise a venerable one, and involves the repetitive units of construction (Hardwick) or products of iterative growth (Mackie) characteristic of modularity. Despite the antiquity of many of the concepts, I think it clear that there is something new about the idea of a modular organism. It is an idea that can give a benthic ecologist working on sea anemones a feeling that in some ways he may have more in common with a plant ecologist studying herbaceous perennials than with another benthic ecologist mainly interested in molluscs. It would appear that some participants at the meeting find cloning an unnecessary criterion, or metamerism an insufficient criterion of modularity.


2011 ◽  
Vol 279 (1734) ◽  
pp. 1709-1715 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jessica K. McGlashan ◽  
Ricky-John Spencer ◽  
Julie M. Old

Incubation temperature affects developmental rates and defines many phenotypes and fitness characteristics of reptilian embryos. In turtles, eggs are deposited in layers within the nest, such that thermal gradients create independent developmental conditions for each egg. Despite differences in developmental rate, several studies have revealed unexpected synchronicity in hatching, however, the mechanisms through which synchrony are achieved may be different between species. Here, we examine the phenomenon of synchronous hatching in turtles by assessing proximate mechanisms in an Australian freshwater turtle ( Emydura macquarii ). We tested whether embryos hatch prematurely or developmentally compensate in response to more advanced embryos in a clutch. We established developmental asynchrony within a clutch of turtle eggs and assessed both metabolic and heart rates throughout incubation in constant and fluctuating temperatures. Turtles appeared to hatch at similar developmental stages, with less-developed embryos in experimental groups responding to the presence of more developed eggs in a clutch by increasing both metabolic and heart rates. Early hatching did not appear to reduce neuromuscular ability at hatching. These results support developmental adjustment mechanisms of the ‘catch-up hypothesis’ for synchronous hatching in E. macquarii and implies some level of embryo–embryo communication. The group environment of a nest strongly supports the development of adaptive communication mechanisms between siblings and the evolution of environmentally cued hatching.


1996 ◽  
Vol 67 (4) ◽  
pp. 1540 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel J. Povinelli ◽  
Keli R. Landau ◽  
Helen K. Perilloux

Blood ◽  
1988 ◽  
Vol 72 (1) ◽  
pp. 299-307 ◽  
Author(s):  
CA Hurwitz ◽  
MR Loken ◽  
ML Graham ◽  
JE Karp ◽  
MJ Borowitz ◽  
...  

Abstract Cell surface phenotypes of 113 B lineage acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) cases, defined by the presence of HLA-DR and at least one B-cell- specific antigen (either CD19, CD20, or CD22), were compared with antigen-defined stages of normal B lymphocyte development. The cases were first evaluated for expression of HLA-DR, CD19, CD34, CD10, CD20, and CD22 by indirect one-color immunofluorescence. Pairwise comparisons of cell surface marker expression were performed for each leukemic sample: no correlations were observed for paired antigen expression on the leukemic samples using antigens expressed either early or late during normal B lymphoid development. Complete immunophenotypes of the cases were then compared with normal B-cell developmental stages. Sixteen different complete immunophenotypes were observed on the leukemias that were not found in normal marrow; at least 78% of the cases demonstrated such “asynchronous” combinations of B lymphoid- associated differentiation antigens. Several samples were subsequently studied by two-color immunofluorescence, and the presence of doubly labeled cells with “asynchronous” antigen combinations was confirmed. These results indicate that the majority of B lineage leukemias exhibit “developmental asynchrony,” as compared with normal marrow B cells. The data further suggest that ALL cases do not accurately represent cells arrested at the stage where the leukemogenic event occurred. Rather, ALL appears to be a disease in which there may be maturation of leukemic blasts; but this maturation is “asynchronous” when compared with the normal developmental process.


Zootaxa ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 3510 (1) ◽  
pp. 65 ◽  
Author(s):  
PRUDHVI RAJ ◽  
KARTHIKEYAN VASUDEVAN ◽  
DEEPAK V. ◽  
RICHA SHARMA ◽  
SHASHI SINGH ◽  
...  

The external, oral and buccopharyngeal morphologies of Nasikabatrachus sahyadrensis tadpoles were studied using ste-reoscopic and scanning electron microscopy. Using DNA barcodes, taxonomic identity of the tadpoles was establishedand tadoples of N. sahyadrensis were reared in semi-natural conditions. Development in the species from hatching tometamorph was prolonged and it took about 100 days for the freshly hatched larvae to metamorphose. The tadpoles areexotrophic, torrent dwelling with a large ventral suctorial oral disc, broadly rounded snout, cylindrical body, and a funnelshaped vent tube opening medially. During development external and buccopharyngeal characters show extensive changes. During metamorphosis developmental asynchrony was observed.


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