scholarly journals A morphometric analysis of Tobleria bicuspis, a Voltziales seed cone from the early Permian Jambi palaeoflora, Sumatra (Indonesia)

PhytoKeys ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 119 ◽  
pp. 67-95
Author(s):  
Isabel M. Van Waveren

Tobleriabicuspis, a coniferophyte seed cone, is described from the Jambi Palaeoflora, Sumatra of Asselian (early Permian) age. A morphometric analysis based on cones, paired fertile units, and fertile and sterile scales, demonstrates their close relationship. Small paired fertile units occur mainly in cones. Medium-sized paired fertile units occur mainly on scales. And large paired fertile units are mainly dispersed. The cones are considered female and the paired fertile units are considered to represent the seeds. The cones are composed of helicoidal, bilaterally symmetrical and deeply incised scales with paired seeds. A comparison can be made with the Voltziales female taxon Schizolepis from the Triassic and Jurassic. Tobleria is regarded as having a voltzian Voltziales affinity and dates from approximately 16 to 26 million years before any other such cones.

The holotype of Crassigyrinus scoticus Watson from the Viséan (Lower Carboniferous) of Edinburgh shows the side of the skull of a very primitive amphibian with fish-like proportions, an osteolepiform fish configuration of bones round the nostril and a preopercular bone on the cheek. ‘ Macromerium scoticum ’ Lydekker from the same locality and horizon proves to be a Crassigyrinus mandibular ramus. This is corroborated by discovery of a skull and anterior skeleton of Crassigyrinus from the Namurian (basal Upper Carboniferous) of Cowdenbeath, Fife. The skull of Crassigyrinus is also shown to have a loosely articulated basioccipital which did not form a finished occipital condyle and a mandible with coronoid teeth. However, it shares a number of derived (synapomorph) characters with the anthracosauroid amphibia of the Carboniferous and early Permian, notably the characteristic tabular horn, the probable absence of posttemporal fossae, the nature of the dermal ornament, the histology of the teeth and a true basipterygoid articulation. The last character may also indicate relations to loxommatid and seymouriamorph amphibia and amniotes. The pattern of bones of the Crassigyrinus skull table, however, is the primitive tetrapod (‘temnospondyl’) one. The postcranial skeleton is both primitive and degenerate. The vertebrae each have a single crescent-shaped centrum (‘intercentrum ’) and neural arches as poorly ossified, unfused bilateral halves. Prezygapophyses are unbuttressed facets and postzygapophyses totally lacking. There is room for a virtually unconstricted notochord. The diameter of the centra increases posteriorly from the small (partly reconstructed) atlas-axis complex. Ribs are long, well-ossified and cylindrical, but lack well-ossified rib-heads. The fore-limb is minute, with a typical primitive tetrapod humerus, which, however, retains some foramina otherwise seen only in Ichthyostega and fishes. The elongate ventral scales are unlike those of any ‘labyrinthodont’ amphibia. It is suggested that the apparent ‘otic notches’ of Crassigyrinus may mark the position of persistent spiracles, while the stapes, not preserved in any specimen, may have been like that known in the Coal Measure anthracosaurs and in the primitive temnospondyl Greererpeton . Combined with an air-filled spiracular cleft the stapes could have been tuned to underwater rather than aerial hearing. Crassigyrinus appears to have been a large Amphiuma -like underwater predator. A case is made for the ‘sister-group’ relation of Crassigyrinus to the anthracosauroids and a cladogram presented of the subgroups involved. It is, however, difficult to make a case for the close relationship of Crassigyrinus and the Seymouriamorpha and the closeness of relationship of the latter to anthracosauroids is questioned. Crassigyrinus shares several primitive characters with Ichthyostega , but they are only distantly related, so that the loss of those characters in all other tetrapods must have been polyphyletic. There are other characters in which one or the other is clearly the more primitive, but the polarity of a number of alternative character states in the two genera is equivocal. The cladistic use of out-group comparison is impotent to solve the problem because rival sister-groups for the Tetrapoda have been proposed using, inter alia , the disputed characters.


2017 ◽  
Vol 48 (5) ◽  
pp. 493-511 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jakub Prokop ◽  
Jarmila Kukalová-Peck

New insects are described from the early Asselian of the Bursum Formation in Carrizo Arroyo, NM, USA. Carrizoneura carpenteri gen. et sp. nov. (Syntonopteridae) demonstrates traits in hindwing venation to Lithoneura and Syntonoptera, both known from the Moscovian of Illinois. Carrizoneura represents the latest unambiguous record of Syntonopteridae. Martynovia insignis represents the earliest evidence of Martynoviidae. Carrizodiaphanoptera permiana gen. et sp. nov. extends range of Diaphanopteridae previously restricted to Gzhelian. The re-examination of the type species Diaphanoptera munieri reveals basally coalesced vein MA with stem of R and RP resulting in family diagnosis emendation. Arroyohymen splendens gen. et sp. nov. (Protohymenidae) displays features in venation similar to taxa known from early and late Permian from the USA and Russia. A new palaeodictyopteran wing attributable to Carrizopteryx cf. arroyo (Calvertiellidae) provides data on fore wing venation previously unknown. Thus, all these new discoveries show close relationship between late Pennsylvanian and early Permian entomofaunas.


Author(s):  
Elsie M. B. Sorensen

The detoxification capacity of the liver is well documented for a variety of substances including ethanol, organic pesticides, drugs, and metals. The piscean liver, although less enzymatically active than the mammalian counterpart (1), contains endoplasmic reticulum with an impressive repertoire of oxidizing, reducing, and conjugating abilities (2). Histopathologic changes are kncwn to occur in fish hepatocytes following in vivo exposure to arsenic (3); however, ultrastructural changes have not been reported. This study involved the morphometric analysis of intracellular changes in fish parynchymal hepatocytes and correlation with arsenic concentration in the liver.Green sunfish (Lepomis cyanellus, R.) were exposed to 0, 30, or 60 ppm arsenic (as sodium arsenate) at 20°C for 1, 2, or 3 week intervals before removal of livers for quantification of the arsenic burden (using neutron activation analysis) and morphometric analysis of ultrastructural alterations. Livers were cut into 1 mm cubes for fixation, dehydration, and embedding.


Author(s):  
John H. Harvey ◽  
Julia Omarzu
Keyword(s):  

2010 ◽  
Vol 31 (2) ◽  
pp. 95-100 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claudia Quaiser-Pohl ◽  
Anna M. Rohe ◽  
Tobias Amberger

The solution strategies of preschool children solving mental-rotation tasks were analyzed in two studies. In the first study n = 111 preschool children had to demonstrate their solution strategy in the Picture Rotation Test (PRT) items by thinking aloud; seven different strategies were identified. In the second study these strategies were confirmed by latent class analysis (LCA) with the PRT data of n = 565 preschool children. In addition, a close relationship was found between the solution strategy and children’s age. Results point to a stage model for the development of mental-rotation ability as measured by the PRT, going from inappropriate strategies like guessing or comparing details, to semiappropriate approaches like choosing the stimulus with the smallest angle discrepancy, to a holistic or analytic strategy. A latent transition analysis (LTA) revealed that the ability to mentally rotate objects can be influenced by training in the preschool age.


2008 ◽  
Vol 29 (4) ◽  
pp. 205-216 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefan Krumm ◽  
Lothar Schmidt-Atzert ◽  
Kurt Michalczyk ◽  
Vanessa Danthiir

Mental speed (MS) and sustained attention (SA) are theoretically distinct constructs. However, tests of MS are very similar to SA tests that use time pressure as an impeding condition. The performance in such tasks largely relies on the participants’ speed of task processing (i.e., how quickly and correctly one can perform the simple cognitive tasks). The present study examined whether SA and MS are empirically the same or different constructs. To this end, 24 paper-pencil and computerized tests were administered to 199 students. SA turned out to be highly related to MS task classes: substitution and perceptual speed. Furthermore, SA showed a very close relationship with the paper-pencil MS factor. The correlation between SA and computerized speed was considerably lower but still high. In a higher-order general speed factor model, SA had the highest loading on the higher-order factor; the higher-order factor explained 88% of SA variance. It is argued that SA (as operationalized with tests using time pressure as an impeding condition) and MS cannot be differentiated, at the level of broad constructs. Implications for neuropsychological assessment and future research are discussed.


PsycCRITIQUES ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 57 (41) ◽  
Author(s):  
Victor Cicirelli
Keyword(s):  

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