Results 171 to 180 of about 3,006 (196)
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The paleostriatal system of Caiman crocodilus

Journal of Comparative Neurology, 1980
AbstractThe organization and projections of the presumed homologue of the mammalian corpus striatum, the ventrolateral area (VLA) of the telencephalon, were investigated in the reptile Caiman crocodilus. The caiman VLA was divided into two major cell fields on the basis of cytoarchitectonic criteria: a rostromedial small celled field (VLA s.c.) and a ...
S E, Brauth, C A, Kitt
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Caiman crocodilus subsp. apaporiensis

2015
Published as part of Escobedo-Galván, Armando H., Velasco, Julián A., González-Maya, José F. & Resetar, Alan, 2015, Morphometric analysis of the Rio Apaporis Caiman (Reptilia, Crocodylia, Alligatoridae), pp. 541-554 in Zootaxa 4059 (3) on pages 543-550, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4059.3.6, http://zenodo.org/record ...
Escobedo-Galván, Armando H.   +3 more
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Caiman crocodilus Linnaeus

1971
The karyotypes shown here were obtained from squash preparations of the spleen of young specimens. Both male and female have similar karyotypes; sex chromosome heteromorphism was not detected in either sex. The specimens were captured in the Amazonas region, in Brazil.
Maria Luiza Beçak   +6 more
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Organization of ascending spinal projections in Caiman crocodilus

Cell and Tissue Research, 1981
Ascending spinal projections in the caiman (Caiman crocodilus) were demonstrated with Nauta and Fink-Heimer methods following hemisections of the third spinal segment in a series of twelve animals. These results were compared with earlier data in the literature obtained from a turtle, a snake, and a lizard using the same experimental and histological ...
S O, Ebbesson, D C, Goodman
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Morphology and function of the parathyroid gland of the caiman, Caiman crocodilus

General and Comparative Endocrinology, 1976
Abstract The juvenile caiman, Caiman crocodilus , possesses two to six parathyroid glands which are embedded in the thymus, one to three on either side of the body. The number is subject to individual variation. In specimens having three parathyroids on one side of the body, the smallest may be designated as an accessory parathyroid. The parathyroid
C, Oguro, Y, Sasayama
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Cochlear potentials and auditory evoked potentials in the caiman (Caiman crocodilus (L.))

Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology, 1990
Brain-stem auditory evoked potentials (BAEPs) and round window compound action potentials (CAPs) in response to rarefaction and condensation clicks were recorded from anaesthetized and artificially respired caiman. The recorded wave forms were substantially different from the brain-stem and round window potentials recorded in mammals, including man. In
J W, Smolders, D M, Caird, R, Klinke
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Hematologic and serum biochemical reference values for the wild Spectacled Caiman, Caiman crocodilus crocodilus, from the Venezuelan plains

Veterinary Clinical Pathology, 2011
Background: Commercial farming of Caiman crocodilus crocodilus has had an impact on the use of this species for meat consumption and the leather industry. Spectacled Caimans comprise part of the South American plains biodiversity. Misinterpretation of laboratory data is a risk owing to the limited hematologic and serum biochemical values available for
Mario, Rossini   +3 more
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Dorsal thalamic nuclei in Caiman crocodilus

Neuroscience Letters, 2014
In Caiman crocodilus, identification of nuclei that comprise the dorsal thalamus was determined by: injections of retrograde tracers into cortex/pallium; injections of retrograde tracers into the noncortical telencephalon; and injections of anterograde tracers into thalamic nuclei.
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Diving Bradycardia and Withdrawal Bradycardia in Caiman crocodilus

Nature, 1969
DIVING animals have been reported to respond with a drastic reduction in heart rate when their head is submerged; this is known as “diving bradycardia”. The phenomenon has been reported in dozens of species including some that do not ordinarily dive1. The bradycardia is extreme; for example, the heart rate of the alligator drops from 41 to 3 (ref.
A S, Gaunt, C, Gans
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Mechanics of the basilar membrane in Caiman crocodilus

Hearing Research, 1985
Vibration measurements were made at a number of positions near the proximal (basal) end of the basilar membrane, and on the columella footplate, of Caiman crocodilus using a capacitive probe. The measurements established the existence of a mechanical travelling wave in this species.
J P, Wilson, J W, Smolders, R, Klinke
openaire   +2 more sources

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