Search for dissertations about: "Biologi med inriktning mot evolutionär organismbiologi"
Showing result 6 - 10 of 11 swedish dissertations containing the words Biologi med inriktning mot evolutionär organismbiologi.
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6. 100 million years of shark macroevolution : A morphometric dive into tooth shape diversity
Abstract : Few vertebrate clades exhibit the evolutionary longevity and versatility of sharks, which constitute nearly half of all current chondrichthyan biodiversity and represent an ecological diversity of mid-to-apex trophic-level predators in both marine and freshwater environments. The rich fossil record of shark teeth from Mesozoic and Cenozoic rocks also makes the group amenable to large-scale quantitative analyses. READ MORE
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7. Silurian vertebrates of Gotland (Sweden) and the Baltic Basin
Abstract : During the Silurian, the Swedish island Gotland was positioned close to the equator and covered by a shallow sea called the Baltic Basin. The sedimentary rocks (predominantly carbonates) comprising most of the island today were initially formed in this warm sea, and the relatively complete succession of rocks often contains fossil fragments and scales from early vertebrates, including heterostracans, anaspids, thelodonts, osteostracans, acanthodians, and a stem-osteichthyan. READ MORE
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8. Analysis of Wnt ligands and Fz receptors in Ecdysozoa : Investigating the evolution of segmentation
Abstract : .... READ MORE
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9. Investigation of Hox gene expression and Wnt-signalling in basally branching ecdysozoans
Abstract : One of the most important processes in the development of an animal is the determination and patterning of the primary body axis, the anterior-posterior (AP) axis. After the AP axis has been established the embryo grows and elongates through posterior elongation. READ MORE
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10. Development and three-dimensional histology of vertebrate dermal fin spines
Abstract : Jawed vertebrates (gnathostomes) consist of two clades with living representatives, the chondricthyans (cartilaginous fish including sharks, rays, and chimaeras) and the osteichthyans (bony fish and tetrapods), and two fossil groups, the "placoderms" and "acanthodians". These extinct forms were thought to be monophyletic, but are now considered to be paraphyletic partly due to the discovery of early chondrichthyans and osteichthyans with characters that had been previously used to define them. READ MORE