Cytogenetic and evolutionary studies on macropathinae (gryllacridoidea : orthoptera)

Typescript Department of Genetics -- t.p Thesis PhD)-- University of Melbourne, Faculty of Science, 1970 Includes bibliographical references (leaves 157-173) The Gryllacridoidea are a very ancient and diverse assemblage. One of the four families included in it, the Sohizodactylidae, is confined to t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mesa, Alejo.
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Melbourne 1970
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11343/340906
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Summary:Typescript Department of Genetics -- t.p Thesis PhD)-- University of Melbourne, Faculty of Science, 1970 Includes bibliographical references (leaves 157-173) The Gryllacridoidea are a very ancient and diverse assemblage. One of the four families included in it, the Sohizodactylidae, is confined to the Old World, while the other three, Stenopelmatidae, Gryllacrididae and Rhaphidophorinae, have a world-wide distribution. The latter family Is divided into the subfamilies Ceuthophilinae from North and Central America, Rhaphidophorinae mainly from Europe and Asia, and Macropathinae with a circum-antarctic distribution. Up to date, less than one hundred species of Macropathinae have been described, the majority of them from New Zealand and the surrounding islands. Fourteen species were described from the East and South of Australia including Tasmania and Flinders Island. A few species are from the Southern cone of South America while only one species has been described from Africa, in Cape Town. The majority of these species are forest inhabitants with nocturnal habits. During the day they hide in dark and humid places like hollow logo and or crevices. Caves and tunnels make a suitable place for then to hide in and reproduce. Their density in those places is sometimes remarkable and hence their fame of being mainly cave inhabitants. To collect these insects in forest is more difficult due to the fact that their populations are more scattered. The Macropathinae, like the remaining rhaphidophorids, are wingless. Their body length range from less than 1 cm. to nearly 5 cm. The length from the tip of the antennae to the hind tarsi reaches 45 cm in Gymnoplectron giganteum (Richards 1962). Information on chromosome numbers and chromosomal sex-determining mechanisms in gryllacridids other than Macropathinae is summarised in Table I. According to these data, the chromosome number varies widely from family to family and even within families. The majority of these papers deal with chromosomes at metaphase, information ...