Tennessee (G. L. S., R. W); Chicago Zoological Park, Brookfield, Illinois (P. J., J. 0.4.)The Asiatic lion (Puntheru Zeo persicu) exists in the wild as a single relict population of approximately 250 individuals in the protected Gir Forest Sanctuary in western India. In 1981, a species survival plan (SSP) for the Asiatic lion was established by the American Association of Zoological Parks and Aquariums to manage the 200+ descendants of Asiatic lions in captivity in western zoological facilities. This captive population was derived from seven founders. In order to compare the genetic structure of the Gir Forest population with that of the captive SSP population, a genetic survey of 46 electrophoretic allozyme systems resolved from extracts of lion blood was undertaken by using 29 SSP Asiatic lions and 28 wild-caught or captive-bred lions maintained at the Sakkarbaug Zoo in India but originally derived from the Gir Forest. The Gir lion population was found to be genetically monomorphic at each of 46 allozyme loci. This was in contrast to several African lion (Puntheru leo Zeo) populations, which show moderate levels of allozyme variation at the same loci. The SSP lion population was polymorphic at three allozyme loci (IDHI, TF, and PTI) for alleles that were previously found only in African lion populations. Pedigree analysis of the genetic transmission of these three biochemical loci demonstrated that two of the five primary founder animals of the SSP Asiatic lion population (a breeding pair originally imported from the Trivandrum Zoo in southern India) were descendants of the African subspecies. Three other founder animals were pure Asian. A retrospective SSP pedigree analysis of two morphologic characters (prominent abdominal fold and pairing of infraorbital foramen) that are partially diagnostic for persicu vs Zeo was consistent with this conclusion as well. The implications for the management of small captive populations of threatened species and of the Asiatic lion SSP population are discussed.
Abstract. Cysts of the rete ovarii system from 20 cats are described. The cellular morphology of these cysts varies because the normal rete ovarii in the cat consists of three anatomically distinct parts. Cysts arise in the ovarian medulla or at the tubal extremity of the ovary, expand into ovarian stroma rather than the mesovarium, and are lined by ciliated columnar to flattened epithelium. Their functional significance is unknown.
Bielanski and Kaczmarski (1979) reported the presence of microtubules in the neck region of mature stallion spermatozoa. It was hypothesized that these microtubules are derived from the manchette (a microtubular organelle present during spermiogenesis). In order to test this hypothesis, testes from 15 mature stallions were collected, perfused with 2% phosphate-buffered glutaraldehyde, and prepared for transmission electron microscopy. Spermatozoa from the caudae epididymides of each stallion were prepared in a similar manner. Spermiogenesis was observed in general, and the presence of a microtubular manchette was established in this species, juxtapositioned posterior to the nuclear ring and extending distally into the cytoplasmic collar which surrounds the prospective midpiece. Interlocking arms between the microtubules of the manchette were observed in transverse sections at all levels within the cytoplasmic collar before, during, and after caudal migration of the nuclear ring. Consequent to caudal migration of the nuclear ring and the annulus, as well as adluminal movement of the spermatid, the cytoplasmic collar was transformed into the residual cytoplasm. Within the residual cytoplasm, the manchette remained as a microtubular organelle which undergoes degeneration. The mature spermatozoa from the caudae epididymides of these stallions lacked the microtubules reported by Bielanski and Kaczmarski. The occurrence of such microtubules in the neck region of stallion spermatozoa is probably an abnormality.
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