ABSTRACT. A field study of mandrill was carried out from 1979 to 1983 in Cameroon for 27 months. Group size of mandrills ranged from 15 to 95 and composition was estimated by direct and indirect observations. The ratio of group size to one adult male was 13.9, larger than other baboon species except the drill. Solitary males were seen. The mandrill may have two types of groups: one-male and multi-male. The multi-male group was observed to split into subgroups, one of which was sometimes a one-male group. The multi-male subgroup was assumed to be composed of several one-male groups. The home range area of mandrills was estimated to be at least 5 km 2 to 28 km 2. Their large home range size could be related to their characteristic feeding pattern in the forest.
ABSTRACT. A field study on the ecology of mandrills (Mandrillus sphinx) was carried out for 28 months in Cameroon. Fresh food remnants and large quantities of fresh feces were collected by following the groups. Analyses of these products indicated that fruit (including seeds), monocotyledonous plant leaves and insects (especially ants and termites), were frequently eaten. Mandrills mostly ate the plant and animal foods in the lower forest stratum and on the ground. Fallen seeds and monocotyledonous plant leaves were eaten more frequently in the minor fruiting season than in the major fruiting season presumably to compensate for the shortage of fresh fruit during the former. Daily travel distances were shorter during the minor fruiting season than during the major fruiting season, because in the minor fruiting season mandrills forage for small food items, such as the new leaves and piths of monocotyledons and fallen seeds which are sparsely distributed on the ground, while in the major fruiting season they search for widely distributed food such as fruit. The daily pattern of group movement and a food intake experiment suggest that mandrills move and feed continuously throughout the day. Use of fallen seeds and monocotyledonous plant leaves appears to enable mandrills to maintain a terrestrial life in the tropical rain forest. The feeding and ranging characteristics of mandrills are basically similar to those of other baboon species in open land, though their environments differ extremely.
ABSTRACT-Chondroitin sulfate (CS) is currently marketed as a therapeutic drug for neurodynia, lumbago and arthrodynia. Recently, many clinical studies have demonstrated the therapeutic effects of orally administered CS against diseases with inflammation. Furthermore, these reports suggest CS plays an important role in the protection of the base of ulcers and has anti-inflammatory activity. We investigated the effects of CS against dextran sulfate sodium (DSS)-induced rat colitis. Rats were given 3% DSS solution for 10 days ad libitum. CS and 5-aminosalicylic acid (5-ASA) were orally administered daily. The doses of the CS groups were 20 or 100 mg/kg and that for the 5-ASA group was 100 mg / kg. Evaluations were made of bloody stools, areas of erosion and hematological data. CS improved the symptoms of bloody stools, erosion and increase of white blood cells. Especially, CS (100 mg/ kg) group showed markedly more improvement than the 5-ASA group. We think that the major mechanism of the therapeutic effects of CS are the prevention of tissue damage by the protection of digestive mucosa and anti-inflammatory effects. Therefore, CS may have therapeutic value for alimentary tract diseases such as inflammatory bowel disease or ulcer.
To elucidate the potential role of superoxide (O2-) and nitric oxide (NO) in the pathogenesis of interstitial pneumonia, the quantity of O2- and NO produced by the alveolar macrophages (AM) were determined in the bleomycin (BLM)-induced interstitial pneumonia mouse model. The production of O2- and NO increased on days 7, 14 and 21 after BLM injection. Strong expression of peroxynitrite (ONOO-) was seen in AM by using immunostaining for nitrotyrosine. The hydroxyproline contents increased on day 21 after BLM injection. O2- and NO are thought to play an important role in the pathology of fibrosis.
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