ABSTRACT. In three sets of experiments, a group of captive Ring-tailed lemurs ranging at liberty were presented with sticks scent-marked with their own scent, or with scent from unrelated animals or unmarked sticks. The results from experiments which involved a choice between scents indicated stronger responses, in terms of greater intensity of scent-marking to scent from "strange" animals. In the experiment where individual scents were presented one at a time, the length of time spent sniffing was greater for "strange" scent but this did not transfer to additional scent-marks. Most of the responses were elicited from males in the group and involved wrist-marking only, but timing of experiment influenced both responses and type of scent-mark probably in relation to the onset of oestrus. The role of scent-marking and the concept of group scent are also discussed.
The stage of development of the gametes of both male and female honeycomb worms Sabellaria alveolata (L.) was examined, using histology, over a 14-month period. Samples came from Howes Strand and Garrettstown, County Cork in south-west Ireland. A clear cycle of both male and female gametogenesis was evident, with a distinct peak in the summer (June–September) when the majority of them were ripe. During October–January a small proportion of males contained abundant spermatozoa, but no mature oocytes were found. Over the whole sampling period the ratio of males:females was 1.4:1. Further south in Roches de la Fosse in France at the centre of its range, two spawnings and an even sex-ratio have been reported.
The current distribution and abundance of Elminius modestus
(Crustacea: Cirripedia) were examined at 15 sites along the Portuguese coast in
March/April 1998. Elminius modestus was found at two sites only but was
absent from a site where it had previously been recorded. The site at Faro is the
most southerly location on continental Europe where Elminius has yet
been recorded and it is nearly 300 km south of where it was previously found.
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