2020
DOI: 10.3897/compcytogen.v14i1.48667
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Cytogenetics of entelegyne spiders (Arachnida, Araneae) from southern Africa

Abstract: Spiders represent one of the most studied arachnid orders. They are particularly intriguing from a cytogenetic point of view, due to their complex and dynamic sex chromosome determination systems. Despite intensive research on this group, cytogenetic data from African spiders are still mostly lacking. In this study, we describe the karyotypes of 38 species of spiders belonging to 16 entelegyne families from South Africa and Namibia. In the majority of analysed families, the observed chromosome numbers and morp… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Mapping of this cluster often revealed a single NOR site, which is probably an ancestral pattern in arachnids [36]. The number of NOR/rDNA loci has increased in some arachnid clades during their evolution [76,77,81,87]. In haplogyne spiders, these loci are also frequently placed on sex chromosomes [77,90].…”
Section: Distribution Of Rdna and Telomeric Sequencesmentioning
confidence: 98%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Mapping of this cluster often revealed a single NOR site, which is probably an ancestral pattern in arachnids [36]. The number of NOR/rDNA loci has increased in some arachnid clades during their evolution [76,77,81,87]. In haplogyne spiders, these loci are also frequently placed on sex chromosomes [77,90].…”
Section: Distribution Of Rdna and Telomeric Sequencesmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…The major rDNA cluster (45S rDNA) is by far the most utilized molecular chromosomal marker across diverse eukaryotic organisms, and especially in non-model groups [72][73][74]. The major rDNA cluster visualized either by 18S or 28S rDNA probes has already been localized in some spiders [36,46,73,[75][76][77], scorpions [45,76,[78][79][80][81][82], pseudoscorpions [83], harvestmen [84][85][86][87], ticks [73,88,89], and an amblypygid [18]. Mapping of this cluster often revealed a single NOR site, which is probably an ancestral pattern in arachnids [36].…”
Section: Distribution Of Rdna and Telomeric Sequencesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…So far, NORs have only been detected in a low number of spider species (see Forman et al 2013;Král et al 2013 for references), especially by the means of FISH (see Šťáhlavský et al 2020;Reyes Lerma et al 2021 for references). In pholcids, however, NOR patterns have been determined recently in many species by FISH (Ávila Herrera et al 2021), which makes it possible to contextualize our data with previous knowledge on the NOR evolution in this family.…”
Section: Norsmentioning
confidence: 99%