A. Rabasco
University of Extremadura
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by A. Rabasco.
Small Ruminant Research | 1993
A. Rabasco; J.M. Serradilla; J.A. Padilla; A. Serrano
Abstract Non-genetic sources of variation in yield of milk, fat, protein and solids and contents in Verata goats were studied on three experimental farms. Interval in days from kidding to first record was an important factor of variation affecting estimates of milk yield. Herd differences existed for fat content (probably related to different feeding regimes) and for protein, fat and solids yields. Lactation number, month of kidding and number of kids affected significantly most traits. Herd-times-year interaction was another important factor of variation. Heritability of milk, protein, fat and solids yields and for protein, fat and solids contents were 0.24, 0.04, 0.2, 0.1, and 0.14, 0.3 and 0.52, respectively. Large errors were due to few genealogical data. However, the more precise estimates of repeatability confirmed the validity of confidence intervals for the heritabilities. Phenotypic correlations between milk yield, fat and protein yields were 0.82 and 0.68. Fat and protein contents were positively correlated ( r =0.81).
Cytogenetic and Genome Research | 1993
J.A. Padilla; José Luis Fernández-García; A. Rabasco; Margarita Martínez-Trancón; I. Rodriguez de Ledesma; J.J. Pérez-Regadera
Beginning with a description of the conventional Giemsa-stained karyotype of the tench (Tinca tinca L.), the structure and variability of the chromosomal heterochromatic regions in this cyprinid species were analyzed by means of C-, silver-, and restriction endonuclease banding. Silver staining revealed active nucleolus organizer regions (NORs) on the secondary constriction of chromosome pair 3. Constitutive heterochromatin was associated with NOR regions detected by C-banding. Restriction endonuclease digestion with AluI, TaqI, and HaeIII induced specific banding patterns that allowed identification of homologous chromosome pairs and revealed features about the sequence composition of several chromosomal heterochromatic regions and of the NOR-associated heterochromatin.
Cytogenetic and Genome Research | 1999
J.A. Padilla; Margarita Martínez-Trancón; A. Rabasco; José Luis Fernández-García
We report here for the first time the karyotype of the Iberian imperial eagle (Aquila adalberti). All eagles examined had a diploid number of 82 chromosomes and a greater number of microchromosomes (12 pairs) than has been found in all other species of the Accipitridae family. This karyotypic evidence corroborates the recent separation of A. adalberti from A. heliaca on the basis of molecular data. RB-FPG banding induced a specific banding pattern that allowed us to identify homologous chromosome pairs and revealed features about late and early replicating regions. Several chromosome banding techniques (C-, CMA3-, and restriction endonuclease banding and silver staining) were used to characterize the karyotype more accurately. Two GC-rich, late-replicating heterochromatin regions were found in the W chromosome. These regions are AluI resistant and can be used for sex determination in this species. All microchromosomes were heterochromatic, GC rich, and late replicating. Silver staining revealed active nucleolus organizing regions on a pair of microchromosomes that were entirely heterochromatic and stained intensely after CMA3-banding. Different chromosome rearrangements are discussed in order to establish the phylogenetic relationship between A. adalberti and its most closely related species, A. heliaca.
Mycoses | 1998
María Esther Sansinforiano; J.A. Padilla; J. Hermoso de Mendoza; M. Hermoso de Mendoza; José Luis Fernández-García; Margarita Martínez-Trancón; A. Rabasco; J. G. Parejo
Summary. The mucopolysaccharide capsule of Cryptococcus neoformans and other pathogenic yeasts prevent the extraction of DNA from these important zoonotic agents. We report that the use of a lysis buffer containing a high concentration of urea is an easy, efficient and time‐saving technique to obtain high yields of good‐quality DNA for molecular diagnosis. The use of urea also prevents the degradation of DNA during storage of samples at room temperature for up to 6 months.
Conservation Genetics | 2009
J.A. Padilla; Juan Carlos Parejo; J. Salazar; Margarita Martínez-Trancón; A. Rabasco; E. Sansinforiano; A. Quesada
Lesser kestrel, Falco naumanni, is a colonial and migratory species breeding in part of the Mediterranean Basin and part of central Asia and north-east of China and Mongolia. This species is catalogued in IUCN red list category as vulnerable. Twenty microsatellite loci were selected from libraries enriched in AC or AG tandem repeats and specific PCR were devised from their flanking sequences. Most microsatellites (14) were found polymorphic among 30 individuals of F. naumanni representing 20 reproduction areas of the species in the region of Extremadura, Spain. Polymorphisms were detected by size variation of the amplified loci, which allele number and observed heterozygosity ranged from 3 to 20 and from 0.300 to 0.933, respectively. Cross-species amplification showed that 13 of selected loci were also found polymorphic in common kestrel species (Falco tinnunculus). Novel polymorphic microsatellites will serve to conservation studies in lesser kestrel.
Israel Journal of Zoology | 2004
J.A. Padilla; Manuel Blasco; b Juan Carlos Parejo; A. Rabasco; María Esther Sansinforiano; Margarita Martínez-Trancón
RAPD analysis has been used to determine the genetic diversity and the population structure of the Chamaeleo chamaeleon in Spain, using three populations, two from Spain and one from Morocco. Genetic variability was evaluated on the basis of 819 loci produced by 60 primers. Dendrograms based on similarity indexes between the 40 animals and estimations of genetic differentiation among populations (FST) showed a clear population substructure defined by the geographical area from which the animals come. Analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) showed that 51.6% of the total variance was due to differences among populations. Moreover, the genetic flow among populations was very low. Therefore, our data suggest that the analyzed African and Spanish populations constitute different conservation units. These results constitute new evidence that supports the establishment of plans for the conservation of this species in Spain.
Journal of Heredity | 2000
J.A. Padilla; Margarita Martínez-Trancón; A. Rabasco; Jc Parejo; Me Sansinforiano; Mi Guijo
Genes & Genetic Systems | 2002
Juan Carlos Parejo; J.A. Padilla; A. Rabasco; M Esther Sansinforiano; Margarita Martínez-Trancón
Archive | 2001
María Esther Sansinforiano; A. Rabasco; Margarita Martínez-Trancón; Juan Carlos Parejo; Miguel Hermoso de Mendoza; J.A. Padilla
Livestock Science | 2009
J.A. Padilla; Esther Sansinforiano; Juan Carlos Parejo; A. Rabasco; Margarita Martínez-Trancón