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Dive into the research topics where Daniel Luis Zanella Kantek is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel Luis Zanella Kantek.


Brazilian Archives of Biology and Technology | 2007

Cytotaxonomy, heterochromatic polymorphism and natural triploidy of a species of Astyanax (Pisces, Characidae) endemic to the Iguaçu river basin

Daniel Luis Zanella Kantek; Rafael Bueno Noleto; Alberto Sergio Fenocchio; Marta Margarete Cestari

Cytogenetic analysis with Astyanax sp. D revealed a karyotype of 2n=50 with 2M+26SM+6ST+16A, besides a triploid specimen showing 2n=75 chromosomes (3M+39SM+9ST+24A). C-banding strongly stained the terminal regions of several SM-ST-A chromossomes. Two pairs of acrocentric chromosomes presented interstitial heterochromatin, this state being polymorphic and occuring due to possible paracentric inversions. The results obtained with the AluI restriction enzyme and A3 chromomycin were similar to the C-banding. Relationships were proposed between Astyanax sp. D and A. scabripinnis, as well as considerations for a possible origin of the triploid specimen (2n=3x=75). When comparing the present results with cytogenetic features of other endemic Astyanax species in the Iguacu river (A. sp. B and C), a clear differentiation was observed between them, indicating cytogenetics as an important cytotaxonomic tool.


Genetica | 2009

Chromosomal evidence of downstream dispersal of Astyanax fasciatus (Characiformes, Characidae) associated with river shed interconnection

Wellington Adriano Moreira Peres; Paulo A. Buckup; Daniel Luis Zanella Kantek; Luiz Antonio Carlos Bertollo; Orlando Moreira-Filho

In the 1960s, as a part of the construction of the Furnas Hydroelectric Power Dam, Minas Gerais, Brazil, the Rio Piumhi was diverted from the Rio Grande drainage to the São Francisco River basin, with the resulting introduction of species from one basin to the other. Chromosomal characteristics of various populations of Astyanax fasciatus sensu Eigenmann from the transect region were studied using cytogenetic techniques, with the goal to identify and map the dispersal of invasive species in the Rio São Francisco. Populations of the Rio Grande and Rio Piumhi are distinct from those of the São Francisco basin based on chromosome markers associated to the heterochromatin, Ag-NORs, 18S rDNA, 5S rDNA, and As-51 satellite DNA sites. Individuals with karyomorph originally present in the Piumhi drainage are now present in the São Francisco basin, downstream from the transposition channel. This expansion of the distribution corroborates a hypothesis of progressive substitution of native populations by the invasive Piumhi form.


Brazilian Archives of Biology and Technology | 2008

Chromosomal Studies of Five Species of the Marine Fishes From the Paranaguá Bay and the Karyotypic Diversity in the Marine Teleostei of the Brazilian Coast

Roger Raupp Cipriano; Alberto Sergio Fenocchio; Roberto Ferreira Artoni; Wagner Franco Molina; Rafael Bueno Noleto; Daniel Luis Zanella Kantek; Marta Margarete Cestari

In this study, five species of marine fishes from the Paranagua Bay in the Brazilian coast were evaluated. Eucinostomus argenteus and Diapterus rhombeus (Gerreidae) presented 48 chromosomes, all of which more acrocentric (FN = 48); Strongylura timucu and S. marina (Belonidae) also presented 48 chromosomes, but with a higher karyotypic complexity than the Gerreidae, 10M+2SM+36A (FN = 60) and 4M+44A (FN = 52), respectively. The fifth species, Mugil curema (Mugilidae), different than the others, presented only 28 chromosomes 20M+4ST+4A (FN = 48). The species presented diversity in the karyotypic macro-structure, which should be relevant for the cytotaxonomy and the evolution of this group of the vertebrate.


Genetics and Molecular Biology | 2006

Karyotypic characterization of Hydromedusa tectifera (Testudines, Pleurodira) from the upper Iguaçu River in the Brazilian state of Paraná

Rafael Bueno Noleto; Daniel Luis Zanella Kantek; Ana Cláudia Swarça; Ana Lúcia Dias; Alberto Sergio Fenocchio; Marta Margarete Cestari

We present the karyotypic characterization of 26 specimens of the side-necked turtle Hydromedusa tectifera collected in the upper Iguacu River, Parana state, Brazil. The turtles were cytogenetically analyzed using Giemsa staining and other banding techniques (C, G, Ag-NOR and CMA3) as well as fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) with a rDNA 18S probe. All the specimens showed a diploid number of 58 composed of 22 macro and 36 microchromosomes. The Ag-NOR, CMA3 and FISH techniques permitted the identification and characterization of the chromosome pairs bearing nucleolus organizer regions (NORs), while G-banding facilitated a better recognition and pairing of macrochromosomes. These data agree with some information available in the literature and should be very useful for further cytotaxonomic and cytosystematic studies.


Brazilian Archives of Biology and Technology | 2007

Cytotaxonomic and evolutionary considerations about karyotipic data of fishes from the Iguaçu River Basin in South of Brazil

Daniel Luis Zanella Kantek; Roger Raupp Cipriano; Vinícius Abilhoa; Roberto Ferreira Artoni; Marta Margarete Cestari

The cytogenetic data available in the literature about the ichthyofauna of the Iguacu River basin were analyzed in this review. The ichthyofauna was characterized by the high level of endemism and by the low diversity of species. Twenty-four of the eighty-one species were already karyotyped; six Characiformes, fourteen Siluriformes and four Perciformes. The chromosomal data showed the taxonomic and systematic complexity of the groups. Hypothesis related to the evolution of some Characiformes and Siluriformes groups from the Iguacu River are proposed, as well as the utilization of karyotypic data for cytotaxonomy.


Comparative Cytogenetics | 2015

Cytogenetic study of heptapterids (Teleostei, Siluriformes) with particular respect to the Nemuroglanis subclade

Daniel Luis Zanella Kantek; Wellington Adriano Moreira Peres; Orlando Moreira-Filho

Abstract The catfish family Heptapteridae (order Siluriformes) is endemic to the Neotropics and is one of the most common of the fish families in small bodies of water. Although over 200 species have been identified in this family, very few have been characterized cytogenetically. Here, we analyze the chromosome genomes of four species of Heptapteridae: Cetopsorhamdia iheringi (Schubart & Gomes, 1959), 2n = 58, comprising 28 metacentric (m) + 26 submetacentric (sm) + 4 subtelomeric (st) chromosomes; Pimelodella vittata (Lütken, 1874), 2n = 46, comprising 16m + 22sm + 8st; Rhamdia prope quelen (Quoy & Gaimard, 1824), 2n = 58 comprising 26m + 16sm + 14st + 2 acrocentric; and Rhamdiopsis prope microcephala (Lütken, 1874), 2n = 56, comprising 12m + 30sm + 14st. The nucleolus organizer regions (NORs) were located in a single chromosome pair in all species. The two species that belonged to the subclade Nemuroglanis, Cetopsorhamdia iheringi and Rhamdia prope quelen, had a diploid chromosome number of 58 and an interstitial NOR adjacent to a C+ block located on one of the larger chromosome pairs in the complement. Our results from conventional cytogenetic techniques in combination with FISH using 18S and 5S rDNA probes corroborated the taxonomical hypothesis for the formation of the Nemuroglanis subclade.


Cytotechnology | 2016

Comparative cytogenetic analysis of marine needlefishes (Beloniformes) from southern Brazil

Roger Raupp Cipriano; Rafael Bueno Noleto; Daniel Luis Zanella Kantek; Maria Cristina da Silva Cortinhas; Marta Margarete Cestari

Cytogenetic studies have assisted in the taxonomic classification of organisms, especially those involving species with highly similar morphologic characteristics, or so-called cryptic species. Strongylura marina and Strongylura timucu collected from Paranaguá Bay, Paraná Coast in Southern Brazil are considered cryptic species, and the identification of interspecific variations based on the number and/or morphology of its chromosomes may serve as differentiating cytotaxonomic markers. Chromosomes of the two species were subjected to different banding and staining methods (C-, Ag-, and DAPI-CMA3), as well as chromosomal mapping of major rDNA (45S), revealed with an 18S probe by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). The pattern of distribution of constitutive heterochromatin showed distinct features involving the pericentromeric and telomeric bands in both species. In S. marina, chromosome 1 represents the main species-specific marker, appearing almost entirely heterochromatic. In both species, the 45S rDNA is located at terminal region of the short arm of the chromosome 6, as detected by silver nitrate staining and FISH. Despite the apparent conserved diploid number of 48 chromosomes, data on the karyotype microstructure characterize the cytogenetic profile of the genus and may allow the establishment of cytotaxonomic and evolutionary inferences for these fishes.


Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries | 2012

Invasion, dispersion and hybridization of fish associated to river transposition: karyotypic evidence in Astyanax '' bimaculatus group'' (Characiformes: Characidae)

Wellington Adriano Moreira Peres; Luiz Antonio Carlos Bertollo; Paulo A. Buckup; Daniel Rodrigues Blanco; Daniel Luis Zanella Kantek; Orlando Moreira-Filho


Journal of Fish Biology | 2007

Classical and molecular cytogenetics of Atherinella brasiliensis (Teleostei, Atheriniformes) from South coast of Brazil

Thaís Saad Sczepanski; Rafael Bueno Noleto; Daniel Luis Zanella Kantek; M. C. S Cortinhas; Marta Margarete Cestari


Cytologia | 2003

Cytogenetic Characterization and NOR Polymorphism in Astyanax sp. C (Tetragonopterinae, Characidae) from the First Plateau of the Iguaçu River (Paraná State, Brazil)

Daniel Luis Zanella Kantek; Alberto Sergio Fenocchio; Marta Margarete Cestari

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Orlando Moreira-Filho

Federal University of São Carlos

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Rafael Bueno Noleto

Universidade Estadual do Paraná

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Roger Raupp Cipriano

Federal University of Paraná

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Alberto Sergio Fenocchio

National University of Misiones

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Paulo A. Buckup

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Alberto Sergio Fenocchio

National University of Misiones

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Ana Cláudia Swarça

Universidade Estadual de Londrina

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