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Dive into the research topics where Ives José Sbalqueiro is active.

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Featured researches published by Ives José Sbalqueiro.


Chromosome Research | 2002

The phylogeny of howler monkeys (Alouatta, Platyrrhini): reconstruction by multicolor cross-species chromosome painting.

Edivaldo Herculano Corrêa de Oliveira; Michaela Neusser; Wilsea Batista Figueiredo; Cleusa Yoshiko Nagamachi; Julio Cesar Pieczarka; Ives José Sbalqueiro; Johannes Wienberg; Stefan Müller

We performed multidirectional chromosome painting in a comparative cytogenetic study of the three howler monkey species Alouatta fusca, A. caraya and A. seniculus macconnelli (Atelinae, Platyrrhini) in order to reconstruct phylogenetic relationships within this genus. Comparative genome maps between these species were established by multicolor fluorescence in-situ hybridization (FISH) employing human, Saguinus oedipus and Lagothrix lagothricha chromosome-specific probes. The three species included in this study and previously analyzed howler monkey species were subjected to a phylogenetic analysis on the basis of a data matrix comprised of 98 discrete molecular cytogenetic characters. The results revealed that howler monkeys represent the genus with the most extensive karyotype diversity within Platyrrhini so far analyzed with high levels of intraspecific chromosomal variability. Two different multiple sex chromosome systems were identified. The phylogenetic analysis indicated that Alouatta is a monophyletic clade which can be derived from a proposed ancestral Atelinae karyotype of 2n=62 chromosomes by a chromosome fusion, a fission, a Y-autosomal translocation and a pericentric inversion. Following these suggestions, the genus Alouatta can be divided into two distinct species groups: the first includes A. caraya and A. belzebul, the second A. s. macconnelli, A. sara, A. s. arctoidea and A. fusca.


Chromosoma | 2005

Chromosome reshuffling in birds of prey: the karyotype of the world's largest eagle (Harpy eagle, Harpia harpyja) compared to that of the chicken (Gallus gallus)

Edivaldo Herculano Corrêa de Oliveira; Felix A. Habermann; Oneida Lacerda; Ives José Sbalqueiro; Johannes Wienberg; Stefan Müller

Like various other diurnal birds of prey, the worlds largest eagle, the Harpy (Harpia harpyja), presents an atypical bird karyotype with 2n=58 chromosomes. There is little knowledge about the dramatic changes in the genomic reorganization of these species compared to other birds. Since recently, the chicken provides a “default map” for various birds including the first genomic DNA sequence of a bird species. Obviously, the gross division of the chicken genome into relatively gene-poor macrochromosomes and predominantly gene-rich microchromosomes has been conserved for more than 150 million years in most bird species. Here, we present classical features of the Harpy eagle karyotype but also chromosomal homologies between H. harpyja and the chicken by chromosome painting and comparison to the chicken genome map. We used two different sets of painting probes: (1) chicken chromosomes were divided into three size categories: (a) macrochromosomes 1–5 and Z, (b) medium-sized chromosomes 6–10, and (c) 19 microchromosomes; (2) combinatorially labeled chicken chromosome paints 1–6 and Z. Both probe sets were visualized on H. harpyja chromosomes by multicolor fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). Our data show how the organization into micro- and macrochromosomes has been lost in the Harpy eagle, seemingly without any preference or constraints.


Cytogenetic and Genome Research | 2005

Phylogenetic inferences of Atelinae (Platyrrhini) based on multi-directional chromosome painting in Brachyteles arachnoides, Ateles paniscus paniscus and Ateles b. marginatus

E.H.C. de Oliveira; M. Neusser; Julio Cesar Pieczarka; Cleusa Yoshiko Nagamachi; Ives José Sbalqueiro; S. Müller

We performed multi-directional chromosome painting in a comparative cytogenetic study of the three Atelinae species Brachyteles arachnoides, Ateles paniscus paniscus and Ateles belzebuth marginatus, in order to reconstruct phylogenetic relationships within this Platyrrhini subfamily. Comparative chromosome maps between these species were established by multi-color fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) employing human, Saguinus oedipus and Lagothrix lagothricha chromosome-specific probes. The three species included in this study and four previously analyzed species from all four Atelinae genera were subjected to a phylogenetic analysis on the basis of a data matrix comprised of 82 discrete chromosome characters. The results confirmed that Atelinae represent a monophyletic clade with a putative ancestral karyotype of 2n = 62 chromosomes. Phylogenetic analysis revealed an evolutionary branching sequence {Alouatta {Brachyteles {Lagothrix and Ateles}}} in Atelinae and {Ateles belzebuth marginatus {Ateles paniscus paniscus {Ateles belzebuth hybridus and Ateles geoffroyi}}} in genus Ateles. The chromosomal data support a re-evaluation of the taxonomic status of Ateles b. hybridus.


Brazilian Journal of Genetics | 1996

Occurrence of Akodon cursor (Rodentia, Cricetidae) with 14, 15 and 16 chromosome cytotypes in the same geographic area in Southern Brazil

Ives José Sbalqueiro; André Paulo Nascimento

The karyotype of Akodon cursor (initially identified as A. arviculoides) had been reported with chromosomal numbers 14 and 15 in the South and Southeast and 16 in Northeastern Brazil. We found the three cytotypes in a region of Southern Brazil. The G-band patterns of these specimens were the same as those from southeastern and northeastern regions. Seventeen different combinations of chromosomes due to a complex rearrangement in pair 1 and pericentric inversions in pairs 2 and 3 were identified. Seven of these combinations are new to in the literature.


Journal of Mammalogy | 2000

DESCRIPTION OF A NEW SPECIES OF AKODON (RODENTIA: SIGMODONTINAE) FROM SOUTHERN BRAZIL

Alexandre Uarth Christoff; VALItRIA Fagundes; Ives José Sbalqueiro; Margarete S. Mattevi

Abstract Cranial and external morphology of 54 specimens of rodents of the genus Akodon from southern Brazil was analyzed. The sample included 27 individuals with a karyotype of 2n = 44 and 13 with 2n = 46 and 14 nonkaryotyped animals. Principal components analysis separated individuals with 2n = 44 from those with 2n = 46. Individuals with 2n = 44 were distinguished from those with 2n = 46 by narrow and elongated molars, ectolophid present, narrow interorbital breadth, reduced tegmen tympani, and distal baculum with the central and lateral digit approximately equal in size and proportions, not enlarged in the extremity. Discriminant functions analyses including 6 A. sanctipaulensis individuals and holotypes of A. serrensis and A. s. leucogula resulted in 3 distinct groups. The 2n = 46 individuals were related to A. serrensis, but those with 2n = 44 were not assignable to any described species for Akodon. We describe and propose the recognition of a new species for the genus.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1998

Interrelationship between Ectoparasites and Wild Rodents from Tijucas do Sul, State of Paraná, Brazil

Darci Moraes Barros-Battesti; Márcia Arzua; Pedro Marcos Linardi; José Ramiro Botelho; Ives José Sbalqueiro

Sixteen species of ectoparasites were collected from 50 wild rodents, from August 1990 to August 1991, in an area of Araucaria augustifolia forest, in the municipality of Tijucas do Sul, State of Paraná, Brazil. Ectoparasites infested 98% of the rodents, with the highest indices of infestation found in the drycool season. Species that occurred in single or multiple infestations were recorded. Ectoparasite/host associations were significant (p < 0.01) for Gigantolaelaps wolffsohni/Oryzomys nigripes, Polygenis pradoi/Oxymycterus sp. and Amblyopinus sp./Oxymycterus sp. The following represent new host records: Polygenis (Polygenis) tripus from Akodon serrensis and Hoplopleura sciuricola from Sciurus aestuans. New geographic records are given for two species of flea and one sucking lice.


Chromosome Research | 2008

Chromosomal phylogeny of four Akodontini species (Rodentia, Cricetidae) from Southern Brazil established by Zoo-FISH using Mus musculus (Muridae) painting probes

Iris Hass; Ives José Sbalqueiro; Stefan Müller

We established chromosome homology maps between Mus musculus (MMU) and five species of the Akodontini tribe, Akodon cursor (2n = 14, 15 and 16), A. montensis (2n = 24), A. paranaensis (2n = 44), A. serrensis (2n = 46) and Oligoryzomys flavescens (2n = 66) by Zoo-FISH (fluorescence in situ hybridization) using mouse chromosome-specific probes. The aims of this study were (1) to detect the chromosomal rearrangements responsible for the karyotype variation in this tribe and (2) to reconstruct the phylogenetic relationships among these species. We observed four common syntenic associations of homologous chromosome segments, of which the MMU 7/19 has been described previously in other rodents from Africa, Asia and Europe, and might represent a phylogenetic link between the Old World and Neotropical rodents. The remaining three associations (3/18, 6/12 and 8/13) have been observed exclusively in Neotropical rodents so far, which at present can be considered synapomorphic traits of this group. Five further mouse chromosomes (MMU 4, 9, 14, 18 and 19) were each found evolutionarily conserved as a separate syntenic unit. Our phylogenetic analysis using parsimony and heuristic search detected one consistent group, separating the Akodontini from other rodents.


Cytogenetic and Genome Research | 1984

An X1X1X2X2/X1X2Y mechanism of sex determination in a South American rodent, Deltamys kempi (Rodentia, Cricetidae)

Ives José Sbalqueiro; Margarete S. Mattevi; L.F.B. Oliveira

Chromosome studies on 14 specimens of Deltamys kempi disclosed six males with 2n = 37, NF = 38, six females with 2n = 38, NF = 38, and two females with 2n = 37, NF = 38. G- and C-band analyses revealed a Y-autosome translocation in the males leading to a multiple chromosome system of sex determination of the type X1X1X2X2/X1X2Y, this being the second case of such a mechanism described in rodents. At meiosis the males presented a trivalent in which C-banding studies showed an alternate orientation of the sex chromosomes due to end-to-end association of the X1 and Y chromosomes, the Y and the X2 being held together by interstitial chiasmata. At metaphase II both n = 17 + Y and n = 18 + X1 are regularly observed. The two females with 2n = 37, NF = 38, are heterozygous for an autosomal centric fusion involving chromosomes 1 and 13. The product of the Y-autosome translocation constitutes the largest element of the karyotype (9.4% of the haploid set); the X1 chromosome amounts to 7.8% of this set, including a large heterochromatic block. When only its euchromatic region is considered, this percentage decreases to 4.6%. From two to seven NORs were observed at the telomeres, with a mean of 4.4 +/- 1.1 per cell.


Genetics and Molecular Biology | 1998

The karyotype of Alouatta fusca clamitans from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil: Evidence for a y-autosome translocation

Edivaldo Herculano Corrêa de Oliveira; Margarida Maria Celeira de Lima; Ives José Sbalqueiro; Alcides Pissinati

Os cariotipos referentes a quatro machos de Alouatta fusca clamitans oriundos do Rio de Janeiro foram analisados atraves de tecnicas de bandamento G, C e NOR. O numero diploide em todos os especimes foi igual a 49, com a presenca de tres cromossomos nao pareados. A comparacao dos padroes de bandamento G com especimes previamente descritos com 2n = 50 revelou a ocorrencia de uma translocacao do tipo Y-autossomo, modificando o sistema cromossomico de determinacao sexual para o tipo multiplo, X1X2Y/X1X1 X2X2. Os blocos de heterocromatina constitutiva se distribuiram na regiao pericentromerica de todos os cromossomos; segmentos intercalares e telomericos foram visualizados em um par acrocentrico e em outro submetacentrico, respectivamente. As regioes organizadoras de nucleolo se localizaram no braco longo de dois pares de pequenos acrocentricos.


Zootaxa | 2014

A new species of swamp rat of the genus Scapteromys Waterhouse, 1837 (Rodentia: Sigmodontinae) endemic to Araucaria angustifolia Forest in Southern Brazil

Fernando Marques Quintela; Gislene L. Gonçalves; Sérgio Luiz Althoff; Ives José Sbalqueiro; Luiz Flamarion B. Oliveira; Thales Renato Ochotorena de Freitas

A new species of swamp rat of the genus Scapteromys from the Meridional Plateau of Southern Brazil is described. Morphological, molecular, and karyological analysis support the recognition of the new species, distinct from S. aquaticus and S. tumidus. Scapteromys sp. nov. is significantly smaller than the congeneric taxa considering most of the external and craniometric measurements and the pelage is conspicuously grayer and darker. It can be distinguished from S. tumidus by the laterally extended thenar pad of the manus and the parallel edges of the hamular process of the pterygoid, and from S. aquaticus by a grayer and darker pelage and smaller values of most external and craniometric measurements. Karyological analysis indicated a difference in chromosome numbers across the distributional range: 2n=34 and 2n=36. A total of 11 haplotypes were found along the range of the new species within the biogeographic province of Araucaria angustifolia Forest. Strongly supported substructure was found within the new taxon, resulting in two reciprocally monophyletic clades.

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Iris Hass

Federal University of Paraná

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Iglenir João Cavalli

Federal University of Paraná

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Margarete S. Mattevi

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Roxane Wirschum Silva

National Council for Scientific and Technological Development

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Bernardo Erdtmann

University of Caxias do Sul

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Néria A. Maia

Federal University of Paraná

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Thales Renato Ochotorena de Freitas

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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