Nuri Yiğit
Ankara University
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Featured researches published by Nuri Yiğit.
Biology Letters | 2008
Rolf Gattermann; Robert E. Johnston; Nuri Yiğit; Peter Fritzsche; Samantha Larimer; Sakir Özkurt; Karsten Neumann; Zhimin Song; Ercüment Çolak; Joan Johnston; M. Elsbeth McPhee
Daily activity rhythms are nearly universal among animals and their specific pattern is an adaptation of each species to its ecological niche. Owing to the extremely consistent nocturnal patterns of activity shown by golden hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus) in the laboratory, this species is a prime model for studying the mechanisms controlling circadian rhythms. In contrast to laboratory data, we discovered that female hamsters in the wild were almost exclusively diurnal. These results raise many questions about the ecological variables that shape the activity patterns in golden hamsters and the differences between laboratory and field results.
Israel Journal of Zoology | 2000
Mustafa Sözen; Nuri Yiğit; Ercüment Çolak
..The subterranean Spalacidae probably originated from a muroid-<:ricetoid stock in Asia Minor or vicinity, in Oligocene times, about 30-40 Ma, and adaptively radiated underground in the Balkans, steppic Russia, and Middle East, extending into North Africa (Savic and Nevo, 1990). Nevo et al. (1994) have tested the longitudinal north-south Israeli evolutionary model, proposed by Nevo (1991), of positive association of diploid chromosome number (2n) and genetic diversity with aridity stress in Spalacidae in Turkey. They showed that in Turkish Spalax, speciation and adaptation, revealed in Israel by 2n and heterozygosity, H, positively carreiate with aridity stress and climatic unpredictability. 2n values and H increase toward the ecologically harsh, arid, climatically unpredictable, and geologically young central Anatolian Plateau from the west, north, south, and east, repeating from all directions the pattem seen in Israe1. However, while variation in the Israeli speciational trend involves only four chromosomal species, ranging from north to south (Nevo, 1991), chromosomal speciation in Turkey is centripetal, involving about 30 taxonomic groups ofspecific rank defined by a combination of chromosome number,
Zoology in The Middle East | 2004
Ahmet Karataş; Nuri Yiğit; Tolga Kankiliç; Ercüment Çolak
Abstract New records from 41 localities are given for six species of vespertilionid bats, namely Myotis myotis (Borkhausen, 1797), M. blythii (Tomes, 1857), M. capaccinii (Bonaparte, 1837), Pipistrellus pipistrellus (Schreber, 1774), P. kuhlii (Kühl, 1819) and Barbastella barbastellus (Schreber, 1774). The diploid number of chromosomes (2n) and the total numbers of autosomal arms (NFa) were determined as 2n= 44, NFa= 50 for M. myotis, M. blythii, M. capaccinii, P. pipistrellus, P. kuhlii and as 2n= 32, NFa= 50 for B. barbastellus.
Zoology in The Middle East | 2004
Max Kasparek; Aygün Kasparek; Bülent Gözcelioğlu; Ercüment Çolak; Nuri Yiğit
Abstract A review of literature records, many of them from the 19th and early 20th centuries, shows that the Striped Hyaena, Hyaena hyaena, has apparently always been rare in Turkey. The natural distribution area extends from the southern Marmara region (Lake İznik, Uludağ) over the Dardanelles and along the Aegean and Mediterranean coast to south-east Anatolia. Historical records from inner and eastern Anatolia are not considered as reliable, and the Turkish population has apparently never had a direct link with the populations living in the Caucasus. Recent field surveys show that the species still survives in Turkey, even in some western parts. Over the last 25 years, records are only available from a few areas; they come from the regions of Çan (Çanakkale province), Bergama (Kozak Yaylası and Yuntdağ area), Bafa Gölü/Milas, Antalya (Termessos National Park), Bolkar Mountains, Amanos mountains (Hatay province), and south-east Anatolia. The most spectacular record is from Altınözü in the Amanos mountains, where a local hunter trapped four individuals between 2002 and 2004, which were kept for some time in captivity before they were released again into the wild. The species is now highly threatened in Turkey and is on the verge of extinction, although our recent field work shows that still undiscovered populations may exist and that the total population, albeit fragmented, may be higher than hitherto thought. The paper includes the description of habitats and of museum specimens.
Zoology in The Middle East | 1998
Nuri Yiğit; Erkut Kivanç; Ercüment Çolak
Abstract The taxonomic status and diagnostic characteristics of Meriones tristrami blackleri, M. t. lycaon, M. t. intraponticus, M. t. bodenheimeri and M. t. bogdanovi are discussed, based on material collected in Turkey. According to biomeţric and morphological comparisons, the specimens from southeastern and eastern Anatolia were found to be closer to bodenheimeri and bogdanovi than to lycaon. The white tail tip of blackleri, the dorsal colour and baculum shape of lycaon, the white incisors of intraponticus, and the short hind foot and the ear length of bodenheimeri are characteristics that distinguish these taxa from one other. The diploid number of chromosomes is 72 in M. tristrami. However, the fundamental number is 76 in blackleri and 82 in lycaon, intraponticus and bodenheimeri.
Zoology in The Middle East | 2000
Nuri Yiğit; Reyhan Verimli; Mustafa Sözen; Ercüment Çolak; Şakir Özkurt
Abstract The karyotypes of seven specimens of Apodemus agrarius from İğneada in Thrace (European Turkey) were examined. The results showed that the diploid number of chromosomes is 2n = 48, the number of autosomal arms NFa = 56, and the fundamental number NF = 58. The X chromosome is large acrocentric and the Y chromosome is small acrocentric. It was found that one subtelocentric pair in the chromosome set of A. agrarius is different from that of European populations.
Zoology in The Middle East | 1999
Şakir Özkurt; Mustafa Sözen; Nuri Yiğit; Ercüment Çolak; Reyhan Verimli
Abstract Morphological and karyological parameters, including the baculum and phallus, of Sciurus anomalus from Turkey were examined. The diploid number of chromosomes is 2n = 40, the fundamental number is NF = 80, the number of autosomal arms is NFa = 76. The X chromosome is a large submetacentric, and the Y chromosome is a small submetacentric.
Israel Journal of Zoology | 2005
Nuri Yiğit; Karsten Neumann; Sakir Özkurt; Ercüment Çolak; Reyhan Çolak
Three Spermophilus populations in western Turkey with two different karyotypic forms were analyzed biometrically (NTSYS) and genetically from their 16S rRNA sequence data. Two of these populations, from Turkish Thrace and southwest Anatolia, share the same chromosomal number of 2n = 40 but were previously considered to represent two closely related species, Spermophilus citellus and Spermophilus xanthoprymnus. Our study revealed a high degree of biometric and genetic similarity between these two populations, concluding that both belong to the same species, S. citellus. In contrast, the population from central Anatolia was identified as S. xanthoprymnus, which shows the diploid chromosomal number of 2n = 42 and distinct biometric and genetic differences. UPGMA cluster analysis established the close relationship between S. citellus (Turkish Thrace) and S. citellus (southwest Anatolia) with a distance of 0.84, and S. xanthoprymnus connected to this cluster with a distance of 0.93. The similar cluster was als...
Israel Journal of Zoology | 2013
Nuri Yiğit; Ercüment Çolak; Erkut Kivanç; Mustafa Sözen
The morphology, biometry, and karyology of 33 specimens of Gerbillus from Kilis (Turkey) were examined. It was determined that the specimens were not different from the nominative Gerbillus dasyurus. Gerbillus dasyurus leosollicitus and Gerbillus dasyurus palmyrae are the nearest geographical subspecies.
Zoology in The Middle East | 2000
Şakir Özkurt; Mustafa Sözen; Nuri Yiğit; Ercüment Çolak; Reyhan Verimli
Abstract A new record of the Marbled Polecat, Vormela peregusna, is given from south-eastern Turkey along with karyological and morphological including bacular characteristics. The specimen has a shorter black band at the tip of the tail than in a specimen examined from western Turkey and thus takes an intermediate position between specimens from Jordan and from western Turkey. Whereas the diploid chromosome number is the same as in Caucasia, Syria, western Turkey and Romania, the fundamental chromosome number (FN) and the number of autosomal arms (NFa) is higher than in Western Turkey, but the same as in Syria.