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Funky Aussie fish stuff


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#1 AussiePeter

AussiePeter
  • NANFA Member

Posted 24 March 2019 - 04:55 PM

We had a nice paper come out last week on our hemiclonal unisexaul fish that we study in Australia titled "Perspectives on the clonal persistence of presumed ‘ghost’ genomes in unisexual or allopolyploid taxa arising via hybridization" which can be downloaded for free at https://www.nature.c...598-019-40865-3

 

We had some follow up press too, even has a picture of a strange looking fellow wearing a nanfa t-shirt too!

 

https://www.canberra...PqJ8ySm54sMblPE

 

For some reason it won't let me post a link of the actual image....so you'll have to click on the article to see it.

 

Cheers

Peter



#2 Doug_Dame

Doug_Dame
  • NANFA Member

Posted 24 March 2019 - 09:40 PM

I read the article, and now I am desperately hoping there will not be a pop quiz. But the color-coding on the maps and figures was very helpful.

 

This may be too much to ask, but to my mind a nominally extinct species should have the good graces to be at least somewhat distinct morphologically, so you can have a proper "Eureka!" moment when you discover it. Finding out via a lab report weeks or months later seems rather anti-climatic. 

 

So ... we must ask ... did you just happen to be wearing the NANFA t-shirt on the day the photographer showed up?

 

As you may have read, Casper has a new NANFA t-shirt design in the works. You'll probably need 2 or 4 or 6, to make up for wear & tear on your existing collection. More, if you want some extras to hand out to your colleagues as incentives and rewards.

 

In a totally unrelated coincidence, I was DARN EXCITED to nab a pair of Melanotaenia fluviatilis today at the local fish club spring auction. AKA Murray River rainbowfish ... they're from the same area as the protagonists of Peter's epic. (As I've said many times before, all fish are native to somewhere. Except glo-fish.)


Doug Dame

Floridian now back in Florida
 


#3 AussiePeter

AussiePeter
  • NANFA Member

Posted 25 March 2019 - 01:34 AM


This may be too much to ask, but to my mind a nominally extinct species should have the good graces to be at least somewhat distinct morphologically, so you can have a proper "Eureka!" moment when you discover it. Finding out via a lab report weeks or months later seems rather anti-climatic. 

 

It was initially detected with DNA, but we have worked out that they do seem to be distinct morphologically too, but it's a bit subtle.

 

 

So ... we must ask ... did you just happen to be wearing the NANFA t-shirt on the day the photographer showed up?

 

I put it on especially, wanted to be sure I had a fish shirt on and my best ones are all nanfa ones!  About half the time though I usually have one on!

 

Good luck with your fluvies!

 

Cheers

Peter





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