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In an effort to link quantitative morphometric information with molecular data on the population level, we have analysed 19 populations of the conchologically variable land snail Candidula unifasciata from across the species range for variation in quantitative shell traits and at the mitochondrial 16S ribosomal (r)DNA locus. In genetic analysis, including 21 additional populations, we observed two fundamental haplotype clades with an average pairwise sequence divergence of 0.209 ± 0.009 between clades compared to 0.017 ± 0.012 within clades, suggesting the presence of two different evolutionary lineages. Integrating additional shell material from the Senckenberg Malacological Collection, a highly significant discriminant analysis on the morphological shell traits with fundamental haplotype clades as grouping variable suggested that the less frequent haplotype corresponds to the described subspecies C. u. rugosiuscula, which we propose to regard as a distinct species. Both taxa were highly subdivided genetically (FST = 0.648 and 0.777 P < 0.001). This was contrasted by the partition of morphological variance, where only 29.6% and 21.9% of the variance were distributed among populations, respectively. In C. unifasciata, no significant association between population pairwise FST estimates and corresponding morphological fixation indices could be detected, indicating independent evolution of the two character sets. Partial least square analysis of environmental factors against shell trait variables in C. u. unifasciata revealed significant correlations between environmental factors and certain quantitative shell traits, whose potential adaptational values are discussed.
Population structure was estimated in a continuous population of a small land snail (Trochoidea geyeri). Mark-recapture experiments and randomly amplified polymorphic DNA analyses indicate that the population structure can be described by the isolation by distance model of Wright (1946). Estimates of density and dispersal suggest a neighbourhood size of 70-208 individuals on an area of 13-21 m². A principal component analysis of the randomly amplified polymorphic DNA data reveals clinal variation of genetic composition across the population, as predicted by the neighbourhood concept. An analysis of molecular variance indicates substantial genetic structuring. Comparisons of the genetic distances, expressed as euclidean distances among individuals, versus the geographic distance between sampling sites yield a highly significant positive correlation (Mantel test: r = 0.567, p<0.0001). The revealed pattern of populational subdivision on a microgeographic scale seems to be one of the principal processes generating and maintaining genetic diversity within populations of small land gastropods.
In the present study the population genetic structure of the terrestrial snail Pomatias elegans was related to habitat structure on a microspatial scale. The genetic variability of 1607 individuals from 51 sampling sites in five different populations in Provence, France, was studied with an allozyme marker using population genetic methods, Mantel tests and spatial autocorrelation techniques were applied to different connectivity networks accounting for the structural features of the landscape. It is suggested that the population structure is, to a large extent, a function of the habitat quality, quantified as population density, and of the spatial arrangement of the habitat in the landscape and not of the geographical distance per se. In fragmented habitats, random genetic drift was the prevailing force for sampling sites separated by a few hundred meters.
Length variations of repetitive sequences in different AT-rich loop-coding regions of mitochondrial 16S rDNA in two gastropod species were discovered during intraspecific haplotype surveys. Examination of the discrete length variation of the basic repeat unit in a phylogenetic framework led to the conclusion of a microsatellite-like mutational dynamic. The observations suggest that the presence of a repetitive sequence structure alone is sufficient to trigger this dynamic.
I analysed the importance of shell size, shell shape, habitat preferences and availability, experienced climate, active dispersal and influence of Pleistocene glaciations for the range sizes of 37 Western Palaearctic Helicidae s.l. species for which a phylogeny was available. In both cross-species and phylogenetically controlled analyses, the range sizes were positively correlated to climatic tolerance, shell size, active dispersal and influence of Pleistocene glaciations. In addition, range sizes increased significantly with latitude. Multiple regression suggested that, predominantly, the influence of Pleistocene glaciations, tolerance to large annual temperature ranges and shell size influenced the distributional range sizes. Habitat preference, range and availability, active dispersal and shell shape explained no additional variance. The results suggest that the processes influencing species range size of the Helicidae s.l. are mainly related to the climatic shifts after the Pleistocene.
Gene trapping is a method of generating murine embryonic stem (ES) cell lines containing insertional mutations in known and novel genes. A number of international groups have used this approach to create sizeable public cell line repositories available to the scientific community for the generation of mutant mouse strains. The major gene trapping groups worldwide have recently joined together to centralize access to all publicly available gene trap lines by developing a user-oriented Website for the International Gene Trap Consortium (IGTC). This collaboration provides an impressive public informatics resource comprising ~45 000 well-characterized ES cell lines which currently represent ~40% of known mouse genes, all freely available for the creation of knockout mice on a non-collaborative basis. To standardize annotation and provide high confidence data for gene trap lines, a rigorous identification and annotation pipeline has been developed combining genomic localization and transcript alignment of gene trap sequence tags to identify trapped loci. This information is stored in a new bioinformatics database accessible through the IGTC Website interface. The IGTC Website (www.genetrap.org) allows users to browse and search the database for trapped genes, BLAST sequences against gene trap sequence tags, and view trapped genes within biological pathways. In addition, IGTC data have been integrated into major genome browsers and bioinformatics sites to provide users with outside portals for viewing this data. The development of the IGTC Website marks a major advance by providing the research community with the data and tools necessary to effectively use public gene trap resources for the large-scale characterization of mammalian gene function.
Background: Costly structures need to represent an adaptive advantage in order to be maintained over evolutionary times. Contrary to many other conspicuous shell ornamentations of gastropods, the haired shells of several Stylommatophoran land snails still lack a convincing adaptive explanation. In the present study, we analysed the correlation between the presence/absence of hairs and habitat conditions in the genus Trochulus in a Bayesian framework of character evolution. Results: Haired shells appeared to be the ancestral character state, a feature most probably lost three times independently. These losses were correlated with a shift from humid to dry habitats, indicating an adaptive function of hairs in moist environments. It had been previously hypothesised that these costly protein structures of the outer shell layer facilitate the locomotion in moist habitats. Our experiments, on the contrary, showed an increased adherence of haired shells to wet surfaces. Conclusion: We propose the hypothesis that the possession of hairs facilitates the adherence of the snails to their herbaceous food plants during foraging when humidity levels are high. The absence of hairs in some Trochulus species could thus be explained as a loss of the potential adaptive function linked to habitat shifts.
Homing in with GPS
(2000)
Flight paths of homing pigeons were measured with a newly developed recorder based on GPS. The device consists of a GPS receiver board, a logging facility, an antenna, a power supply, a DCDC converter and a casing. It has a weight of 33g and works reliably with a sampling rate of 1/s with an operation time of about 3 h, providing timeindexed data on geographic positions, ground speed and altitude. The data are downloaded when the bird is recaptured. The devices are fixed to the birds with a harness. The measured complete flight paths show many details: e.g. initial loops flown immediately after release and large detours flown by some pigeons. We are here presenting 3 examples of flight paths from a release site 17.3 km Northeast of the home loft in Frankfurt. Mean speed in flight, duration of breaks and length of the flight path were calculated. The pigeons chose different routes and have different individual tendencies to fly loops over the village close to the release site.
This paper describes a first version of the GPS flight recorder for homing pigeons. The GPS recorder consists of a hybrid GPS board, a patch antenna 19*19 mm, a 3 V Lithium battery as power supply, a DCDC converter, a logging facility and an additional microprocessor. It has a weight of 33g. Prototypes were tested and worked reliably with a sampling rate of 1/sec and with an operation time of about 3 h. In first tests on homing pigeons 9 flight paths were recorded, showing details like loops flown immediately after the release, complete routes over 30 km including detours, rest periods and speed.
Here I analyse 23 populations of D. galeata, a large-lake cladoceran, distributed mainly across the Palaearctic. I detected high levels of clonal diversity and population differentiation using variation at six microsatellite loci across Europe. Most populations were characterised by deviations from H-W equilibrium and significant heterozygote deficiencies. Observed heterozygote deficiencies might be a consequence of simultaneous hatching of individuals produced during different times of the year or of the coexistence of ecologically and genetically differentiated subpopulations. A significant isolation by distance was only found over large geographic distances (> 700 km). This pattern is mainly due to the high genetic differentiation among neighbouring populations. My results suggest that historic populations of Daphnia were once interconnected by gene flow but current populations are now largely isolated. Thus local ecological conditions which determine the level of biparental sexual reproduction and local adaptation are the main factors mediating population structure of D. galeata. The population genetic structure and diversity in D. galeata was investigated at a European scale using six microsatellite loci and 12S rDNA sequence data to infer and compare historical and contemporary patterns of gene flow. D. galeata has the potential for long-distance dispersal via ephippial resting eggs by wind and other dispersing vectors (waterfowl), but shows in general strong population differentiation even among neighbouring populations. A total of 427 individuals were analysed for microsatellite and 85 individuals for mitochondrial (mtDNA) sequence data from 12 populations across Europe. I detected genetic differentiation among populations across Europe and locations within sampling regions for both genetic marker systems (average values: mtDNA FST = 0.574; microsatellite FST = 0.389), resulting in a lack of isolation by distance. Furthermore, several microsatellite alleles and one haplotype were shared across populations. Partitioning of molecular variance was inconsistant for both marker systems. Microsatellite variation was higher within than among populations, whereas mtDNA data yielded an inverse pattern. Relative high levels of nuclear DNA diversity were found across Europe. The amount of mitochondrial diversity was low in Spain, Hungary and Denmark. Gene flow analysis at a European scale did not reveal typical pattern of population recolonization in the light of postglacial colonization hypotheses. Populations, which recently experienced an expansion or population-bottleneck were observed both in middle and northern Europe. Since these populations revealed high genetic diversity in both marker systems, I suggest these areas to represent postglacial zones of secondary contact among divergent lineages of D. galeata. In order to reveal the relationship between population genetic structure of D. galeata and the relative contribution of environmental factors, I used a statistical framework based on canonical correspondence analysis. Although I detected no single ecological gradient mediating the genetic differentiation in either lake regions, it is noteworthy that the same ecological factors were significantly correlated with intra- and interspecific genetic variation of D. galeata. For example, I found a relationship between genetic variation of D. galeata and differentiation with higher and lower trophic levels (phytoplankton, submerged macrophytes and fish) and a relationship between clonal variation and species diversity within Cladocera. Variance partitioning had only a minor contribution of each environmental category (abiotic, biomass/density and diversity) to genetic diversity of D. galeata, while the largest proportion of variation was explained by shared components. My work illustrates the important role of ecological differentiation and adaptation in structuring genetic variation, and it highlights the need for approaches incorporating a landscape context for population divergence.
The GPS recorder consists of a GPS receiver board, a logging facility, an antenna, a power supply, a DC-DC converter and a casing. Currently, it has a weight of 33 g. The recorder works reliably with a sampling rate of 1/s and with an operation time of about 3 h, providing time-indexed data on geographic positions and ground speed. The data are downloaded when the animal is recaptured. Prototypes were tested on homing pigeons. The records of complete flight paths with surprising details illustrate the potential of this new method that can be used on a variety of medium-sized and large vertebrates.
Background: The cosmopolitan moon jelly Aurelia is characterized by high degrees of morphological and ecological plasticity, and subsequently by an unclear taxonomic status. The latter has been revised repeatedly over the last century, dividing the genus Aurelia in as many as 12 or as little as two species. We used molecular data and phenotypic traits to unravel speciation processes and phylogeographic patterns in Aurelia.
Results: Mitochondrial and nuclear DNA data (16S and ITS-1/5.8S rDNA) from 66 world-wide sampled specimens reveal star-like tree topologies, unambiguously differentiating 7 (mtDNA) and 8 (ncDNA) genetic entities with sequence divergences ranging from 7.8 to 14% (mtDNA) and 5 to 32% (ncDNA), respectively. Phylogenetic patterns strongly suggest historic speciation events and the reconstruction of at least 7 different species within Aurelia. Both genetic divergences and life history traits showed associations to environmental factors, suggesting ecological differentiation forced by divergent selection. Hybridization and introgression between Aurelia lineages likely occurred due to secondary contacts, which, however, did not disrupt the unambiguousness of genetic separation.
Conclusions: Our findings recommend Aurelia as a model system for using the combined power of organismic, ecological, and molecular data to unravel speciation processes in cosmopolitan marine organisms.
© 2002 Schroth et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. Verbatim copying and redistribution of this article are permitted in any medium for any non-commercial purpose, provided this notice is preserved along with the article's original URL: http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2148/2/1
Background: In general shell-less slugs are considered to be slimy animals with a rather dull appearance and a pest to garden plants. But marine slugs usually are beautifully coloured animals belonging to the less-known Opisthobranchia. They are characterized by a large array of interesting biological phenomena, usually related to foraging and/or defence. In this paper our knowledge of shell reduction, correlated with the evolution of different defensive and foraging strategies is reviewed, and new results on histology of different glandular systems are included. Results: Based on a phylogeny obtained by morphological and histological data, the parallel reduction of the shell within the different groups is outlined. Major food sources are given and glandular structures are described as possible defensive structures in the external epithelia, and as internal glands. Conclusion: According to phylogenetic analyses, the reduction of the shell correlates with the evolution of defensive strategies. Many different kinds of defence structures, like cleptocnides, mantle dermal formations (MDFs), and acid glands, are only present in shell-less slugs. In several cases, it is not clear whether the defensive devices were a prerequisite for the reduction of the shell, or reduction occurred before. Reduction of the shell and acquisition of different defensive structures had an implication on exploration of new food sources and therefore likely enhanced adaptive radiation of several groups. © 2005 Wägele and Klussmann-Kolb; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited: http://www.frontiersinzoology.com/content/2/1/3/
The study of organisms with restricted dispersal abilities and presence in the fossil record is particularly adequate to understand the impact of climate changes on the distribution and genetic structure of species. Trochoidea geyeri (Soós 1926) is a land snail restricted to a patchy, insular distribution in Germany and France. Fossil evidence suggests that current populations of T. geyeri are relicts of a much more widespread distribution during more favourable climatic periods in the Pleistocene. Results: Phylogeographic analysis of the mitochondrial 16S rDNA and nuclear ITS-1 sequence variation was used to infer the history of the remnant populations of T. geyeri. Nested clade analysis for both loci suggested that the origin of the species is in the Provence from where it expanded its range first to Southwest France and subsequently from there to Germany. Estimated divergence times predating the last glacial maximum between 25–17 ka implied that the colonization of the northern part of the current species range occurred during the Pleistocene. Conclusion: We conclude that T. geyeri could quite successfully persist in cryptic refugia during major climatic changes in the past, despite of a restricted capacity of individuals to actively avoid unfavourable conditions.
The mammalian retina contains around 30 morphological varieties of amacrine cell types. These interneurons receive excitatory glutamatergic input from bipolar cells and provide GABA- and glycinergic inhibition to other cells in the retina. Amacrine cells exhibit widely varying light evoked responses, in large part defined by their presynaptic partners. We wondered whether amacrine functional diversity is based on a differential expression of glutamate receptors among cell populations and types. In whole cell patch-clamp experiments on mouse retinal slices, we used selective agonists and antagonists to discriminate responses mediated by NMDA/ non-NMDA (NBQX) and AMPA/ KA receptors (cyclothiazide, GYKI 52466, GYKI 53655, SYM 2081). We sampled a large variety of individual cell types, which were classified by their dendritic field size into either narrow-field or wide-field cells after filling with Lucifer yellow or neurobiotin. In addition, we used transgenic GlyT2-EGFP mice, whose glycinergic neurons express EGFP. This allowed us to classify amacrines on basis of their neurotransmitter into either glycinergic or GABAergic cells. All cells (n = 300) had good responses to non-NMDA agonists. Specific AMPA receptor responses could be obtained from almost all cells recorded: 94% of the AII (n = 17), 87% of the narrow-field (n = 45), 81% of the wide-field (n = 21), 85% of the glycinergic (n = 20) and 78% of the GABAergic cells (n = 9). KA receptor selective drugs were also effective on the majority of the AII (79%, n = 14), narrow-field (93%, n = 43), wide-field (85%, n = 26), glycinergic (94%, n = 16) and GABAergic amacrine cells (100%, n = 6). Among the cells tested for the two receptors (n = 65), we encountered both exclusive expression of AMPA or KA receptors and co-expression of the two types. Most narrow-field (70%, n = 27), glycinergic (81%, n = 16) and GABAergic cells (67%, n = 6) were found to have both AMPA and KA receptors. In contrast, only less than half of the wide-field cells (43%, n = 14) were found to co-express AMPA and KA receptors, most of them expressing exclusively AMPA (36%) or KA receptors (21%). We could elicit small NMDA responses from most of the wide-field (75%, n = 13) and GABAergic cells (67%, n = 3), whereas only 47% of the narrow-field (n = 15), 14% of the AII (n = 22) and no glycinergic cell (n = 2) reacted to NMDA. Abstract 83 Our data suggest that AMPA, KA and NMDA receptors are differentially expressed among different types of amacrine cells rather than among populations with different neurotransmitters or different dendritic coverage of the retina. Selective expression of kinetically different glutamate receptors among amacrine types may be involved in generating transient and sustained inhibitory pathways in the retina. Since AMPA and KA receptors are not generally clustered at the same postsynaptic sites, a single amacrine cell expressing both AMPA and KA receptors may provide inhibition with different temporal characteristics to individual synaptic partners.
Life of Varroa destructor, Anderson and Trueman, an ectoparasitic mite of honeybees, is divided into a reproductive phase in the bee brood and a phoretic phase during which the mite is attached to the adult bee. Phoretic mites leave the colony with workers involved in foraging tasks. Little information is available on the mortality of mites outside the colony. Mites may or not return to the colony as a result of death of the infested foragers, host change by drifting of foragers, or removal of mites outside the colony. That mites do not return to the colony was indicated by substantially higher infestation of outflying workers compared to the infestation of returning workers (Kutschker, 1999). The main objective of the study was to provide information whether V. destructor influences flight behaviour of foragers and consequently returning frequency of foragers to the colony. I first repeated the experiment of Kutschker (1999) examining the infestation of outflying and returning workers. Further, I registered flight duration of foragers using a video method. In this experiment I compared also the infestation and flight duration of bees of different genetic origin, Carnica from Oberursel and bees from Primorsky region. I investigated returning time of workers, returning frequency until evening, drifting to other colonies and orientation toward the nest entrance in the experiments in which workers were released in close vicinity of the colony. At last, I measured the loss of foragers in relation to colony infestation using a Bee Scan. Results from this study, listed below, showed considerable influence of V. destructor on flight behavior of foragers translating into loss of mites. Loss of mites with foragers add substantial component to mite mortality and was underestimated in previous studies. Such loss might be viewed as a mechanism of resistance against V. destructor. a) The mean infestation of outflying workers (0.019±0.018) was twice as the mean infestation of returning workers (0.009±0.018). The difference in the infestation between outflying and returning workers was more marked in highly infested colonies. b) Investigation of individually tagged workers by use of a two camera video recording device showed significantly higher infestation of outflying workers compared to returning workers. Mites were lost by the non returning of infested foragers (22%) and by loss of mites from foragers that returned to the colony without the mite (20%). A small portion of mites (1.8%) was gained. Loss of mites significantly exceeded mite gain. c) The flight duration of infested workers determined by using the same two camera video system was significantly higher in infested compared to uninfested workers of the same age that flew closest at time. The median flight duration of infested workers was 1.7 higher (214s) than the median duration of unifested workers (128s). d) Infested workers took 2.3 times longer to return to the colony than uninfested workers of the same age when released from the same locations, closest at time. The returning time increased with the distance of release. In a group of bees released simultaneously the infestation was higher in bees returning later and in those that did not return in the observation period of 15 min. e) Released workers did not return to the colony 1.5 more frequently than uninfested workers in evening. The difference in returning was significant for locations of 20 and 50m from the colony. No difference in returning between infested and uninfested workers were observed for the most distant location of 400m. f) No significant difference was found in returning time and/or in the returning frequency until evening between workers artificially infested overnight and naturally infested workers. Artificially infested workers returned later and less frequently than a control group indicating rapid influence of V. destructor on flight behavior of foragers. g) The orientation ability of infested workers toward the nest entrance was impaired. Infested workers compared to uninfested workers twice as often approached a dummy entrance before finding the nest entrance. h) No significant differences were found in drifting between infested and uninfested workers. Drifting in the neighboring nucleus colony occurred in about 1% occasions after release of marked workers. Similarly, more infested, but not significantly more infested workers (2.6%) entered a different colored hive than the same colored hive (1.9%). However, the number of drifting bees were to low to make results conclusive. i) The comparison between Carnica and Primorsky workers revealed higher infestation in Carnica compared to Primorsky. Further, Primorsky workers lost more mites during foraging due to mite loss from foragers and non returning of infested workers. No significant differences in flight duration were observed between the two bee stocks. j) Loss of foragers, as determined by the Bee Scan counts of outflying and returning foragers, and the infestation of outflying bees increased significantly over a period of 70 days. A colony with 7.7. higher infestation of outflying foragers lost 2.2. time more bees per flight per day compared to a low infested colony. k) The estimates of mite loss with foragers from mite population per day up to 3.1% exceeds approximately mite mortality of 1% within the colony as represented by counting dead mites on bottom board inserts.
Zahnwale sind die einzige Säugetiergruppe, die umfassend an ein Leben im Wasser angepasst ist und dabei ein aktives Sonarsystem zur Orientierung nutzt. Wahrscheinlich produzieren alle Zahnwalarten sonische oder ultrasonische Klicklaute, deren Echos die Tiere zu einem drei-dimensionalen "akustischen Bild" zusammensetzen. Im Gegensatz zu den meisten anderen Säugetieren produzieren Zahnwale diese Laute im Nasen-Komplex durch einen pneumatisch betriebenen Mechanismus. Jedoch spielt auch der Kehlkopf dabei eine wichtige Rolle, indem er den nötigen Luftdruck in der Nase erzeugt. Die Ergebnisse werden in Bezug auf die physikalischen Voraussetzungen eines Bio-Sonars in einer aquatischen Umwelt interpretiert. Um die morphologischen Eigenschaften (Struktur, Form, Topographie) der Organe im Kopf verschiedener Zahnwalarten vollständig zu erfassen, wurden diese mittels Computertomographie und Magnetresonanztomographie gescannt. Daraufhin wurden die Köpfe makroskopisch präpariert und histologische Schnitte von Gewebeproben angefertigt. Schließlich wurden die Ergebnisse durch digitale dreidimensionale Rekonstruktionen vervollständigt. Diese Studie basiert zum größten Teil auf der Untersuchung von Schweinswalen (Phocoena phocoena) und Pottwalen (Physeter macrocephalus). Zum Vergleich wurden fetale und postnatale Individuen anderer Zahnwalarten herangezogen wie Delphinartige (Delphinus delphis, Stenella attenuata, Tursiops truncatus), Flussdelphinartige (Pontoporia blainvillei, Inia geoffrensis) und der Zwergpottwal (Kogia breviceps). Im Allgemeinen konnte durch die morphologischen Daten dieser Studie die einheitliche "phonic lips-Hypothese der Schallproduktion bei Zahnwalen, wie sie von Cranford, Amundin und Norris [J. Morphol. 228 (1996): 223-285] aufgestellt wurde, bestätigt werden. Diese Hypothese beschreibt eine ventilartige Struktur in der Nasenpassage, den sogenannten "monkey lips/dorsal bursae complex" (MLDB) als Schallgenerator. Der pneumatische Mechanismus lässt die beiden Hälften des MLDB aufeinanderschlagen und erzeugt damit die initiale Schallschwingung im Gewebe ("phonic lips"). Diese Vibration wird über die Melone, einen großen Fettkörper in der vorderen Nasenregion der Zahnwale, fokussiert und in das umgebende Wasser übertragen. Die akzessorischen Nasensäcke und spezielle Schädel- und Bindegewebestrukturen können zu der Fokussierung beitragen. Obwohl die Echolotsignale der Schweinswale sehr spezialisiert zu sein scheinen, weisen die Übereinstimmungen in der Topographie und in der Form der Nasenstrukturen im Vergleich zu Delphinen und Flussdelphinartigen (Pontoporia und Inia) auf eine ganz ähnliche Funktion der Nase bezüglich der Produktion und Emission von Echolotschall hin. Allerdings gibt es einige anatomische Besonderheiten im Nasenkomplex des Schweinswals, welche die besondere Pulsstruktur der Sonarsignale erklären könnte. Diese werden in der Dissertation diskutiert. Bei einem Vergleich der Nasenmorphologie der Pottwale einerseits und der nicht-pottwalartigen Zahnwale andererseits fällt vor allem der Grad der Asymmetrie ins Auge. Im Gegensatz zu dem oben für Delphine und Schweinswale beschrieben Mechanismus betreiben Pottwale die Schallproduktion an den "monkey lips" mit Luft, die im rechten Nasengang unter Druck gesetzt wird (und nicht im nasopharyngealen Raum). Zudem könnte durch Änderung des Luftvolumens im rechten Nasengang die Schalltransmission zwischen den Fettkörpern, und somit die Schallemission, kontrolliert werden. In diesem theoretischen Szenario fungiert der breite rechte Nasengang als eine Art "akustische Schranke", welche zwischen zwei verschiedenen Modi der Klickproduktion wechselt: Der erste Modus mit luftgefülltem Nasengang führt zur Produktion der Kommunikationsklicks ("coda clicks") und der zweite Modus zur Aussendung von Echolotklicks, wenn der Nasengang kollabiert ist. Somit scheinen die zentrale Position und die nahezu horizontale Orientierung des rechten Nasengangs im Kopf der Pottwale als Schnittstelle (Schranke) zwischen den beiden großen Fettkörpern mit dem Mechanismus der Schallproduktion bei veränderten Luftvolumina korreliert zu sein. Die hier beschriebenen und andere Ergebnisse dieser Dissertation deuten darauf hin, dass die Gestalt und das Ausmaß der Nasenasymmetrie nicht mit der systematischen Zugehörigkeit der jeweiligen Art korrelieren, sondern durch den jeweiligen Typus des Sonarsystems als Ausdruck einer bestimmten ökologischen Anpassung bedingt sind. Bei Zahnwalen ist der Kehlkopf charakterisiert durch eine rostrale Verlängerung des Kehldeckels und der beiden Stellknorpel, die ein gänseschnabelartiges Rohr bilden, das von einem starken Sphinktermuskel umrundet und dabei in Position gehalten wird. Auf diese Weise ist das Atemrohr vollständig vom Digestionstrakt getrennt. Aus anatomischer Sicht ist es wahrscheinlich, dass die Schallerzeugung bei Zahnwalen durch eine Kolbenbewegung des Kehlkopfes in Richtung der Choanen zustande kommt, wodurch der Luftdruck im Nasenbereich erzeugt wird. Die Kontraktion des Sphinktermuskels als einem muskulösen Schlauch erzeugt wahrscheinlich die größte Kraft für diese Kolbenbewegung. Jedoch dürften die Muskelgruppen, die den Kehlkopf und das Zungenbein am Unterkiefer und an der Schädelbasis aufhängen, signifikant zur Druckerhöhung beitragen.