Fish cytogenetic research: advances, applications and perspectives
Ozouf-Costaz, C.; Foresti, F. (1992). Fish cytogenetic research: advances, applications and perspectives. Neth. J. Zool. 42(2-3): 277-290. https://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156854291X00333
In: Netherlands Journal of Zoology. E.J. Brill: Leiden. ISSN 0028-2960; e-ISSN 1568-542X, more
Also appears in:
Osse, J.W.M.; Hollingworth, C.E. (Ed.) (1992). The Threatened World of Fish: Proceedings of the 7th International Ichthyology Congress, The Hague (The Netherlands), August 26-30, 1991. Netherlands Journal of Zoology, 42(2-3). E.J. Brill: Leiden. 524 pp., more
Methods developed since 1976 for harvesting, preparing and banding fish chromosomes are now commonly used for taxonomic and philogenetic studies, genetic control and chomosome manipulations in fish breeding and in monitoring aquatic pollutants by examining chromosomal aberrations. These studies have chiefly concerned common temperate freshwater species; the same procedures, when applied to marine and coldwater fish, often provide unsatisfactory results, especially in cell culture. A concerted effort should be made in marine fish, and to develop molecular cytogenetic methods to provide a more powerful tool to study chromosomal evolution.
All data in the Integrated Marine Information System (IMIS) is subject to the VLIZ privacy policy