Screening of Anti Diuretic Activity Aerva Lanata Extracts against Furosemide Exposed Rodent Models | Chapter  16 | New Visions in Biological Science Vol. 8

Bioactive chemicals from aromatic and medicinal plants demonstrated excellent antibacterial and antifungal activity. The antidiuretic activity of the Aerva lanata was researched and described in the current study. Medicinal plants were utilised to inhibit infections and cure most disorders such as diuretics and diabetics. Total urine production in normal animas was 1.320.22 ml/kg per dayContinue reading “Screening of Anti Diuretic Activity Aerva Lanata Extracts against Furosemide Exposed Rodent Models | Chapter  16 | New Visions in Biological Science Vol. 8”

Neuroprotective Potential of Fragaria nubicola Juice on Ischemia Reperfusion Induced Brain Injury in Rats | Chapter  15 | New Visions in Biological Science Vol. 8

Brain stroke is one of the primary causes of death in the absence of proper treatment. Fragaria nubicola has potential antioxidant action and may be cytoprotective against ischemia-reperfusion brain injury due to the presence of phenolic chemicals. ellagic acid and phenolic compounds are abundant in Fragaria nubicola. We used neurobehavioral tests such as the neurodeficitContinue reading “Neuroprotective Potential of Fragaria nubicola Juice on Ischemia Reperfusion Induced Brain Injury in Rats | Chapter  15 | New Visions in Biological Science Vol. 8”

Study on Zoomorphic Variation with Copulation Duration in Centrobolus | Chapter  14 | New Visions in Biological Science Vol. 8

As a kind of syn-copula mate-guarding, Centrobolus usually has protracted copulation. In four species of the millipede genus Centrobolus, variations in copulation duration were calculated and examined. All four species had distinct mean copulation durations, however only two of them differed intra-specifically. Copulation duration coefficient of variation (CV) was different between C. inscriptus and C.Continue reading “Study on Zoomorphic Variation with Copulation Duration in Centrobolus | Chapter  14 | New Visions in Biological Science Vol. 8”

Assessment of Latitudinal Gradient in Gnomeskelus Species Richness | Chapter  13 | New Visions in Biological Science Vol. 8

The Tropical Conservativism Hypothesis proposes that processes of speciation, extinction, and dispersal resulted in higher species richness in the tropics and decreased away from the equator, implying that species richness increased in the tropics and fell away from the equator. The Biogeographical Conservativism Hypothesis proposes that the processes in question are not unique to theContinue reading “Assessment of Latitudinal Gradient in Gnomeskelus Species Richness | Chapter  13 | New Visions in Biological Science Vol. 8”

A Study on Centrobolus titanophilus Size Dimorphism Shows Width-Based Variability | Chapter  12 | New Visions in Biological Science Vol. 8

The goal of this study was to look into the sexual size dimorphism of Centrobolus titanophilus. In Diplopoda, one sex was larger than the other, demonstrating reversed sexual size dimorphism (SSD). The SSD of C. titanophilus was derived using data collected in South Africa’s Cape Province. C. titanophilus had an average size of 285 41.875Continue reading “A Study on Centrobolus titanophilus Size Dimorphism Shows Width-Based Variability | Chapter  12 | New Visions in Biological Science Vol. 8”

Xylophagous Millipede Surface Area to Volume Ratios are Size-dependent in Forests: A Brief Study | Chapter  11 | New Visions in Biological Science Vol. 8

A water conservation hypothesis describes a consistent effect of rising precipitation (and resource abundance) on body size reductions. The goal of this study was to look into a water conservation theory in millipedes and compare the high long-term mean annual precipitation of forest biome species (750-1500 mm) to the lower long-term mean annual precipitation ofContinue reading “Xylophagous Millipede Surface Area to Volume Ratios are Size-dependent in Forests: A Brief Study | Chapter  11 | New Visions in Biological Science Vol. 8”

Study on Size Dimorphism in Six Juliform Millipedes | Chapter  10 | New Visions in Biological Science Vol. 8

The goal of this work was to explain Sexual Size Dimorphism (SSD) in the diplopod genera Bicoxidens, Doratogonus, Harpagophora, Julomorpha, and Orthoporoides, in which length, width, and rings are the primary components of interspecific variation. The data sets for B. brincki Schubart, [1] D. annulipes Carl, 1917, H. spirobolina (Karsch, 1881), J. hilaris Attems, 1928,Continue reading “Study on Size Dimorphism in Six Juliform Millipedes | Chapter  10 | New Visions in Biological Science Vol. 8”

Study on Year-round Correlation between Mass and Copulation Duration in Forest Millipedes | Chapter  9 | New Visions in Biological Science Vol. 8

Diet, copulation time, copulation energy expenditure, oxygen intake, precipitation, sex, and temperature are all factors that influence diplopod size. In the diplopod genus Centrobolus, sexual size dimorphism (SSD) has a positive connection with body size and copulation duration. The goal of this study was to see if body mass was connected to copulation duration overContinue reading “Study on Year-round Correlation between Mass and Copulation Duration in Forest Millipedes | Chapter  9 | New Visions in Biological Science Vol. 8”

Longer Males Determined with Positive Skew and Kurtosis in Centrobolus (Diplopoda: Spirobolida: Pachybolidae) | Chapter  8 | New Visions in Biological Science Vol. 8

In the diplopod genus Centrobolus, sexual size dimorphism (SSD) displays a positive connection with body size width. The key components of interspecific variation in diplopod species are length, width, and rings. In six species, interspecific size variation was estimated with the goal of testing data sets for skewness and kurtosis. Positive skew and positive kurtosisContinue reading “Longer Males Determined with Positive Skew and Kurtosis in Centrobolus (Diplopoda: Spirobolida: Pachybolidae) | Chapter  8 | New Visions in Biological Science Vol. 8”

Determining the Secondary Role of UV Light in Swimmers Melanoma Genesis | Chapter  7 | New Visions in Biological Science Vol. 8

Swimmers are more likely than non-swimmers to develop cutaneous melanoma. UV exposure is the sole cause of cutaneous melanomas in swimmers, according to experimental research. The incidence of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) breakdown in hair follicles has been proposed by several authors as an etiological component. Keratinocytes produce H2O2, which diffuses into melanocytes and may haveContinue reading “Determining the Secondary Role of UV Light in Swimmers Melanoma Genesis | Chapter  7 | New Visions in Biological Science Vol. 8”

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