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Creators/Authors contains: "Wallace, R L"

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  1. Most species of Keratella possess dome-shaped, dorsal plates comprising a network of polyhedral units (facets), delineated by slightly raised ridges. The arrangement of facets define a species’ facet pattern (FP), with the resulting structure resembling a geodesic dome. Researchers have sorted species into categories based on their FPs, but those have not been analyzed. Additionally, while a strong lorica has been suggested to protect Keratella from predatory attack or other actions causing blunt force trauma (BFT), we know little of how that occurs. Thus, in our study we tested two hypotheses. (1) There is support for categorizing Keratella species into unique groupings based on their FPs. (2) FPs provide resistance to physical stresses. To test that hypothesis we used the structural analysis software SkyCiv©. Our results indicate support for four FP categories. Additionally, the SkyCiv analysis provided preliminary ‘proof-of-concept’ that Keratella FPs have a functional significance: i.e., adding or subtracting facets in our model was followed by a change in predicted structural reliability. We posit that FPs are adaptations protecting Keratella from fractures to the lorica that may result from BFT incurred during predatory attack by copepods or while caught within the branchial chambers of daphnids 
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  2. Dolan, John (Ed.)
    Abstract Mexico is a megadiverse country, with 10% of all known species found within its borders. The CONABIO catalogue registers rotifers as one of the best-studied groups of animals in Mexico, with the number of species recorded representing 18% of the total global rotifer fauna. However, this registry does not record a single exotic species of Rotifera in Mexico. Here, we confirm the presence of six species of exotic rotifers in Mexican inland waters, highlighting the case of Kellicottia bostoniensis, recorded in Mexico since the 1990’s, but never as an exotic species. 
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