Publications by authors named "J Vukic"

Article Synopsis
  • Certain animal groups underwent significant changes in morphology, allowing them to adapt to diverse environments, illustrating the concept of convergent evolution.
  • Gobies, a diverse group of fishes, exhibit a variety of shapes and lifestyles, which have enabled them to colonize various habitats in Europe.
  • Through analyses of body shape changes, researchers found that gobies demonstrate convergent evolution linked to their locomotion in four ecological groups, providing insights into how species adapt to their environments.
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Diplozoidae are common monogenean ectoparasites of cyprinoid fish, with the genus being the most diversified. Despite recent studies on Diplozoidae from Europe, Africa and Asia, the diversity, distribution and phylogeny of this parasite group appears to be still underestimated in the Middle East. The objective of this study was to investigate the diversity, endemism and host specificity of diplozoids parasitizing cyprinoid fish from the Middle East, considering this region as an important historical interchange of fish fauna, and to elucidate the phylogenetic position of Middle Eastern species within Diplozoidae.

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Marine species exhibiting wide distributional ranges are frequently subdivided into discrete genetic units over limited spatial scales. This is often due to specific life-history traits or oceanographic barriers that prevent gene flow. Fine-scale sampling studies revealed distinct phylogeographic patterns in the northeastern Atlantic and the Mediterranean, ranging from panmixia to noticeable population genetic structure.

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Host-parasite coevolution is one of the fundamentals of evolutionary biology. Due to the intertwined evolutionary history of two interacting species and reciprocal coadaptation processes of hosts and parasites, we can expect that studying parasites will shed more light onto the evolutionary processes of their hosts. Monogenea (ectoparasitic Platyhelminthes) and their cyprinoid fish hosts represent one of the best models for studying host-parasite evolutionary relationships using a cophylogenetic approach.

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The suborder Gobioidei is among the most diverse groups of vertebrates, comprising about 2310 species. In the fossil record gobioids date back to the early Eocene (c. 50 m.

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