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Dan Wharton

Chicago Zoological Society

Publishes on Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, Mitochondrial Function and Pathology, Bat Biology and Ecology Studies. 17 papers and 1k citations.

17Publications
1kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Maternal inheritance of mitochondrial DNA during backcrossing of two species of mice
Ulf Gyllensten, Dan Wharton, Allan C. Wilson|Journal of Heredity|1985
Cited by 198

As judged by restriction analysis, mitochondrial DNA shows strictly maternal inheritance during 6-8 generations of backcrossing in both directions between Mus domesticus and Mus spretus. The average number of paternal mitochondrial genomes contributed to the next generation is estimated to be no more than one per thousand maternal mitochondrial genomes contributed. Despite the estimated accumulation of over 2000 mutational differences between M. spretus and M. domesticus mtDNAs since their divergence from a common ancestor, each of these mitochondrial DNAs, whether on a M. spretus or a M. domesticus nuclear background, allows mice to develop with seemingly normal viability and fertility.

The Future of Zoos: A New Model for Cultural Institutions
John Fraser, Dan Wharton|Curator The Museum Journal|2007
Cited by 51

Abstract Over the last 30 years, the international zoo movement has gradually adopted conservation as its mantra. World‐class zoos have invested substantially in species conservation and animal research as part of their involvement in wildlife conservation. However, zoo exhibit interpretation, policy development, and strategic planning are yet to be organized around a well‐developed agenda with a clear set of conservation objectives. As museums increasingly redefine their role in society to speak about alternative futures for living with nature, zoos have the potential to become much more focused cultural change agents, potentially crafting a new vision for how society can live in a productive relationship with the world's remaining biodiversity. This article argues for an activist approach in which institutions with living collections would take on unique conservation tasks including scientifically grounded promotion of conservation values.

Mta, the maternally transmitted antigen, is determined jointly by the chromosomal Hmt and the extrachromosomal Mtf genes.
K F Lindahl, Barbara Hausmann, Phillip J. Robinson et al.|The Journal of Experimental Medicine|1986
Cited by 35Open Access

Mus spretus from four stocks, originating in Spain, Portugal, and Morocco, were tested for the maternally transmitted antigen, Mta. All expressed a variant form not found in other species of mice. Analysis of appropriate crosses with inbred mice showed that the spretus form of Mta is determined by a new allele, c, of the Hmt gene. The Hmtc allele has been isolated in coupling with four different H-2 haplotypes. It is possible to raise CTL specific for the spretus form of Mta. The maternally transmitted factor, Mtf alpha s, of spretus mice determines, in conjunction with the Hmta allele of C57BL/6, an Mta that is indistinguishable from the common form found in C57BL/6 and most other inbred mice. Our experiments show that the specificity of the cell surface antigen Mta is governed jointly by the cytoplasmic gene Mtf and the chromosomal gene Hmt. We propose that Hmt encodes a class I histocompatibility antigen that acts as a restricting element for the Mtf gene product, thus meeting the requirements of T killer cell recognition.

Assessment of conservation units for the Sumatran rhinoceros (<i>Dicerorhinus sumatrensis</i>)
Cited by 16

Abstract An assessment of conservation units for the Sumatran rhinoceros ( Dicerorhinus sumatrensis ) was conducted using a population aggregation analysis (PAA) of mitochondrial DNA site substitutions. Populations were defined as the three geographically separated regions of West Malaysia, Sumatra, and Borneo. The intent of this assessment was to explore management options for this highly endangered lineage rather than conduct a traditional taxonomic revision. Individual DNA positions were not diagnostic for any population. A single haplotype provided a character as support for diagnosing the West Malaysian and Bornean population. The haplotypes on West Malaysia and Sumatra were more similar to each other than either was to the one on Borneo. These data, and a review of the morphological characters, support the option of treating Sumatran rhinos as a single conservation unit, providing managers with greater flexibility in managing the unique Dicerorhine lineage. © 1995 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.