TL;DR: The first multilocus analysis of phylogenetic relationships among genera of Erinaceidae and estimated the split times between and within the two subfamilies is performed, producing a well-resolved molecular phylogeny.
TL;DR: The African hedgehog, Atelerix albiventris, is examined, in light of unusual features reported in shrews and moles, and proves to share many but not all of the characteristics seen in these other insectivores.
Abstract: To obtain further perspective on reproduction and particularly gamete function among so-called primitive mammals presently grouped in the Order Insectivora, we have examined the African hedgehog, Atelerix albiventris, in light of unusual features reported in shrews and moles. Atelerix proves to share many but not all of the characteristics seen in these other insectivores. The penis of Atelerix has a 'snail-like' form, but lacks the surface spines common in insectivores and a number of other mammals. Hedgehog spermatozoa display an eccentric insertion of the tail on the sperm head, and they manifest the barbs on the perforatorium that, in shrews, probably effect the initial binding of the sperm head to the zona pellucida. As a possible correlate, the structural matrix of the hedgehog acrosome comprises only two main components, as judged by immunoblotting, rather than the complex of peptides seen in the matrix of some higher mammals. The Fallopian tube of Atelerix is relatively simple; it displays only minor differences in width and in the arborized epithelium between the isthmus and ampulla, and shows no evidence of the unusual sperm crypts that characterize the isthmus or ampulla, depending on the species, in shrews and moles. In common with other insectivores, Atelerix appears to be an induced ovulator, as judged by the ovulation of some 6-8 eggs by about 23 h after injection of hCG. The dense cumulus oophorus appeared to have little matrix, in keeping with the modest dimensions of the tubal ampulla and, while it was not quite as discrete as that of soricids, it did show the same insensitivity to 0.5% (w/v) ovine or bovine hyaluronidase.
TL;DR: Investigating hedgehogs' Leishmania infection in different foci in Tunisia located along a North-South transect, during and outside different transmission seasons corroborate the hypothesis they constitute reservoir hosts and confirm natural infection of Atelerix algirus and originally of Paraechinus aethiopicus in Tunisia.
TL;DR: The clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical findings in a series of primary central nervous system neoplasms in African hedgehogs (Atelerix albiventris) are described, finding one oligodendroglioma was found and one metastasized to the tongue.
Abstract: In this retrospective study, we describe the clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical findings in a series of primary central nervous system (CNS) neoplasms in African hedgehogs (Atelerix albivent...