Artículo
First record of albinism in the taragüi gecko homonota taragui (Squamata: Phyllodactylidae)
Fecha
2015-07Registro en:
Courtis, Azul Celeste, et al., 2015. First record of albinism in the taragüi gecko homonota taragui (Squamata: Phyllodactylidae). Herpetology Notes. Milán: Societas Europaea Herpetologica, vol. 8, p. 425-427. ISSN 2071-5773.
2071-5773
Autor
Courtis, Azul Celeste
Cajade, Rodrigo
Piñeiro, José Miguel
Hernando, Alejandra Beatriz
Marangoni, Federico
Institución
Resumen
Albinism is a rare, congenital, genetically inherited condition characterized by a partial or complete lack of melanin; the pigment that colors the skin, eyes and hair or feathers (López and Ghirardi, 2011). This condition results from the expression of a recessive allele, which causes tyrosinase inactivity, an enzyme involved in melanin biosynthesis (Krecsák, 2008). There are two types of albinism, complete albinism, a condition expressed phenotypically as the complete absence of melanin in the entire body; and partial albinism, when melanin is reduced in the whole body or the absence is located in just one part of the body (Klug and Cummings, 1999).