Search results for " Urinary"

showing 10 items of 569 documents

Appendix E. Principal component analysis of diets and Daphnia.

2016

Principal component analysis of diets and Daphnia.

fungireproductive and urinary physiology
researchProduct

Appendix D. Correlations between different nutrients of diets and offspring and body size of Daphnia.

2016

Correlations between different nutrients of diets and offspring and body size of Daphnia.

fungireproductive and urinary physiology
researchProduct

Do the benefits of polyandry scale with outbreeding?

2015

Lay Summary Mating can be both costly and dangerous. Despite this, females of many species typically mate more than once and with different males. We found that female seed bugs only benefit from mating with more than 1 male if one of her mates was a different species. Females needed only 1 mating with her own species to maximize her fitness. Thus, multiple mating may be adaptive in areas where the 2 species coexist.

genetic compatabilitysukupuolivalintapolyandrypolyandriabehavior and behavior mechanismsOriginal Articlesexual selection.reproductive interferencereproductive and urinary physiology
researchProduct

Fecundity determines the outcome of founding queen associations in ants

2021

AbstractAnimal cooperation evolved because of its benefits to the cooperators. Pleometrosis in ants - the cooperation of queens to found a colony - benefits colony growth, but also incurs costs for some of the cooperators because only one queen usually survives the association. While several traits are associated with queen survival, they tend to be confounded and it is unclear which factor specifically determines the outcome of pleometrosis. In this study, we used the ant Lasius niger to monitor offspring production in colonies founded by one or two queens. Then, we experimentally paired queens that differed in fecundity but not in size, and vice versa, to disentangle the effect of these f…

genetic structuresEvolutionBehavioural ecologyOffspringScienceeducationZoologyArticle590 Tiere (Zoologie)Queen (playing card)570 Life sciences590 Zoological sciencesAnimalsSocial Behaviorreproductive and urinary physiologySocial evolutionBehavior AnimalbiologyAntsReproductionLasiusQRAnimal behaviourFecunditybiology.organism_classificationFertilitybehavior and behavior mechanismsMedicineEntomology570 Biowissenschaften
researchProduct

Laparoscopic retropubic colposuspension for the treatment of genuine stress incontinence. long term follow up

2003

Objectives: The minimal surgical treatment of stress urinary incontinence with endoscopic operation has four basic advantages compared with traditional open procedures: decreased blood loss due to better visualization of the space of Retzius, decreased postoperative pain, shorter hospitalization and faster recovery. Comparative studies have shown a higher subjective and objective cure rate for the retropubic urethropexy(Burch procedure) than for the anterior colporraphy or endoscopic needle urethropexy(1). The aim of this study is to evaluate the safety, the efficacy and morbility of laparoscopic Burch procedure for the surgical treatment of genuine stress incontinence. Methods: We reviewed…

laparoscopic Burchretropubic urethropexystress urinary incontinenceSettore MED/40 - Ginecologia E Ostetricia
researchProduct

The influence of bacteria-dominated diets on Daphnia magna somatic growth, reproduction, and lipid composition

2012

We explored how dietary bacteria affect the life history traits and biochemical composition of Daphnia magna, using three bacteria taxa with very different lipid composition. Our objectives were to (1) examine whether and how bacteria-dominated diets affect Daphnia survival, growth, and fecundity, (2) see whether bacteria-specific fatty acid (FA) biomarkers accrued in Daphnia lipids, and (3) explore the quantitative relationship between bacteria availability in Daphnia diets and the amounts of bacterial FA in their lipids. Daphnia were fed monospecific and mixed diets of heterotrophic (Micrococcus luteus) or methanotrophic bacteria (Methylomonas methanica and Methylosinus trichosporium) and…

media_common.quotation_subjectDaphnia magnaHeterotrophApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicrobiologyDaphniaBotanyAnimalsFood sciencereproductive and urinary physiologymedia_commonchemistry.chemical_classificationCarbon IsotopesBacteriaNitrogen IsotopesEcologybiologyReproductionfungiFatty acidbiology.organism_classificationLipidsDietCryptomonasFertilityDaphniachemistryPhytoplanktonMethylomonas methanicaReproductionBiomarkersBacteriaFEMS Microbiology Ecology
researchProduct

Gene expression patterns associated with caste and reproductive status in ants: worker-specific genes are more derived than queen-specific ones.

2013

Variation in gene expression leads to phenotypic diversity and plays a central role in caste differentiation of eusocial insect species. In social Hymenoptera, females with the same genetic background can develop into queens or workers, which are characterized by divergent morphologies, behaviours and lifespan. Moreover, many social insects exhibit behaviourally distinct worker castes, such as brood-tenders and foragers. Researchers have just started to explore which genes are differentially expressed to achieve this remarkable phenotypic plasticity. Although the queen is normally the only reproductive individual in the nest, following her removal, young brood-tending workers often develop …

media_common.quotation_subjectHymenopteraInsectNestGeneticsAnimalsreproductive and urinary physiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonPhenotypic plasticitybiologyBehavior AnimalEcologyAntsReproductionfungiCasteWorker policingbiology.organism_classificationEusocialityPhenotypeSocial DominanceEvolutionary biologybehavior and behavior mechanismsFemaleSocial evolutionTranscriptomeMolecular ecology
researchProduct

Gene expression is stronger associated with behaviour than with age and fertility in ant workers

2018

AbstractThe ecological success of social insects is based on division of labour, not only between queens and workers, but also among workers. Whether a worker tends the brood or forages is strongly influenced by age, fertility and nutritional status, with brood carers being younger, more fecund and corpulent. Here, we experimentally disentangle behaviour from age and fertility inTemnothorax longispinosusant workers and analyse how these parameters are linked to whole-body gene expression. Our transcriptome analysis reveals four times more genes associated with behaviour than with age and only few fertility-associated genes. Brood carers exhibited an upregulation of genes involved in lipid b…

media_common.quotation_subjectfungiNutritional statusFertilityBiologyANTBroodTranscriptomeLipid biosynthesisGene expressionbehavior and behavior mechanismsDivision of labourreproductive and urinary physiologyDemographymedia_common
researchProduct

Data from: Recent speciation and secondary contact in endemic ants

2014

Gene flow is the main force opposing divergent selection, and its effects are greater in populations in close proximity. Thus, complete reproductive isolation between parapatric populations is not expected, particularly in the absence of ecological adaptation and sharp environmental differences. Here, we explore the biogeographical patterns of an endemic ant species, Cataglyphis floricola, for which two colour morphs (black and bicolour) coexist in parapatry throughout continuous sandy habitat in southern Spain. Discriminant analyses of six biometric measurements of male genitalia and 27 cuticular hydrocarbons reveal high differentiation between morphs. Furthermore, the low number of shared…

medicine and health careCataglyphis floricolaSocial evolutionanimal structuresgenetic structuresfungiMedicineLife sciencesreproductive and urinary physiology
researchProduct

Data from: Gene expression patterns associated with caste and reproductive status in ants: worker-specific genes are more derived than queen-specific…

2013

Variation in gene expression leads to phenotypic diversity and plays a central role in caste differentiation of eusocial insect species. In social Hymenoptera, females with the same genetic background can develop into queens or workers, which are characterized by divergent morphologies, behaviors and lifespan. Moreover, many social insects exhibit behaviorally distinct worker castes, such as brood-tenders and foragers. Researchers have just started to explore which genes are differentially expressed to achieve this remarkable phenotypic plasticity. Although the queen is normally the only reproductive individual in the nest, following her removal, young brood-tending workers often develop ov…

medicine and health careLife History EvolutionBehavior/Social Evolutionfungibehavior and behavior mechanismsMedicineTemnothorax longispinosusLife sciencesreproductive and urinary physiology
researchProduct