Search results for " niche"

showing 10 items of 252 documents

Evolution, ecology and systematics of Soldanella (Primulaceae) in the southern Apennines (Italy)

2015

Background The populations of Soldanella (Primulaceae) of the southern Apennines (Italy) are unique within the genus for their distribution and ecology. Their highly fragmented distribution range, with three main metapopulations on some of the highest mountains (Gelbison, Sila and Aspromonte massifs) of the area, poses intriguing questions about their evolutionary history and biogeography, and about the possibility of local endemisms. Aims and methods In order to clarify the phylogeny and biogeography of the three metapopulations of Soldanella in the southern Apennines, attributed to S. calabrella to date, and to identify possible local endemisms, a comparative approach based on the study o…

SystematicsDNA PlantRange (biology)rbcLBiogeographyPlastidsPhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPrimulaceaeEcological nichegeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorySoldanella sacraEcologybiologyEcologyBayes TheoremMassifbiology.organism_classificationtrnLBiological EvolutionEvolutionary radiationSoldanellaQuaternary radiationtotal ITSPrimulaceaeItalynew specieEvolutionary biologyResearch Article
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Understanding the scaling-up of community energy niches through Strategic Niche Management Theory: insights from Finland

2018

The growing phenomenon of civil society involvement in renewable energy generation has attracted researchers’ interest. However, rather little is known of how a diverse and relatively small sector such as community energy could scale up and promote a change in energy production. We examine this issue through the lens of Strategic Niche Management (SNM) and conceptualize community energy as a socio-technical niche that holds the potential to promote a transition to renewable energy. Drawing on interview data with members of community energy projects and experts in Finland, we identify different types of community energy projects and the factors that may prevent them from scaling up. The stud…

TypologyCivil societyuusiutuvat energialähteetProcess (engineering)020209 energyStrategy and ManagementEnergy (esotericism)Nicheta1172Context (language use)02 engineering and technology010501 environmental sciencesHM01 natural sciencesIndustrial and Manufacturing Engineeringcommunity energy0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringta517Economic geographyrenewable energy sources0105 earth and related environmental sciencesGeneral Environmental ScienceEcological nicheenergiata511Renewable Energy Sustainability and the Environmentbusiness.industryEnvironmental resource managementscaling-upRenewable energystrategic niche managementnichecommunities (groups)yhdyskunnatbusinessenergy
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Ecological Indicator Values for Europe (EIVE) 1.0

2023

Aims: To develop a consistent ecological indicator value system for Europe for five of the main plant niche dimensions: soil moisture (M), soil nitrogen (N), soil reaction (R), light (L) and temperature (T). Study area: Europe (and closely adjacent regions). Methods: We identified 31 indicator value systems for vascular plants in Europe that contained assessments on at least one of the five aforementioned niche dimensions. We rescaled the indicator values of each dimension to a continuous scale, in which 0 represents the minimum and 10 the maximum value present in Europe. Taxon names were harmonised to the Euro+Med Plantbase. For each of the five dimensions, we calculated European values fo…

Vascular plantNiche widthLightNitrogenPlant SciencenitrogenmoistureNiche position577: ÖkologieEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMoistureEllenberg indicator valueEcological indicator valuepHvascular plantTemperaturetemperaturebioindication ; ecological indicator value ; Ellenberg indicator value ; Europe ; light ; moisture ; niche position ; niche width ; nitrogen ; pH ; temperature ; vascular plantAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)bioindicationecological indicator valueBioindicationEurope580: Pflanzen (Botanik)niche widthlightniche position
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Importance of dispersal and thermal environment for mycorrhizal communities: lessons from Yellowstone National Park

2011

International audience; The relative importance of dispersal and niche restrictions remains a controversial topic in community ecology, especially for microorganisms that are often assumed to be ubiquitous. We investigated the impact of these factors for the community assembly of the root-symbiont arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) by sampling roots from geothermal and nonthermal grasslands in Yellowstone National Park (YNP), followed by sequencing and RFLP of AMF ribosomal DNA. With the exception of an apparent generalist RFLP type closely related to Glomus intraradices, a distance-based redundancy analysis indicated that the AMF community composition correlated with soil pH or pH-driven c…

Wyoming0106 biological sciencesMetacommunitycharacteristicshabitatYellowstone National Parkparc national de YellowstoneBiologyPoaceaecomplex mixtures010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesHot Springstype de solsoilrestriction fragment length polymorphismsMycorrhizaeSoil pHBotanyAnimalsEcosystemSoil MicrobiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsarbuscular mycorrhizal fungi community composition dispersal2. Zero hungerEcological nicheBisonCommunitypHEcologyfungiCommunity structuretemperaturefood and beveragesPlant communityHydrogen-Ion Concentration15. Life on landnicheBiological dispersalRFLP[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologySoil microbiologyPolymorphism Restriction Fragment Length010606 plant biology & botanyEcology
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Distribution models and environmental changes : Application to echinoid faunas in the Southern Ocean and ecoregionalization

2018

Current environmental changes, which impact marine environments, cover major scientific and societal issues, especially as these environmental changes are expected to accelerate along the 21st century. Understanding and forecasting the response of marine biodiversity to these changes is a pregnant scientific issue. Biogeographic and macroecological approaches provide a scientific framework for that purpose. They allow describing and understanding species distribution patterns at large spatial scale as well as estimating their potential shift with regards to environmental change. This is particularly true in the Southern Ocean, where the effects of climate change are already occurring and wh…

[SDE.BE] Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyEchinides[SDE.MCG] Environmental Sciences/Global ChangesModèles de niche écologique[SDV.BA] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Animal biologySpecies distribution modelsDynamic Energy BudgetSouthern OceanOcéan AustralEchinoids[SDV.BID] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biodiversity
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Macroecology of Southern Ocean echinoids : distribution, biogeography and modelisation

2011

What are the forcing factors and main patterns of species distribution? This question is the core of macroecological issues and is of particular interest in the present context of global warming. The main objectives of this thesis were to determine the current distribution patterns of Antarctic and sub-Antarctic echinoid species at the scale of the whole Southern Ocean and to highlight the forcing factors that control them. The ecological niche modelling of 19 echinoid species showed that distribution is mainly structured in two patterns: (1) a first one represented by species that are not limited to the south of the Polar Front and distributed from the Antarctic coasts to the sub-Antarctic…

[SDV.SA] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciencesEcological niche modellingModèles de niche écologique[SDV.BA] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Animal biologyÉchinidesBiogéographie[ SDV.BA ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Animal biologyOcéan AustralBiogeographySouthern OceanMacroecologyMacroécologie[ SDV.SA ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciencesEchinoids
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Ecological role of mycotoxins produced by Fusarium graminearum : consequences of the presence of deoxynivalenol (DON) in crop residues on the soil mi…

2012

Fusarium graminearum is a plant pathogenic fungus, causing devastating disease “Fusarium head blight” (FHB) in cereals including wheat and maize. It also contaminates the grains with mycotoxins including deoxynivalenol (DON) which are toxic to human and animals. This disease has resulted in the serious losses in grain yield and quality. We established through a first bibliographic review that during off season fungus survives saprophytically on the crop residues (ecological habitat) and serves as primary inoculum for the next season crop. However, we noticed also that the literature was poor about the role mycotoxins could play in the establishment of F. graminearum in such a habitat. The m…

[SDV.SA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciencesCrop residuesPreceding cropsoil tillageRésidus de culturesoil microbial community structureEcological requirements[ SDV.EE ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environmentsaprophytic abilityTillagequantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR)population dynamicsecological nicheearthwormSaprotrophic development[ SDV.SA ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciences[SDV.EE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment[SDV.SA] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural scienceswheat strawWheat diseasesFusarium Head Blight (FHB)Mycotoxins[SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio]terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (TRFLP)Habitat[SDV.EE] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environmenthigh performance liquid chromatography (HPLC)Soil microbial ecologyamensalism
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Cellular Composition and Organization of the Subventricular Zone and Rostral Migratory Stream in the Adult and Neonatal Common Marmoset Brain

2011

The adult subventricular zone (SVZ) of the lateral ventricle contains neural stem cells. In rodents, these cells generate neuroblasts that migrate as chains toward the olfactory bulb along the rostral migratory stream (RMS). The neural-stem-cell niche at the ventricular wall is conserved in various animal species, including primates. However, it is unclear how the SVZ and RMS organization in nonhuman primates relates to that of rodents and humans. Here we studied the SVZ and RMS of the adult and neonatal common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus), a New World primate used widely in neuroscience, by electron microscopy, and immunohistochemical detection of cell-type-specific markers. The marmoset …

animal structuresRostral migratory streamNeurogenesisanimal diseasesSubventricular zoneArticlecommon marmosetNeural Stem CellsNeuroblastrostral migratory streamCell MovementLateral Ventriclesbiology.animalmedicineAnimalsHumansStem Cell NicheCell ProliferationbiologyGeneral NeuroscienceNeurogenesisBrainMarmosetsubventricular zoneCallithrixbiology.organism_classificationImmunohistochemistryMagnetic Resonance ImagingCallithrixNeural stem cellOlfactory bulbMicroscopy Electronmedicine.anatomical_structureAnimals Newbornnervous systemNeuroscience
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Plasticity in the trophic niche of an invasive ant explains establishment success and long‐term coexistence

2021

Invasive species are one of the main threats to biodiversity worldwide and the processes enabling their establishment and persistence remain poorly understood. In generalist consumers, plasticity in diet and trophic niche may play a crucial role in invasion success. There is growing evidence that invasive ants, in particular, occupy lower trophic levels in their introduced range compared to the native one, but evidences remain fragmented. We conducted stable isotope analysis at five locations distributed on two continents to infer the trophic position of the invasive ant Formica paralugubris in the native and introduced part of the range. This species forms large colonies and can be a vorac…

ants; impacts; invasive species; niche plasticity; stable isotopes; trophic levelEcologyniche plasticitystable isotopesantsBiologyPlasticitytrophic levelANTInvasive speciesinvasive speciesTerm (time)impactsTrophic nicheEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTrophic levelOikos
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Consistent phenological shifts in the making of a biodiversity hotspot: the Cape flora

2011

Abstract Background The best documented survival responses of organisms to past climate change on short (glacial-interglacial) timescales are distributional shifts. Despite ample evidence on such timescales for local adaptations of populations at specific sites, the long-term impacts of such changes on evolutionary significant units in response to past climatic change have been little documented. Here we use phylogenies to reconstruct changes in distribution and flowering ecology of the Cape flora - South Africa's biodiversity hotspot - through a period of past (Neogene and Quaternary) changes in the seasonality of rainfall over a timescale of several million years. Results Forty-three dist…

ecological nichesFloraEvolutionClimate ChangeBiodiversityClimate changesequence dataevolutionary responsesBiology580 Plants (Botany)MagnoliopsidaSouth AfricaCapeAdaptive radiationQH359-425Survival responsesskin and connective tissue diseasesrapid evolutionEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyEcological nicheEvolutionary BiologyEcologyheterogeneous environmentsPhenologyEcologyEPS-4flowering timeBiodiversityBiological EvolutionBiosystematiekfossil recordBiodiversity hotspot10121 Department of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany1105 Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematicssouthern africaclimate-changeBiosystematicssense organsadaptive radiationResearch ArticleBMC Evolutionary Biology
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