Search results for "Biological dispersal"

showing 10 items of 326 documents

The phylogeny of the European high mountain genus Adenostyles (Asteraceae-Senecioneae) reveals that edaphic shifts coincide with dispersal events.

2013

UNLABELLED PREMISE OF THE STUDY Heterogeneity of edaphic conditions plays a large role in driving the diversification of many plant groups. In the Alps and other European high mountains, many closely related calcicole and calcifuge plant taxa exist. To better understand patterns and processes of edaphic differentiation, the phylogeny of the edaphically variable genus Adenostyles was studied. The genus contains three species, of which A. alpina has five subspecies. Each species and subspecies is largely confined to either calcareous or noncalcareous substrates. • METHODS We analyzed the phylogeny of Adenostyles using DNA sequences of nrITS, nrETS, nuclear chalcone synthase, and three plastid…

biologyEcologyAltitudeCalcicoleEdaphicPlant ScienceSenecioneaeSubspeciesAsteraceaebiology.organism_classificationCalcifugeAdenostyles alpinaBiological EvolutionEuropePhylogeographySoilBotanyGeneticsBiological dispersalAdenostylesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEcosystemPhylogenyDemographyAmerican journal of botany
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The acanthocephalan parasite Polymorphus minutus alters the geotactic and clinging behaviours of two sympatric amphipod hosts: the native Gammarus pu…

2005

Acanthocephala are parasites with complex life cycles involving arthropod intermediate hosts and vertebrate final hosts. They use predation as a means of transmission, and some species have developed the ability to modify behaviour of their intermediate hosts to enhance the probability of ingestion by the definitive host. Knowledge of how a single parasite species is adapted to modify the behaviour of different intermediate host species is important for the understanding of parasitic transmission in host communities. In Burgundy, the freshwater amphipod crustaceans Gammarus pulex (native species) and Gammarus roeseli (eastern European invader) are both intermediate hosts for the acanthoceph…

biologyEcologyIntermediate hostZoologyIntroduced speciesbiology.organism_classificationEastern europeanGammarus pulexPulexGammarusGammarus roeseliBiological dispersalAnimal Science and ZoologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Zoology
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Evolutionary significance of the invasion of introduced populations into the native range of Meconopsis cambrica

2011

The long history of the deliberate or accidental and human-mediated dispersal of flowering plants has led to the introduction of foreign genotypes of many species into areas of Europe hitherto occupied by potentially distinct native populations. Studies of the genetic and evolutionary consequences of such changes are handicapped by the difficulty of identifying the surviving native populations of many species in the absence of clear morphological differences. We investigated the relationship between putative native and introduced populations of the herbaceous perennial Meconopsis cambrica (Papaveraceae), as the isolated native populations of this species can be identified by historical and …

biologyEcologyMeconopsis cambricaIntrogressionIntroduced speciesNative plantbiology.organism_classificationInvasive speciesGene flowEvolutionary biologyGeneticsBiological dispersalInternal transcribed spacerEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMolecular Ecology
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What is the origin of the Scottish populations of the European endemic Cherleria sedoides (Caryophyllaceae)?

2015

Cherleria sedoides L. (Minuartia sedoides (L.) Hiern) is a montane perennial which, with some species in Minuartia sect. Spectabiles, is more closely related to Scleranthus than to other Minuartia species and is therefore best restored to the reinstated and redefined genus Cherleria. Reconstruction of the ancestral area of the clade containing C. sedoides suggests that it evolved in the Alps or the Balkan peninsula. The species now has an unusual distribution, being present in the mountains of southern Europe and Scotland but absent from the Arctic. Three historical scenarios that might have led to the presence of the species in Scotland are outlined and tested by a molecular analysis compa…

biologyEcologyScleranthusBotanyLast Glacial MaximumMetapopulationPlant Sciencebiology.organism_classificationExternal transcribed spacerGeographyGenusMinuartiaBotanyBiological dispersalInternal transcribed spacerEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
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Restrictive mate choice criteria cause age-specific inbreeding in female black grouse, Tetrao tetrix

2012

Inbreeding is generally rare in large, natural populations yet mate choice often appears to be random with respect to kinship. This suggests that the risks of inbreeding may be small because passive mechanisms of inbreeding avoidance, for example dispersal, are effective at lowering inbreeding risk. Previous theoretical and empirical studies have assumed that the risks of inbreeding are constant over an individual’s life span, but in the lek-breeding black grouse, inbreeding increases with female age. To determine whether inbreeding avoidance mechanisms are also age dependent, we generated four null models of random mate choice ranging from complete randomness to more biologically realistic…

biologyEcologyTetraoBlack grousebiology.organism_classificationPasserineMate choicebiology.animalInbreeding depressionInbreeding avoidanceBiological dispersalAnimal Science and ZoologyInbreedingEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDemographyAnimal Behaviour
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Chapter 2 Fasciola, Lymnaeids and Human Fascioliasis, with a Global Overview on Disease Transmission, Epidemiology, Evolutionary Genetics, Molecular …

2009

Abstract Fascioliasis, caused by liver fluke species of the genus Fasciola, has always been well recognized because of its high veterinary impact but it has been among the most neglected diseases for decades with regard to human infection. However, the increasing importance of human fascioliasis worldwide has re‐launched interest in fascioliasis. From the 1990s, many new concepts have been developed regarding human fascioliasis and these have furnished a new baseline for the human disease that is very different to a simple extrapolation from fascioliasis in livestock. Studies have shown that human fascioliasis presents marked heterogeneity, including different epidemiological situations and…

biologyFasciolaMolecular epidemiologyHuman evolutionary geneticsHepaticaFasciola giganticaBiological dispersalZoologybiology.organism_classificationGenetic isolateFasciolidae
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Connectedness and connectivity of the Natura 2000 network of protected areas across country borders in the European Union

2012

Abstract We studied the spatial connectedness of Natura 2000 site boundaries and the functional connectivity of the Natura 2000 network across the 34 terrestrial borders of the European Union. Connectivity was measured by the dispersal success of 192 reptile, amphibian, invertebrate and plant species from Annex II of the European Union Habitats Directive, based on the presence of same species on both sides of the borders. Connectedness and connectivity varied greatly between state borders, with good and bad examples found in all parts of the European Union. Connectedness and connectivity were positively correlated. However, a few outlying examples showed that good connectedness is not neces…

business.industrySocial connectednessFunctional connectivityEnvironmental resource managementGeographyHabitatBiological dispersalmedia_common.cataloged_instanceEconomic geographyTaxonomic rankHabitats DirectiveEuropean unionNatura 2000businessEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape Conservationmedia_commonBiological Conservation
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Evolutionary genomics can improve prediction of species' responses to climate change

2020

Abstract Global climate change (GCC) increasingly threatens biodiversity through the loss of species, and the transformation of entire ecosystems. Many species are challenged by the pace of GCC because they might not be able to respond fast enough to changing biotic and abiotic conditions. Species can respond either by shifting their range, or by persisting in their local habitat. If populations persist, they can tolerate climatic changes through phenotypic plasticity, or genetically adapt to changing conditions depending on their genetic variability and census population size to allow for de novo mutations. Otherwise, populations will experience demographic collapses and species may go ext…

eco‐evolutionary dynamicsComments and OpinionsRange (biology)Species distributionlcsh:EvolutionBiodiversityeco-evolutionary dynamics10127 Institute of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studiesmodelslcsh:QH359-425GeneticsComment and OpinionKeystone speciesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsLocal adaptationgenomic quantitative geneticsbusiness.industryEnvironmental resource managementEnvironmental niche modellingGeographyBiodiversity loss570 Life sciences; biology590 Animals (Zoology)Biological dispersalbusinessGlobal biodiversity
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Survival Rates of Young MagpiesPica picain a Mountain Population of Eastern Spain

2007

Abstract. The aim of this study was to estimate the survival of young Magpies between fledging and the next breeding season and to identify some of the factors affecting it. A total of 50 nestlings were colour-ringed in two breeding seasons in the valley of the Pitarque River (Teruel, E Spain), and were monitored weekly until May of the following year. 59 nestlings were also colour-ringed in two nearby localities (4–5 km) to detect possible dispersal to and from our study area. Mark-recapture analyses were used to estimate weekly survival, which was assumed to be constant for periods of four weeks in order to reduce the number of parameters. Models with the effect of time, age class, season…

education.field_of_studyEcologyFledgePopulationBiologySeasonalitymedicine.diseaseSeasonal breedermedicineBiological dispersalAnimal Science and ZoologyAkaike information criterionOrnithologyeducationSurvival rateDemographyActa Ornithologica
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Highly asymmetric fine-scale genetic structure between sexes of African striped mice and indication for condition dependent alternative male dispersa…

2011

Sex-biased dispersal is observed in many taxa, but few studies have compared sex-biased dispersal among and within populations. We addressed the magnitude and habitat dependency of sex-biased dispersal in social African striped mice by separating group-related from population-related genetic variance to understand the contribution of each sex to deme structure. As dispersal over unoccupied habitat is likely to be more costly than dispersal within a population, we predicted that individuals leaving the natal population have a lower body condition, being inferior to heavier territorial individuals. Fine-scale genetic structure was detected in both sexes. Female relatedness decreased continuou…

education.field_of_studyEcologyPopulationZoologyBiologyGene flowGenetic variationGenetic structureGeneticsBiological dispersalPhilopatryeducationInbreedingEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDemeMolecular Ecology
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