Search results for "Brood"

showing 10 items of 114 documents

Forest fragmentation is associated with primary brood sex ratio in the treecreeper (Certhia familiaris).

2003

We studied the primary brood sex ratio of an old-growth forest passerine, the Eurasian treecreeper (Certhia familiaris), along a gradient of forest fragmentation. We found evidence that male nestlings were more costly to produce, since they suffered twofold higher nestling mortality and were larger in body size than females. Furthermore, the proportion of males in the brood was positively associated with the provisioning rate and the amount of food delivered to the nestlings. During the first broods, a high edge density and a high proportion of pine forests around the nests were related to a decreased production of males. The densities of spiders, the main food of the treecreeper, were 38% …

MaleEnvironmentModels BiologicalGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyTreesSongbirdsbiology.animalAnimalsSex RatioSex allocationreproductive and urinary physiologyGeneral Environmental ScienceDemographySex CharacteristicsGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologybiologyEcologyEcologyfungiGeneral MedicineCerthia familiarisbiology.organism_classificationPasserineBroodDietDeciduousHabitatbehavior and behavior mechanismsBody ConstitutionTreecreeperFemaleGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesSex ratioResearch ArticleProceedings. Biological sciences
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When should cuckolded males care for extra-pair offspring?

2012

In socially monogamous species with bi-parental care, males suffer reduced reproductive success if their mate engages in extra-pair copulations (EPCs). One might therefore expect that males should refuse to care for a brood if they can detect that an EPC has occurred. Here, we use a game-theory model to study male brood care in the face of EPCs in a cooperatively breeding species in which offspring help to raise their (half-) siblings in their parents' next breeding attempt. We show that under certain conditions males are selected to care even for broods completely unrelated to themselves. This counterintuitive result arises through a form of pseudo-reciprocity, whereby surviving extra-pair…

MaleGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyReproductive successParentingOffspringGeneral MedicineBiologyModels BiologicalGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyBroodSexual Behavior AnimalCooperative breedingBrood careta1181AnimalsFemaleGenetic FitnessGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesPaternal careSocial psychologyResearch ArticlesGeneral Environmental ScienceDemographyProceedings. Biological sciences
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Genotype Reconstruction of Paternity in European Lobsters (Homarus gammarus)

2015

Decapod crustaceans exhibit considerable variation in fertilisation strategies, ranging from pervasive single paternity to the near-ubiquitous presence of multiple paternity, and such knowledge of mating systems and behaviour are required for the informed management of commercially-exploited marine fisheries. We used genetic markers to assess the paternity of individual broods in the European lobster, Homarus gammarus, a species for which paternity structure is unknown. Using 13 multiplexed microsatellite loci, three of which are newly described in this study, we genotyped 10 eggs from each of 34 females collected from an Atlantic peninsula in the south-western United Kingdom. Single recons…

MaleGenotypeZygoteZoologylcsh:MedicineNephropidaeSexual Behavior AnimalStockingHomarus gammarusGammarusAnimalslcsh:Sciencereproductive and urinary physiologyMultidisciplinarybiologyEcologySirelcsh:RMating systembiology.organism_classificationBroodHatcheryNephropidaeFertilizationFemalelcsh:QMicrosatellite RepeatsResearch Article
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Genetic evidence confirms polygamous mating system in a crustacean parasite with multiple hosts.

2014

Mating systems are diverse in animals, notably in crustaceans, but can be inferred from a limited set of parameters. Baeza and Thiel (2007) proposed a model predicting mating systems of symbiotic crustaceans with three host characteristics and the risk of predation. These authors proposed five mating systems, ranging from monogamy to polygynandry (where multiple mating occurs for both genders). Using microsatellite loci, we tested the putatively mating system of the ectoparasite crab Dissodactylus primitivus. We determined the mating frequencies of males and females, parentage assignment (COLONY & GERUD software) as well as the contents of female spermathecae. Our results are globally consi…

MaleGénétique moléculaire[ SDV.MP.PAR ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/Parasitologylcsh:MedicineZoologyMarine BiologyEvolution des espècesBiologyPolygynandryBehavioral EcologySexual Behavior AnimalSpermathecaCrustaceaGenetics[ SDV.EE.IEO ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/SymbiosisAnimals[SDV.MP.PAR]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/ParasitologyMatinglcsh:ScienceSymbiosisBiologySperm competitionreproductive and urinary physiologyGeneticsEvolutionary Biology[ SDE.BE ] Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyMultidisciplinaryEcologyAnimal Behaviorlcsh:RMarine EcologyMating systemBrood3. Good healthFemale sperm storagebehavior and behavior mechanismslcsh:QParasitologyFemale[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyAnimal GeneticsZoologySperm precedenceResearch ArticleMicrosatellite Repeats[SDV.EE.IEO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/Symbiosis
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Unmatedness promotes the evolution of helping more in diplodiploids than in haplodiploids

2014

The predominance of haplodiploidy (where males develop from unfertilized haploid eggs and females from fertilized diploid eggs) among eusocial species has inspired a body of research that focuses on the possible role of relatedness asymmetries in the evolution of helping and eusociality. Previous theory has shown that in order for relatedness asymmetries to favor the evolution of helping, there needs to be variation in sex ratios among nests in the population (i.e., split sex ratios). In haplodiploid species, unmated females can produce a brood of all males, and this is considered the most likely mechanism for split sex ratios at the origin of helping. In contrast, in diploidiploids unmated…

MaleRange (biology)PopulationZoologyHaploidyBiologyModels BiologicalAnimalsSex RatioSocial Behavioreducationreproductive and urinary physiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeneticseducation.field_of_studyReproductionhaplodiploidy hypothesisneitsyysBiological EvolutionDiploidyHymenopteraEusocialityBroodReproductive failuresplit sex ratiosHaplodiploidyta1181FemalePloidyaitososiaalisuusAmerican naturalist
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Rapid change in host use of the common cuckoo Cuculus canorus linked to climate change

2010

Parasites require synchrony with their hosts so if host timing changes with climate change, some parasites may decline and eventually go extinct. Residents and short-distance migrant hosts of the brood parasitic common cuckoo, Cuculus canorus , have advanced their phenology in response to climate change more than long-distance migrants, including the cuckoo itself. Because different parts of Europe show different degrees of climate change, we predicted that use of residents or short-distance migrants as hosts should have declined in areas with greater increase in spring temperature. Comparing relative frequency of parasitism of the two host categories in 23 European countries before and af…

MaleTime FactorsClimate ChangePopulation DynamicsSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaClimate changeParasitismmigrationphenologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyCuculusNesting BehaviorCommon cuckooBirdsAnimalshost raceskin and connective tissue diseasesCuckooResearch ArticlesGeneral Environmental ScienceGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologybiologyEcologyHost (biology)PhenologyGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationBroodresponse to climate changecoevolutionmigration distanceAnimal MigrationFemaleBIO/07 - ECOLOGIAsense organsGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesBIO/05 - ZOOLOGIAProceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
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Host detection and rate of parasitism by Acroricnus seductor (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae), a natural enemy of mud-dauber wasps (Hymenoptera: Sphecida…

2011

Abstract The behavioural ecology of ichneumonid wasps that attack aculeate Hymenoptera is still largely unknown. Field observations and morphological analyses were devoted to investigate host detection and rate of parasitism by Acroricnus seductor (Scopoli), a natural enemy of the black and yellow mud dauber wasp Sceliphron caementarium (Drury). At the study site, about half of the host nests suffered parasitism by A. seductor. No significant difference was found between the rate of parasitism in sheltered (inside human building) and unsheltered (outside building) nests. Larger nests did not suffer a higher rate of parasitism, and larger brood cells were not more likely to be parasitized. …

Mud dauberIchneumonidaeSphecidaeNestbiologySceliphron caementariumEcologyParasitismAnimal Science and Zoologybiology.organism_classificationSceliphronEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBroodAnimal Biology
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Aggressive mimicry coexists with mutualism in an aphid

2015

Understanding the evolutionary transition from interspecific exploitation to cooperation is a major challenge in evolutionary biology. Ant-aphid relationships represent an ideal system to this end because they encompass a coevolutionary continuum of interactions ranging from mutualism to antagonism. In this study, we report an unprecedented interaction along this continuum: aggressive mimicry in aphids. We show that two morphs clonally produced by the aphid Paracletus cimiciformis during its root-dwelling phase establish relationships with ants at opposite sides of the mutualism-antagonism continuum. Although one of these morphs exhibits the conventional trophobiotic (mutualistic) relations…

Mutualism (biology)Life Cycle StagesAphidMultidisciplinaryBase SequencebiologyAntsEcologyMolecular Sequence DataTetramoriumAnt mimicryBiological Sciencesbiology.organism_classificationGas Chromatography-Mass SpectrometryBroodPolyphenismPhylogeneticsEvolutionary biologyAphidsAggressive mimicryAnimalsSymbiosisPhylogeny
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Replacement queens in the neotropical termiteNasutitermes coxipoensis

1987

The production of replacement queens in experimentally orphaned colonies was investigated in the neotropical termiteNasutitermes coxipoensis holmgren. A single adultoid replacement queen was produced with six weeks in more than 50% of the nests. The new queen begins oviposition extremely quickly. Replacement kings are seldom seen but must be present since brood in the nest in atribuable to the replacement queen. InN. coxipoensis, replacement adultoid queens and kings seem to develop preferentially from the few aged nymphs which are present in the nest throughout the year.

Nasutitermes coxipoensisNestEcologyInsect ScienceBiologyNymphEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBroodQueen (playing card)Insectes Sociaux
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Termite Nests: Architecture, Regulation and Defence

2000

Termite nest architecture evolved along with changes in lifestyle, the basic building behaviour being transmitted through the genes of reproductives. The main selective pressure is thought to have been defence against predators. In more advanced termites the maintenance of homeostasis in temperature and humidity may appear to dominate nest architecture. Nest defence involves nest structures in combination with the morphology and behaviour of the sterile castes. The soldier caste, characteristic of termites, is specialized for defence, with a variety of mechanical and chemical weapons, but this caste was lost in some advanced genera, especially the Apicotermitinae. Workers are always involve…

NestEcologyCasteApicotermitinaeBiologyArchitectureBroodPredation
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