Search results for "COSY"

showing 10 items of 2166 documents

Aquatic effects of peat extraction and peatland forest drainage: a comparative sediment study of two adjacent lakes in Central Finland

2016

The aquatic effects of forestry practices and peat extraction continue to cause serious concerns. The effect mechanisms of peat extraction on water quality and aquatic ecology of the receiving surface waters are well known, but the impacts are often difficult to differentiate from those of forest management. A pairwise temporal sediment study was conducted on two adjacent lakes in Central Finland to study whether the unique effects of peat extraction can be detected in an area of intensive forest drainage. Both lakes are affected by forestry, but the reference lake has no history of peat extraction in its watershed. The deepest parts of the lakes were cored through the lacustrine sediments,…

0106 biological sciencesPeat010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesForest managementchironomidsSoil Science01 natural sciencesBenthosAquatic plantpiilevätturpeennostoEnvironmental Chemistry0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesWater Science and TechnologyHydrologyGlobal and Planetary Change010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyAquatic ecosystemGeologyPollutionaquatic effectsBenthic zonesedimentaatioEnvironmental scienceEutrophicationSurface waterEnvironmental Earth Sciences
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Use of Inverse Spatial Conservation Prioritization to Avoid Biological Diversity Loss Outside Protected Areas

2013

Globally expanding human land use sets constantly increasing pressure for maintenance of biological diversity and functioning ecosystems. To fight the decline of biological diversity, conservation science has broken ground with methods such as the operational model of systematic conservation planning (SCP), which focuses on design and on-the-ground implementation of conservation areas. The most commonly used method in SCP is reserve selection that focuses on the spatial design of reserve networks and their expansion. We expanded these methods by introducing another form of spatial allocation of conservation effort relevant for land-use zoning at the landscape scale that avoids negative ecol…

0106 biological sciencesPeatEcologyLand usebusiness.industryEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyScale (chemistry)Environmental resource managementBiodiversitySpatial design15. Life on land010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences13. Climate action11. SustainabilityProduction (economics)Environmental scienceEcosystembusinessZoningEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape ConservationConservation Biology
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A multi-proxy long-term ecological investigation into the development of a late Holocene calcareous spring-fed fen ecosystem (Raganu Mire) and boreal…

2021

Abstract The calcareous substrate of spring-fed fens makes them unique islands of biodiversity, hosting endangered, vulnerable, and protected vascular plants. Hence, spring-fed fens ecosystems require special conservation attention because many of them are destroyed (e.g. drained, forested) and it is extremely difficult or even impossible to restore the unique hydrogeological and geochemical conditions enabling their function. The long-term perspective of paleoecological studies allows indication of former wetland ecosystem states and provides understanding of their development over millennia. To examine the late Holocene dynamics of a calcareous spring-fed fen (Raganu Mire) ecosystem on th…

0106 biological sciencesPeatPeatlandGeneral Decision SciencesWetland010501 environmental sciences010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesPlant successionDeforestationMireClimate changeEcosystemEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsHoloceneQH540-549.50105 earth and related environmental sciencesgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologyEcologyMacrofossilFireTufaEnvironmental scienceMolluscPlant macrofossilsEcological Indicators
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Experimental climate warming alters the relationship between fungal root symbiosis and Sphagnum litter phenolics in two peatland microhabitats

2017

International audience; Belowground interactions between plants and microorganisms are involved in numerous ecosystems processes such as carbon and nutrient cycling. Understanding their responses to on-going climate warming is thus of paramount importance to better predict future ecosystem functioning. We hypothesized that climate warming alters the interactions between Sphagnum litter phenolics and the fungal root symbiosis of the Ericale plant Andromeda polifolia in a Jura mountain peatland (France). We initiate a climate warming treatment (+1°C) in April 2008 in two microhabitats (lawns and hummocks). We measured polyphenolic contents, mycorrhizal and dark septate endophyte (DSE) root co…

0106 biological sciencesPeatSoil SciencephenoloxidaseperoxidaseDark septate endophyte01 natural sciencesMicrobiologySphagnum[ SDE ] Environmental Sciencesdark septate endophyteSymbiosisBotanyEcosystembryophyteRhizospherebiologyEcologyGlobal warmingplant secondary metabolites (PSM)04 agricultural and veterinary sciences15. Life on landbiology.organism_classification13. Climate actionericoid mycorrhizae[SDE]Environmental Sciences040103 agronomy & agricultureLitter0401 agriculture forestry and fisheries010606 plant biology & botany
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The mechanistic basis of changes in community assembly in relation to anthropogenic disturbance and productivity

2016

Anthropogenic disturbance often causes changes in communities. However, the mechanistic basis of these changes remains elusive. As all patterns in community ecology can be understood as a result of four processes (speciation, selection, drift, and dispersal), the effect of disturbance should depend on how disturbance disrupt these processes. We studied the effects of disturbance and productivity on species richness, community composition, and community dispersion (i.e., variation in community composition) in the vegetation of 120 boreal peatlands using null-model approach to determine whether community assembly processes differ between pristine and disturbed sites. Sites represented three p…

0106 biological sciencesPeatproductivityDisturbance (geology)beta diversity: dispersiontuottavuusselectionBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural scienceslcsh:QH540-549.5Ecosystemspecies richnessEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsdisturbanceEcologyCommunitydriftEcologyspecies composition010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyVegetationIntermediate Disturbance HypothesisProductivity (ecology)Environmental scienceta1181Biological dispersalbeta diversitydispersionlcsh:EcologySpecies richnessEcosphere
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Mixotrophic phytoplankton dynamics in a shallow Mediterranean water body: how to make a virtue out of necessity

2018

Mixotrophy is a combination of photosynthesis and direct access to organic carbon sources, mainly through osmotrophy or phagotrophy. This strategy is adopted by several, phylogenetically distinct, phytoplankton groups and is commonly occurring in marine, brackish and freshwater ecosystems. Traditionally, it has been put in relation to both scarcity of inorganic nutrients and poor light conditions. However, we observed blooms of the mixotrophic, toxic haptophyte Prymnesium parvum in different periods of the year and under variable resources availability. The analysis of a 6.5-year data set of phytoplankton weekly records from a Sicilian shallow lake (Biviere di Gela, south-eastern Sicily) al…

0106 biological sciencesPhototrophBrackish waterbiologyEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyAquatic ScienceBiological interactionbiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesFreshwater ecosystemOsmotrophyHaptophyteNutrientPhagotrophyPrymnesium parvumBOD 5Settore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataPhytoplanktonNutrient availabilityEnvironmental sciencePrymnesium parvumHydrobiologia
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Xyloglucan endotransglucosylase/hydrolase (XTH) overexpression affects growth and cell wall mechanics in etiolated Arabidopsis hypocotyls.

2013

Abstract: Growth and biomechanics of etiolated hypocotyls from Arabidopsis thaliana lines overexpressing xyloglucan endotransglucosylase/hydrolase AtXTH18, AtXTH19, AtXTH20, and PttXET16-34 were studied. Overexpression of AtXTH18, AtXTH19, and AtXTH20 stimulated growth of hypocotyls, while PttXET16-34 overexpression did not show this effect. In vitro extension of frozen/thawed hypocotyls measured by a constant-load extensiometer started from a high-amplitude initial deformation followed by a slow time-dependent creep. Creep of growing XTH-overexpressing (OE) hypocotyls was more linear in time compared with the wild type at pH 5.0, reflecting their higher potential for long-term extension. X…

0106 biological sciencesPhysiologyArabidopsisPlant ScienceBiologyReal-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction01 natural sciencesHypocotylCell wall03 medical and health sciencesCell WallGene Expression Regulation PlantTensile StrengthArabidopsisArabidopsis thalianaXyloglucan:xyloglucosyl transferaseBiology030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesAgriculturafungiWild typeGlycosyltransferasesfood and beveragesXyloglucan endotransglucosylasebiology.organism_classificationHypocotylBiochemistryEtiolationBiophysics010606 plant biology & botany
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Xyloglucan endotransglucosylase and cell wall extensibility

2011

Transgenic tomato hypocotyls with altered levels of an XTH gene were used to study how XET activity could affect the hypocotyl growth and cell wall extensibility. Transgenic hypocotyls showed significant over-expression (line 13) or co-suppression (line 33) of the SlXTH1 in comparison with the wild type, with these results being correlated with the results on specific soluble XET activity, suggesting that SlXTH1 translates mainly for a soluble XET isoenzyme. A relationship between XET activity and cell wall extensibility was found, and the highest total extensibility was located in the apical hypocotyl segment of the over-expressing SlXTH1 line, where the XET-specific activity and hypocotyl…

0106 biological sciencesPhysiologyBiologíaPlant ScienceBiologyPolysaccharidePolymerase Chain Reaction01 natural sciencesHypocotylCell wall03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundTransformation GeneticSolanum lycopersicumCell WallSpectroscopy Fourier Transform InfraredXyloglucan:xyloglucosyl transferaseGenetically modified tomatoPlant Proteins030304 developmental biologychemistry.chemical_classification0303 health sciencesfungiWild typeGlycosyltransferasesfood and beveragesXyloglucan endotransglucosylaseBlotting NorthernXyloglucanchemistryBiochemistrySpectrometry Mass Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-IonizationAgronomy and Crop Science010606 plant biology & botany
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Guano-Derived Nutrient Subsidies Drive Food Web Structure in Coastal Ponds.

2016

A stable isotope study was carried out seasonally in three coastal ponds (Marinello system, Italy) affected by different gull guano input to investigate the effect of nutrient subsidies on food web structure and dynamics. A marked 15N enrichment occurred in the pond receiving the highest guano input, indicating that gull-derived fertilization (guanotrophication) had a strong localised effect and flowed across trophic levels. The main food web response to guanotrophication was an overall erosion of the benthic pathway in favour of the planktonic. Subsidized primary consumers, mostly deposit feeders, switched their diet according to organic matter source availability. Secondary consumers and,…

0106 biological sciencesPhysiologyMarine and Aquatic Scienceslcsh:Medicine01 natural sciencesCharadriiformesFood chainIsotopescoastal pondsFood Web StructureMedicine and Health Scienceslcsh:ScienceTrophic levelMultidisciplinaryEcologyfood webEcologyConsumerFishesFood webSeabirdsGullsCommunity EcologyItalyBenthic zoneVertebratesGuanoSeasonsResearch ArticleFood Chainguano; food web; benthos; mixing model; isotope; coastal pondsbentho010603 evolutionary biologyBirdsAnimalsEcosystemguanoPondsisotopeEcosystemNutrition010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyEcology and Environmental Sciencesfungilcsh:RFood ConsumptionOrganismsDetritivoreBiology and Life SciencesNutrientsBodies of WaterModels Theoreticalmixing modelInvertebratesDietFisheryFoodEarth SciencesEnvironmental sciencelcsh:QPhysiological ProcessesPLoS ONE
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Cercarial behaviour alters the consumer functional response of three‐spined sticklebacks

2020

This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Born-Torrijos, A., Paterson, R., van Beest, G., Vyhlídalová, T., Henriksen, E.H., Knudsen, R., Kristoffersen, R., Amundsen, P.-A. & Soldánová, M. (2021). Cercarial behaviour alters the consumer functional response of three-spined sticklebacks. Journal of Animal Ecology, 90, 978-988, which has been published in final form at https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.13427. This article may be used for non-commercial purposes in accordance with Wiley Terms and Conditions for Use of Self-Archived Versions. This article may not be enhanced, enriched or otherwise transformed into a derivative work, without express permission from Wiley or by st…

0106 biological sciencesPlagiorchisfood.ingredientPopulationFunctional responseZoologyBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesHost-Parasite InteractionsPredationfoodAnimalsParasite hostingEcosystem14. Life underwaterCercariaeducationPredatorEcosystemEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicseducation.field_of_study010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyCestode InfectionsSmegmamorphaBiological dispersalAnimal Science and ZoologyTrematodaJournal of Animal Ecology
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