Search results for "Coevolution"

showing 10 items of 85 documents

Le rôle écologique des bonobos : service écologique de dispersion de graine en forêt du Congo

2012

Bonobos (Pan paniscus) are threatened with extinction. They are the largest primates, and the only apes (except human), of the southern bank of the Congo Basin. Along with chimpanzees, they are our closest living relatives and are studied by anthropologists to include/understand our hominid origins; but what about their functional role in the forest? Would their disappearance have serious consequences for forest ecology? Answering this question is the aim of this new project, with several years of observations of a free-ranging habituated group of bonobos on the LuiKotale research station (DR Congo). In this tropical rainforest, the very great majority of plants need animals to reproduce an…

[SDV.SA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciences[SDV.SA] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciences[SDV.BA] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Animal biologySeed dispersal[SDV.BA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Animal biologyBassin du CongoCoévolutionConservation[ SDV.BA ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Animal biologyEcological serviceCongo BasinÉcologie forestièreMutualismDispersion de grainesService écologiqueForest ecologyMutualisme[ SDV.SA ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciencesCoevolution
researchProduct

Understanding Human-Technology Relations Within Technologization and Appification of Musicality

2020

In this paper, we outline a theoretical account of the relationship between technology and human musicality. An enactive and biocultural position is adopted that assumes a close coevolutionary relationship between the two. From this position, we aim at clarifying how the present and emerging technologies, becoming embedded and embodied in our lifeworld, inevitably co-constitute and transform musical practices, skills, and ways of making sense of music. Therefore, as a premise of our scrutiny, we take it as a necessity to more deeply understand the ways that humans become affiliated to the ever-changing instruments of music technology, in order to better understand the coevolutionary impact …

appificationkognitiomusiikkikasvatusmusiikkiteknologiamusiikkimusikaalisuustechnologization4E (embodied embedded enactive and extended) cognitionhuman-technology relationsmusiikkipsykologiacoevolutionihminen-konejärjestelmätteknologiamusic technologymusic education
researchProduct

Understanding Human–Technology Relations Within Technologization and Appification of Musicality

2020

In this paper, we outline a theoretical account of the relationship between technology and human musicality. An enactive and biocultural position is adopted that assumes a close coevolutionary relationship between the two. From this position, we aim at clarifying how the present and emerging technologies, becoming embedded and embodied in our lifeworld, inevitably co-constitute and transform musical practices, skills, and ways of making sense of music. Therefore, as a premise of our scrutiny, we take it as a necessity to more deeply understand the ways that humans become affiliated to the ever-changing instruments of music technology, in order to better understand the coevolutionary impact …

appificationlcsh:BF1-990technologizationlcsh:Psychology4E (embodiedHypothesis and Theoryand extended) cognitioncoevolutionPsychologymusic technologymusic educationembeddedenactiveGeneral Psychologyhuman–technology relationsFrontiers in Psychology
researchProduct

Cooperation between Different CRISPR-Cas Types Enables Adaptation in an RNA-Targeting System

2021

CRISPR-Cas systems are immune systems that protect bacteria and archaea against their viruses, bacteriophages. Immunity is achieved through the acquisition of short DNA fragments from the viral invader’s genome.

bacteriophagesanimal diseasesvirusesevoluutiotype VIchemical and pharmacologic phenomenaadaptationFlavobacteriumMicrobiologybakteriofagitbakteeritClustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeatstype II1184 Genetics developmental biology physiologyDNAbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionAdaptation PhysiologicalQR1-502immuunijärjestelmäCRISPRcoevolutionRNA ViralbacteriaRNAspacer acquisitionCRISPR-Cas Systemshorisontaalinen geeninsiirtoGenome BacterialResearch Article
researchProduct

Constraining the Deep Origin of Parasitic Flatworms and Host-Interactions with Fossil Evidence

2015

Novel fossil discoveries have contributed to our understanding of the evolutionary appearance of parasitism in flatworms. Furthermore, genetic analyses with greater coverage have shifted our views on the coevolution of parasitic flatworms and their hosts. The putative record of parasitic flatworms is consistent with extant host associations and so can be used to put constraints on the evolutionary origin of the parasites themselves. The future lies in new molecular clock analyses combined with additional discoveries of exceptionally preserved flatworms associated with hosts and coprolites. Besides direct evidence, the host fossil record and biogeography have the potential to constrain their…

biologyEvolutionary biologyHost (biology)BiogeographyCestodaZoologyParasitismbiology.organism_classificationMolecular clockPlatyhelminthsCoevolutionPlatyzoa
researchProduct

Die Ölblumensymbiosen - Parallelismus and andere Aspekte ihrer Entwicklung in Raum and Zeit1, 2

2009

The oil-bee/oil-flower relationships: parallelism and other aspects of their evolution in space and time A survey is given of our present knowledge and existing hypotheses concerning the biogeography, history, and phylogeny of plant taxa yielding fatty oil as a floral reward, and of the bee genera involved in their pollination. Four syngenetic complexes of the symbiosis arose convergently: The neotropical, the paleotropical, the holarctic, and the capensic complex. On the basis of the mutual structural adaptations of bees and flowers it is concluded that, in addition, parallelism within related groups as a result of a common tendency to develop the respective organs, has played an important…

biologyPollinationEcologyBiogeographybiology.organism_classificationApoideaTaxonHolarcticPollinatorPhylogeneticsGeneticsAnimal Science and ZoologyMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCoevolutionJournal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research
researchProduct

Dazzled and confused? Habituation and sensitization in free-living Yellow Warblers

2004

brood parasitism coevolutionary adaptation habituation yellow warbler brown-headed cowbird
researchProduct

Cowbird versus cuckoo hosts: a comparative study of learned nest defense

2005

One of the best example of coevolutionaru adaptations is that of the interactions between avian brood parasites and their hosts. Brood parasites lay their eggs in nests of other specieis and leave the job of caring for their young with the hosts. Hosts of brood parasites tend to suffer high reproductive costs as often they raise few of no young of their own, an effect of being parasitizes. For this reason, many hosts have evolved strategies that reduces the cost of parasitism.

brood parasitism common cucckoo brown-headed cowbird nest defence coevolutionary mechanisms
researchProduct

Microorganisms and Biotic Interactions

2014

SPE IPM; Most ecosystems are populated by a large number of diversified microorganisms, which interact with one another and form complex interaction networks. In addition, some of these microorganisms may colonize the surface or internal parts of plants and animals, thereby providing an additional level of interaction complexity. These microbial relations range from intraspecific to interspecific interactions, and from simple short-term interactions to intricate long-term ones. They have played a key role in the formation of plant and animal kingdoms, often resulting in coevolution; they control the size, activity level, and diversity patterns of microbial communities. Therefore, they modul…

commensalismmutualism[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]media_common.quotation_subjectEcology (disciplines)parasitismcheatermicrobiomeBiologyinfectious diseasesCompetition (biology)trophic networks[SDV.BV]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal Biologydefensive mutualistEcosystemCoevolutionmedia_commonTrophic levelagronomyEcologybiogeochemical cyclesInterspecific competitionEcological engineeringantagonismsymbiosisvirulencehostecosystem functioningparasite[SDE]Environmental SciencesSustainabilitypredationcompetition
researchProduct

Data from: Rumbling orchids: how to assess divergent evolution between chloroplast endosymbionts and the nuclear host

2015

Phylogenetic relationships inferred from multilocus organellar and nuclear DNA data are often difficult to resolve because of evolutionary conflicts among gene trees. However, conflicting or “outlier” associations (i.e., linked pairs of “operational terminal units” in two phylogenies) among these data sets often provide valuable information on evolutionary processes such as chloroplast capture following hybridization, incomplete lineage sorting, and horizontal gene transfer. Statistical tools that to date have been used in cophylogenetic studies only also have the potential to test for the degree of topological congruence between organellar and nuclear data sets and reliably detect outlier …

medicine and health caretopological incongruenceSatyriumCatasetinaeMedicineEulophiinaeCymbidiinaeChloroplast captureCyrtopodiinaeOrchidsLife sciencescophylogenetic toolorganelle-nucleus-coevolution
researchProduct