Search results for "DISPERSAL"

showing 10 items of 465 documents

On the origin of European sheep as revealed by the diversity of the Balkan breeds and by optimizing population-genetic analysis tools

2020

Background In the Neolithic, domestic sheep migrated into Europe and subsequently spread in westerly and northwesterly directions. Reconstruction of these migrations and subsequent genetic events requires a more detailed characterization of the current phylogeographic differentiation. Results We collected 50 K single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) profiles of Balkan sheep that are currently found near the major Neolithic point of entry into Europe, and combined these data with published genotypes from southwest-Asian, Mediterranean, central-European and north-European sheep and from Asian and European mouflons. We detected clines, ancestral components and admixture by using variants of commo…

Mediterranean climate[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]BreedingGenetic analysisDomesticationPhylogenyComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSlcsh:SF1-11002. Zero hunger0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studySettore AGR/17 - ZOOTECNICA GENERALE E MIGLIORAMENTO GENETICObiologyPhylogenetic treeBalkan sheep breeds population‑genetic analysis tools SNPs04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesGeneral MedicineBalkan Peninsulasheep population genetics diversityMouflonPhylogeographyorigin ; sheep ; diversity ; BalkanResearch Articlelcsh:QH426-470GenotypePopulationZoologyPolymorphism Single Nucleotidediversity03 medical and health sciencesGeneticsAnimalsGenetic TestingeducationDomesticationEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biologySheepsheep diversity Balkan breeds0402 animal and dairy sciencepopulation geneticsGenetic Variationbiology.organism_classification040201 dairy & animal sciencePhylogeographylcsh:GeneticsGenetics PopulationBiological dispersalAnimal Science and Zoologylcsh:Animal cultureGenetics Selection Evolution
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El marcaje revela un intercambio limitado de inmaduros de tortuga boba (<i>Caretta caretta</i>) entre regiones en el Mediterráneo occiden…

2008

Exchange of immature loggerhead sea turtles (Caretta caretta) between the northern and southern regions of the western Mediterranean was investigated using data obtained from several Spanish tagging programmes. Tagged turtles ranged in straight carapace length from 23.0 to 74.0 cm. Thirty-six turtles were recaptured after an average interval of 390.5±462.6 days (SD). As the mean dispersal distance (MDD) of a turtle population that spreads over the western Mediterranean would stabilize after 117 days (CI 95%: 98 to 149), two analyses were conducted that included data from turtles recaptured after 98 and 149 days respectively. In both analyses, turtles were recaptured more often than expected…

Mediterranean climateeducation.field_of_studyEcologyPopulationZoologyAquatic ScienceBiologyOceanographylaw.inventionlawBiological dispersalCarapaceTurtle (robot)educationScientia Marina
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Zooplankton biodiversity and community structure vary along spatiotemporal environmental gradients in restored peridunal ponds

2015

<p>Zooplankton assemblages in neighboring ponds can show important spatial and temporal heterogeneity. Disentangling the influence of regional versus local factors, and of deterministic versus stochastic processes has been recently highlighted in the context of the metacommunity theory. In this study, we determined patterns of temporal and spatial variation in zooplankton diversity along one hydrological year in restored ponds of different hydroperiod and age. The following hypotheses regarding the assembling of species over time were tested: i) dispersal is not limited in our study system due to its small area and high exposure to dispersal vectors; ii) community dissimilarity among …

MetacommunityBiodiversityContext (language use)Aquatic ScienceBiologyZooplanktondiversityrotifersparasitic diseasesdispersalsimilaritylcsh:Physical geographylcsh:Environmental sciencesWater Science and Technologylcsh:GE1-350EcologyEcologyfungilcsh:Geography. Anthropology. RecreationCommunity structuresingularity.Crustaceanslcsh:Gmetacommunity dynamicsBiological dispersalSpatial variabilitySpecies richnesslcsh:GB3-5030Journal of Limnology
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2019

High dispersal rates are known to homogenize host's population genetic structure in panmictic species and to disrupt host local adaptation to the environment. Long-distance dispersal might also spread micro-organisms across large geographical areas. However, so far, to which extent selection mechanisms that shape host's population genetics are mirrored in the population structure of the enteric microbiome remains unclear. High dispersal rates and horizontal parental transfer may homogenize bacterial communities between breeding sites (homogeneous hypothesis). Alternatively, strong selection from the local environment may differentiate bacterial communities between breeding sites (heterogene…

Microbiology (medical)0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_study030306 microbiologyPopulationBeta diversityZoologyPopulation geneticsBiologyMicrobiology03 medical and health sciencesGenetic structureBiological dispersalMicrobiomeeducation030304 developmental biologyIsolation by distanceLocal adaptationFrontiers in Microbiology
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Palaeoclimatic changes explain Anatolian mountain frog evolution: a test for alternating vicariance and dispersal events

2002

Holarctic biodiversity has been influenced by climatic fluctuations since the Pliocene. Asia Minor was one of the major corridors for postglacial invasions in the Palearctic. Today this area is characterized by an extraordinarily rich fauna with close affiliation to European, Asian and Indo-African biota. However, exact scenarios of range expansion and contraction are lacking. Using a phylogeographical approach we (i) identify monophyletic lineages among Anatolian mountain frogs and (ii) derive a spatio-temporal hypothesis for the invasion process in Anatolia. We sequenced 540 bp of the mitochondrial 16S rRNA gene from 40 populations of mountain frogs from Anatolia, the Elburz Mountains and…

MonophylyPhylogeographyHolarcticbiologyMountain frogEcologyRana macrocnemisGeneticsVicarianceBiological dispersalMolecular clockbiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMolecular Ecology
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Multiple overseas dispersal in amphibians

2003

Amphibians are thought to be unable to disperse over ocean barriers because they do not tolerate the osmotic stress of salt water. Their distribution patterns have therefore generally been explained by vicariance biogeography. Here, we present compelling evidence for overseas dispersal of frogs in the Indian Ocean region based on the discovery of two endemic species on Mayotte. This island belongs to the Comoro archipelago, which is entirely volcanic and surrounded by sea depths of more than 3500 m. This constitutes the first observation of endemic amphibians on oceanic islands that did not have any past physical contact to other land masses. The two species of frogs had previously been tho…

MovementBiogeographyMolecular Sequence DataMantellidaeBiologyphylogenyDNA MitochondrialComorosGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyEvolution MolecularAmphibiaddc:570MadagascarVicarianceAnimalsIndian OceanPhylogenybiogeographyDNA PrimersGeneral Environmental ScienceLikelihood FunctionsBase SequenceGeographyModels GeneticGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyEcologySequence Analysis DNAGeneral MedicineSalt waterBiological dispersalAnuraGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesResearch Article
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MuTE: a MATLAB toolbox to compare established and novel estimators of the multivariate transfer entropy.

2014

A challenge for physiologists and neuroscientists is to map information transfer between components of the systems that they study at different scales, in order to derive important knowledge on structure and function from the analysis of the recorded dynamics. The components of physiological networks often interact in a nonlinear way and through mechanisms which are in general not completely known. It is then safer that the method of choice for analyzing these interactions does not rely on any model or assumption on the nature of the data and their interactions. Transfer entropy has emerged as a powerful tool to quantify directed dynamical interactions. In this paper we compare different ap…

Multivariate statisticsInformation transferTheoretical computer scienceComputer scienceEntropyInformation TheorySocial SciencesCAUSALITYMedicine (all); Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology (all); Agricultural and Biological Sciences (all)BioinformaticsMedicine and Health SciencesEntropy (energy dispersal)MultidisciplinaryEntropy (statistical thermodynamics)Medicine (all)QSoftware DevelopmentREstimatorSoftware EngineeringElectroencephalographyCausalityNeurologyCardiovascular DiseasesProbability distributionMedicineAlgorithmsResearch ArticleComputer ModelingComputer and Information SciencesScienceCardiologyProbability density functionEntropy (classical thermodynamics)Artificial IntelligenceLinear regressionEntropy (information theory)HumansComputer SimulationEntropy (arrow of time)Conditional entropyBiochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology (all)EpilepsyBiology and Life SciencesModels TheoreticalMODELNonlinear systemAgricultural and Biological Sciences (all)ROC CurveINFORMATION-TRANSFERSettore ING-INF/06 - Bioingegneria Elettronica E InformaticaCognitive ScienceTransfer entropySoftwareEntropy (order and disorder)NeurosciencePLoS ONE
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Incorporating classified dispersal assumptions in predictive distribution models – A case study with grasshoppers and bush-crickets

2011

Abstract Current and future species distributions depend on environmental conditions, but the ability of species to shift their range boundaries or to expand their distribution ranges in response to global change also depends on their dispersal capacity. Dispersal capacity, however, has often been neglected in previous studies that either assumed no-dispersal or full dispersal, both of which are unrealistic for most taxa. The aims of this study are (i) to identify the predictors of the present spatial distribution on a regional scale for 13 grasshoppers and bush-crickets, and (ii) to derive predictions of their future distributions under climate change by applying different dispersal capaci…

Multivariate statisticsTaxonEcologyRange (biology)Ecological ModelingSpecies distributionBiological dispersalClimate changeGlobal changeBiologySpatial distributionEcological Modelling
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Short seed-dispersal distances and low seedling recruitment in farmland populations of bird-dispersed cherry trees

2012

Summary In Central Europe, many plant populations are patchily distributed in human-modified landscapes and depend on animal vectors for seed dispersal. To predict seed-dispersal distances and locations of seeds of wild cherry trees (Prunus avium L.) in forest and farmland habitats in a human-modified landscape, we integrate movement data and seed regurgitation times of the Common Blackbird (Turdus merula L.) in a simulation model. We performed feeding trials with Common Blackbirds and wild cherries to determine the distribution of regurgitation times. We captured 32 male blackbirds and equipped them with radio tags to follow their movements in forest and farmland habitats. To simulate the …

Mutualism (biology)EcologyEcologySeed dispersalForagingfood and beveragesPlant ScienceBiologybiology.organism_classificationPrunusHabitatSeedlingPlant speciesBiological dispersalEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Ecology
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Woodland key habitats evaluated as part of a functional reserve network

2010

Abstract Woodland key habitats (WKHs) represent a potentially cost-efficient means to protect biodiversity in managed forests. The Forest Act of Finland defines 13 habitat types of WKHs, which enjoy legal protection. It has been argued that WKHs are too small-sized and scattered in occurrence to be actually important in the maintenance of forest biodiversity. However, from the species’ perspective, WKHs form a network together with nature reserves. We evaluated the value and role of WKHs as a part of the whole reserve network using a graph-theoretical connectivity approach in three areas (ca. 500 km 2 each) located in Central Finland. The networks were formed separately for different habita…

Nature reserveGeographyHabitatEcologyForest managementThreatened speciesBiodiversityEndangered speciesBiological dispersalWoodlandEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape ConservationBiological Conservation
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