Search results for "Genetics"

showing 10 items of 12494 documents

Why no tetraploid cultivar of foxtail millet?

2004

Autotetraploid material was induced by colchicine treatment of a pure line of foxtail millet and an interspecific hybrid between foxtail millet and giant green foxtail. Compared with diploid material, tetraploids were smaller, flowered later, and had a two-fold reduced fertility (number of grain per cm of spike). Grain weight increased by 20% with polyploidy, but total grain yield decreased by 46%. This work illustrates the difficulty of breeding polyploid lines of foxtail millet that are of agronomic use.

0106 biological sciences0303 health sciences[SDV.GEN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Genetics[SDV.GEN] Life Sciences [q-bio]/GeneticsPlant ScienceInterspecific competitionBiology01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciencesColchicine treatmentGrain weightPolyploidAgronomyFoxtailGeneticsPlant breedingCultivarPloidyAgronomy and Crop ScienceEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS030304 developmental biology010606 plant biology & botany
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PROTECTION FIRST THEN FACILITATION: A MANIPULATIVE PARASITE MODULATES THE VULNERABILITY TO PREDATION OF ITS INTERMEDIATE HOST ACCORDING TO ITS OWN DE…

2011

Many trophically transmitted parasites with complex life cycles manipulate their intermediate host behavior in ways facilitating their transmission to final host by predation. This facilitation generally results from lowering host's antipredatory defenses when the parasite is infective to the final host. However, a recent theoretical model predicts that an optimal parasitic strategy would be to protect the intermediate host from predation when noninfective, before switching to facilitation when the infective stage is reached. We tested this hypothesis in the fish acanthocephalan parasite Pomphorhynchus laevis using the amphipod Gammarus pulex as intermediate host. Gammarids parasitized by n…

0106 biological sciences0303 health sciencesbiologyEcologyHost (biology)Intermediate hostbiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesPredation03 medical and health sciencesGammarus pulexPulexGeneticsFacilitationParasite hostingPomphorhynchus laevisGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biologyEvolution
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Rapid Diversification of Sperm Precedence Traits and Processes Among Three Siblingdrosophilaspecies: Divergent Sperm Precedence Mechanisms

2013

Postcopulatory sexual selection is credited with driving rapid evolutionary diversification of reproductive traits and the formation of reproductive isolating barriers between species. This judgment, however, has largely been inferred rather than demonstrated due to general lack of knowledge about processes and traits underlying variation in competitive fertilization success. Here, we resolved processes determining sperm fate in twice-mated females, using transgenic Drosophila simulans and Drosophila mauritiana populations with fluorescently labeled sperm heads. Comparisons among these two species and Drosophila melanogaster revealed a shared motif in the mechanisms of sperm precedence, wit…

0106 biological sciences0303 health sciencesbiologyEcologyurogenital systemReproductive isolationbiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesSpermSperm displacement03 medical and health sciencesFemale sperm storageEvolutionary biologySexual selectionGeneticsDrosophila melanogasterGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesSperm precedenceSperm competitionEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsreproductive and urinary physiology030304 developmental biology
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SEXUAL SELECTION WHEN FERTILIZATION IS NOT GUARANTEED

2005

Much of the theory of sexual selection assumes that females do not generally experience difficulties getting their eggs fertilized, yet sperm limitation is occasionally documented. How often does male limitation form a selection for female traits that improve their mating rate? The question is difficult to test, because if such traits evolve to be efficient, sperm limitation will no longer appear to be a problem to females. Here, we suggest that changes in choosiness between populations, and in particular between virgin and mated females, offer an efficient way to test this hypothesis. We model the "wallflower effect," that is, changes in female preferences due to time and mortality costs o…

0106 biological sciences0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyEcologyPopulationBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesSperm03 medical and health sciencesWallflowerMate choiceSexual selectionGeneticsMatingGeneral Agricultural and Biological ScienceseducationSperm precedenceEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSelection (genetic algorithm)030304 developmental biologyDemographyEvolution
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Sex in space: population dynamic consequences

1999

Sex, so important in the reproduction of bigametic species, is nonetheless often ignored in explorations of the dynamics of populations. Using a growth model of dispersal-coupled populations we can keep track of fluctuations in numbers of females and males. The sexes may differ from each other in their ability to disperse and their sensitivity to population density. As a further complication, the breeding system is either monogamous or polygamous. We use the harmonic mean birth function to account for sex-ratio-dependent population growth in a Moran–Ricker population renewal process. Incorporating the spatial dimension stabilizes the dynamics of populations with monogamy as the breeding sys…

0106 biological sciences0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyPopulationGeneral MedicineBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesPopulation densityGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyArticleBirth rateSexual reproduction03 medical and health sciencesPopulation growthSex in spaceBiological dispersal10. No inequalityGeneral Agricultural and Biological ScienceseducationSex ratio030304 developmental biologyGeneral Environmental ScienceDemography
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2021

Abstract The Mediterranean Basin has experienced extensive change in geology and climate over the past six million years. Yet, the relative importance of key geological events for the distribution and genetic structure of the Mediterranean fauna remains poorly understood. Here, we use population genomic and phylogenomic analyses to establish the evolutionary history and genetic structure of common wall lizards (Podarcis muralis). This species is particularly informative because, in contrast to other Mediterranean lizards, it is widespread across the Iberian, Italian, and Balkan Peninsulas, and in extra-Mediterranean regions. We found strong support for six major lineages within P. muralis, …

0106 biological sciences0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyGenetic diversitybiologyLineage (evolution)Populationbiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesMediterranean BasinPodarcis muralisPopulation genomics03 medical and health sciencesPhylogeographyEvolutionary biologyGenetic structureGeneticseducationMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biologyMolecular Biology and Evolution
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VARIATION BETWEEN POPULATIONS AND LOCAL ADAPTATION IN ACANTHOCEPHALAN-INDUCED PARASITE MANIPULATION

2010

Many trophically transmitted parasites manipulate their intermediate host phenotype, resulting in higher transmission to the final host. However, it is not known if manipulation is a fixed adaptation of the parasite or a dynamic process upon which selection still acts. In particular, local adaptation has never been tested in manipulating parasites. In this study, using experimental infections between six populations of the acanthocephalan parasite Pomphorhynchus laevis and its amphipod host Gammarus pulex, we investigated whether a manipulative parasite may be locally adapted to its host. We compared adaptation patterns for infectivity and manipulative ability. We first found a negative eff…

0106 biological sciences0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyHost (biology)PopulationIntermediate hostZoologyBiologybiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesObligate parasite03 medical and health sciencesHost–parasite coevolutionGeneticsPomphorhynchus laevisAdaptationGeneral Agricultural and Biological ScienceseducationEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biologyLocal adaptationEvolution
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Drosophila Evolution over Space and Time (DEST) - A New Population Genomics Resource

2021

Abstract Drosophila melanogaster is a leading model in population genetics and genomics, and a growing number of whole-genome datasets from natural populations of this species have been published over the last 20 years. A major challenge is the integration of these disparate datasets, often generated using different sequencing technologies and bioinformatic pipelines, which hampers our ability to address questions about the evolution and population structure of this species. Here we address these issues by developing a bioinformatics pipeline that maps pooled sequencing (Pool-Seq) reads from D. melanogaster to a hologenome consisting of fly and symbiont genomes and estimates allele frequenc…

0106 biological sciences0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyPopulationPopulation geneticsGenomicsGenome browserComputational biologyInformation repositoryBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGenome03 medical and health sciencesComputingMethodologies_PATTERNRECOGNITIONHologenome theory of evolutionEvolutionary dynamicseducation030304 developmental biology
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2018

Aposematic theory has historically predicted that predators should select for warning signals to converge on a single form, as a result of frequency-dependent learning. However, widespread variation in warning signals is observed across closely related species, populations and, most problematically for evolutionary biologists, among individuals in the same population. Recent research has yielded an increased awareness of this diversity, challenging the paradigm of signal monomorphy in aposematic animals. Here we provide a comprehensive synthesis of these disparate lines of investigation, identifying within them three broad classes of explanation for variation in aposematic warning signals: …

0106 biological sciences0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studybiologyPopulationFrequency-dependent selectionAposematismbiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyMüllerian mimicryGenetic architecture03 medical and health sciencesEvolutionary biologySexual selectionHeliconiusGeneral Agricultural and Biological ScienceseducationSelection (genetic algorithm)030304 developmental biologyBiological Reviews
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PERMANENT GENETIC RESOURCES: Polymorphic microsatellite loci and interspecific cross-amplification in the parasitoid wasps Megastigmus stigmatizans a…

2008

We isolated and characterized 19 polymorphic microsatellite loci in the congeneric parasitoid wasps Megastigmus stigmatizans and Megastigmus dorsalis associated with cynipid oak galls. Loci isolated from species-specific libraries showed extensive cross-amplification, resulting in a total of 15 polymorphic loci for M. stigmatizans and 13 for M. dorsalis.

0106 biological sciences0303 health sciencesfood.ingredientbiologyfungiZoologyInterspecific competitionbiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences3. Good healthParasitoidMegastigmus stigmatizans03 medical and health sciencesMegastigmus dorsalisfoodMegastigmusBotanyGeneticsMicrosatellitePolymorphic locusCross amplificationEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biologyBiotechnologyMolecular Ecology Resources
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