Search results for "MECO"

showing 10 items of 49 documents

Does an ant-dispersed plant, Viola reichenbachiana, suffer from reduced seed dispersal under inundation disturbances?

2008

Many plant species use ants as seed dispersers. This dispersal mode is considered to be susceptible to disturbances, but the effect of natural, small-scale disturbances is still unknown. We investigated how small-scale disturbances due to inundation affect seed dispersal in Viola reichenbachiana, a dominant myrmecochorous herb in riparian forests. Inundation disturbances were high in depressions and low on hillocks of the forest floor. We found that V reichenbachiana was similarly abundant at highly and less disturbed sites, contrary to other, non ant-dispersed species. We also found that the motivation of ants to disperse seeds was higher at highly disturbed sites. Nevertheless, the number…

0106 biological sciencesSeed dispersalconsequencesmutualismMyrmecochoryRiparian forestBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesForest herbsMyrmecochoryBotanyRiparian forestBehaviourWageningen Environmental Research[SDU.ENVI]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Continental interfaces environmentEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDemographyForest floorMutualism (biology)geographygeography.geographical_feature_categorymyrmecochoryEcologySmall-scale disturbance15. Life on landbiology.organism_classificationCentrum EcosystemenformicidaeSeed dispersal syndromeCentre for Ecosystem StudiesstrategiesAnimal–plant mutualismSeed-dispersal motivationViola reichenbachianaBiological dispersalhymenopteragrassland[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecology010606 plant biology & botany
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Tettigoniidae (Orthoptera) ovipositing in old galls of Dryocosmus kuriphilus (Hymenoptera: Cynipidae)

2016

Authors report some biological notes on two species of Orthoptera Tettigoniidae emerged from old spongy-woody galls of Dryocosmus kuriphilus Yasumatsu, 1951 collected in April 2015 from some areas of Sicily (Italy): Leptophyes sicula Kleukers, Odé et Fontana, 2010 (Phaneropterinae) and Cyrtaspis scutata (Charpentier, 1825) (Meconematinae). Between the end of April and the first days of May 30 neanids emerged from the galls, were reared and their cycle followed. While L. sicula laid eggs in groups, C. scutata laid single eggs inside the galls; both species have shown that in a few years they adapted in exploiting this new shelter for egg laying. No interaction with the gall inducing insect w…

0106 biological sciencesfood.ingredientOrthopteraorthopteraTettigoniidae010607 zoologyHymenoptera01 natural sciencesfoodgall-successoritalyBotanytettigoniidaeMeconematinaebush-cricketsgall biology successor katydid ItalybiologybiologyLeptophyesbiology.organism_classification010602 entomologyDryocosmus kuriphilusSettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataQL1-991Insect SciencehymenopteraGall-inducing insectcynipidaePhaneropterinaeovipositionZoologyEuropean Journal of Entomology
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The MDS and EVI1 complex locus (MECOM) isoforms regulate their own transcription and have different roles in the transformation of hematopoietic stem…

2016

Transcriptional activation of the EVI1 oncogene (3q26) leads to aggressive forms of human acute myeloid leukemia (AML). However, the mechanism of EVI1-mediated leukemogenesis has not been fully elucidated. Previously, by characterizing the EVI1 promoter, we have shown that RUNX1 and ELK1 directly regulate EVI1 transcription. Intriguingly, bioinformatic analysis of the EVI1 promoter region identified the presence of several EVI1 potential binding sites. Thus, we hypothesized that EVI1 could bind to these sites regulating its own transcription. In this study, we show that there is a functional interaction between EVI1 and its promoter, and that the different EVI1 isoforms (EVI1-145kDa, EVI1-Δ…

0301 basic medicineGene isoformMECOMResponse elementBiophysicsBiologyBiochemistryCell LineMice03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundStructural BiologyTranscription (biology)Proto-OncogenesGeneticsAnimalsHumansProgenitor cellPromoter Regions GeneticMolecular BiologyTranscription factorGeneticsLeukemiaGene Expression Regulation LeukemicPromoterHematopoietic Stem CellsMDS1 and EVI1 Complex Locus ProteinCell biologyDNA-Binding ProteinsCell Transformation Neoplastic030104 developmental biologyRUNX1chemistryTranscription FactorsBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Gene Regulatory Mechanisms
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An Easy Game? Experiences of ‘Homecoming’ in the Post-Socialist Context of Croatia and the Czech Republic

2016

The obstacles that often accompany remigration, planned and imagined as a ‘homecoming’, are seldom the topic of investigation in migration studies. Returning is not always an ‘easy game’. To explore this aspect of remigration, this chapter intends to focus on narratives of return produced mainly by so-called co-ethnic migrants who moved back to Croatia and the Czech Republic during the past two decades of post-socialist transformation. The empirical base of the chapter draws on the experiences and struggles accompanying remigration, and of arrival and acceptance in the respective society as described by returnees in biographical interviews. Attention is given to everyday social interaction …

05 social sciences0507 social and economic geographyHomecomingHomelandContext (language use)Diversification (marketing strategy)0506 political scienceMigration studiesGeographySocial transformationPolitical economyDevelopment economics050602 political science & public administrationNarrative050703 geographySocial capital
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Meconium microbiota types dominated by lactic acid or enteric bacteria are differentially associated with maternal eczema and respiratory problems in…

2013

Background Culture-dependent methods have shown that meconium, the newborn's first intestinal discharge, is not sterile, but the diversity of bacteria present in this material needs to be further characterized by means of more sensitive molecular techniques. Objective Our aims were to characterize molecularly the meconium microbiota in term infants, to assess whether it contributes to the future microbiota of the infants' gastrointestinal tract, and to evaluate how it relates to lifestyle variables and atopy-related conditions. Methods We applied high-throughput pyrosequencing of the 16S rRNA gene to study the meconium microbiota in twenty term newborns from a Spanish birth cohort. For comp…

AdultDNA BacterialHypersensitivity ImmediateMeconiumImmunologyEczemaBiologyAtopyfluids and secretionsEnterobacteriaceaeMeconiumLactobacillalesPregnancyRisk FactorsRNA Ribosomal 16SmedicineHumansImmunology and AllergyClinical significanceLife StylePhylogenyFecesPregnancyGastrointestinal tractInfant NewbornBacteria Presentmedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationIntestinesImmunologyMetagenomeFemaleBacteria
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Data from: Moving in the Anthropocene: global reductions in terrestrial mammalian movements

2019

Animal movement is fundamental for ecosystem functioning and species survival, yet the effects of the anthropogenic footprint on animal movements have not been estimated across species. Using a unique GPS-tracking database of 803 individuals across 57 species, we found that movements of mammals in areas with a comparatively high human footprint were on average one-half to one-third the extent of their movements in areas with a low human footprint. We attribute this reduction to behavioral changes of individual animals and to the exclusion of species with long-range movements from areas with higher human impact. Global loss of vagility alters a key ecological trait of animals that affects no…

Alces alcesPapio cynocephalusOdocoileus hemionusSus scrofaSaiga tataricaMartes pennantimedicine and health careAnthropocenePuma concolorConnochaetes taurinusDasypus novemcinctusChrysocyon brachyurusOvibos moschatusPanthera pardusEquus hemionusTrichosurus vulpeculaLife SciencesLynx lynxPapio anubisUrsus arctosNDVI; diet; movement ecologyTolypeutes matacusmovement ecologyMedicineCapreolus capreolusEquus quaggaCanis latransPropithecus verreauxiBeatragus hunteriOdocoileus virginianusTamandua mexicanaSyncerus cafferLepus europaeusNDVICervus elaphusEquus grevyiEuphractus sexcinctusLoxodonta africanaOdocoileus hemionus columbianusProcyon lotorAntilocapra americanaMyrmecophaga tridactylaMadoqua guentheriGulo guloTapirus terrestrisPanthera oncaCerdocyon thousFelis silvestrisCanis aureusEulemur rufifronsSaguinus geoffroyiHuman FootprintRangifer tarandusCanis lupusCercocebus galeritusAepyceros melampusChlorocebus pygerythrusProcapra gutturosaLoxodonta africana cyclotisGiraffa camelopardalisdiet
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Iron isotope signature of magnetofossils and oceanic biogeochemical changes through the Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum.

2021

21 pages; International audience; Magnetotactic bacteria (MTB) intracellularly precipitate magnetite (Fe3O4) crystals that can be preserved in the geological record. When MTB die, the so-called magnetofossils constitute valuable proxies for paleoenvironmental reconstructions and are suspected to represent some of the oldest traces of biomineralization on Earth. Yet, the biogenicity of putative magnetofossils found in ancient terrestrial and extra-terrestrial samples is still largely debated and their significance for past climate still holds uncertainties. Here we studied a sedimentary sequence from the Indian Ocean (ODP Hole 711A) recording the Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum (MECO) through…

Biogeochemical cycle010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesGeochemistryTrace elementIron isotopesFe sequential extraction010502 geochemistry & geophysicsMass-independent fractionationHyperthermal01 natural sciencesDiagenesischemistry.chemical_compoundMagnetotactic bacteriaIsotope fractionationMagnetofossilschemistry13. Climate actionGeochemistry and Petrology[SDU.STU.GC]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/GeochemistryBiosignatureMECOMagnetofossilGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesMagnetite
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Variability of isozyme pattern, chromosome number, and latex colour and components in the closely related Papaver duhium L. and P. lecoqii Lamotte in…

1995

Summary The variability of nine different isozyme systems, chromosome number, colour of fresh and dried latex and presence or absence of meconic acid was investigated in altogether 45 populations of Papaver dubium and P. lecoqii mainly from C Europe. It was found that P. dubium is hexaploid with 2n = 42 chromosomes, has brown dried latex, and contains meconic acid. P. lecoqii is tetraploid with 2n = 28 chromosomes, has red dried latex, and lacks meconic acid. The two taxa can also be distinguished by differences in three of the nine isozymes analysed, and are almost completely monomorphic for their respective isozyme pattern. It is concluded that the two taxa, which cannot be reliably disti…

Chromosome numberEcologyPlant ScienceBiologybiology.organism_classificationIsozymechemistry.chemical_compoundTaxonchemistryPapaverBotanyPapaver dubiumMeconic acidEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsFlora
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Occurrence of biomarkers of pesticide exposure in non-invasive human specimens.

2015

Biomonitoring has been used in many types of investigations, including national programmes and epidemiological studies, to explore the occurrence of biomarkers of pesticide exposure in the general population or relevant groups. This review discusses recent studies that measure levels of biomarkers of pesticide exposure in non-invasive human specimens such as urine, breast milk, meconium and hair. Specific and non-specific metabolites of organophosphate and pyrethroid insecticides have been widely investigated in urine, where some of the suitable biomarkers present rates of detection higher than 80%, which stand for an ongoing chronic exposure to traces of these chemicals. Hair is a promisin…

Chronic exposureMeconiumEnvironmental EngineeringHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisPopulationBreast milkBiologychemistry.chemical_compoundEnvironmental healthBiomonitoringEnvironmental ChemistryHumansPesticideseducationeducation.field_of_studyPyrethroidMilk Humanbusiness.industryNon invasivePublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthInfant NewbornGeneral MedicineGeneral ChemistryPesticidePollutionBiotechnologychemistryEnvironmental PollutantsFemaleBiomarkers of exposure assessmentbusinessBiomarkersEnvironmental MonitoringHairChemosphere
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Conservation aspects for chasmophytic species: Phenological behavior and seed strategies of the Central Apennine threatened endemismMoehringia papulo…

2012

Abstract Chasmophytic vegetation growing on the cracks of cliffs in the Mediterranean and in the Euro-Siberian phytogeographic regions shows a great regional diversity, with a large number of endemic plant species, many of them endangered and at risk of extinction. Moehringia papulosa is an example of a threatened plant living in this kind of habitat. It is an endemism of the Marche region in central Italy, whose natural populations are considered as critically endangered (CR) under the IUCN criteria and the habitat is protected by the E.U. (Directive 92/43/EEC) with the habitat 8210 “calcareous rocky slopes with chasmophytic vegetation”. The phenology of natural populations was analyzed, s…

Critically endangeredHabitatEcologyThreatened speciesEndangered speciesIUCN Red ListMyrmecochoryPlant ScienceElaiosomeBiologyEndemismEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPlant Biosystems - An International Journal Dealing with all Aspects of Plant Biology
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