Search results for "MIMICRY"

showing 10 items of 120 documents

Research data supporting "Social information use about novel aposematic prey is not influenced by a predator’s previous experience with toxins"

2019

This data is from the experiment investigating social avoidance learning in wild-caught great tits, conducted at Konnevesi Research Station in Central Finland during winter 2017. Sheet 1 (���main data���) contains data from the main avoidance learning experiment, including individual attributes (sex, age, weight etc.), experimental treatments and individuals��� foraging choices in the learning trials. Sheet 2 (���preference test���) contains data from the initial preference test of the symbols that were used in the experiment, and Sheet 3 (���visibility test���) data from the initial visibility test of the same symbols.

great titssocial learningpredator-prey interactionstoxin loadaposematismmimicry
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Antipredatory function of head shape for vipers and their mimics.

2011

Most research into the adaptive significance of warning signals has focused on the colouration and patterns of prey animals. However, behaviour, odour and body shape can also have signal functions and thereby reduce predators' willingness to attack defended prey. European vipers all have a distinctive triangular head shape; and they are all venomous. Several non-venomous snakes, including the subfamily Natricinae, commonly flatten their heads (also known as head triangulation) when disturbed. The adaptive significance of this potential behavioural mimicry has never been investigated. We experimentally tested if the triangular head shape typical of vipers offers protection against predation.…

kyykäärmeetModels AnatomicScience PolicyAnimal TypesPopulation Dynamicslcsh:MedicineZoologyBiologybehavioural mimicryHead shapePredationkäärmeetBehavioral EcologyNatrix mauraPredator-Prey DynamicsViperaSubfamily NatricinaeViperidaeAnimalsaposematismAnimal behaviorlcsh:ScienceBiologyAnimal ManagementsnakeEvolutionary BiologyMultidisciplinaryAnimal BehaviorEcologyPopulation BiologyEcologyta1184lcsh:RAgricultureBioethicsTriangular head shapeSpecies InteractionsCommunity EcologyEvolutionary EcologyPredatory BehaviorMimicryAnimal Studiesta1181lcsh:QVeterinary ScienceZoologyResearch ArticlePloS one
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Heat-Shock Proteins in Autoimmunity

2013

Heat shock proteins (HSPs), also known as “stress proteins,” are among the highly conserved and immunogenic proteins shared among diverse groups of microbial agents and mammals [1]. Heat and other types of stressful stimuli can increase the cellular expression of HSPs. These proteins have been categorized into different families according to their molecular mass, for example, HSP110, HSP90, HSP70, HSP60, HSP40, HSP20-30, and HSP10 [1–3]. For uniformity, guidelines for the nomenclature of various human HSP families have been proposed [4]. Under physiological conditions, the ubiquitously distributed HSPs maintain the integrity and function of other cellular proteins in stressful conditions. H…

lcsh:Immunologic diseases. AllergyArticle SubjectImmunologychemical and pharmacologic phenomenaBiologymedicine.disease_causeAutoimmunity03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineImmune systemImmunology and Microbiology (miscellaneous)Heat shock proteinmedicineImmunology and Allergy030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesInnate immune systemFOXP3Acquired immune system3. Good healthMolecular mimicryEditorialImmunologyHSP60lcsh:RC581-607030217 neurology & neurosurgeryAutoimmune Diseases
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Data from: Ecological conditions alter cooperative behaviour and its costs in a chemically defended sawfly

2018

The evolution of cooperation and social behaviour is often studied in isolation from the ecology of organisms. Yet, the selective environment under which individuals evolve is much more complex in nature, consisting of ecological and abiotic interactions in addition to social ones. Here we measured the life-history costs of cooperative chemical defence in a gregarious social herbivore, Diprion pini pine sawfly larvae, and how these costs vary under different ecological conditions. We ran a rearing experiment where we manipulated diet (resin content) and attack intensity by repeatedly harassing larvae to produce a chemical defence. We show that forcing individuals to allocate more to coopera…

medicine and health careautomimicrygenetic structuresDiprionidaefungiMedicineDiprion piniLife scienceslife-history costsantipredator defence
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Data from: Predator mimicry, not conspicuousness, explains the efficacy of butterfly eyespots

2015

Large conspicuous eyespots on butterfly wings have been shown to deter predators. This has been traditionally explained by mimicry of vertebrate eyes, but recently the classic eye-mimicry hypothesis has been challenged. It is proposed that the conspicuousness of the eyespot, not mimicry, is what causes aversion due to sensory biases, neophobia or sensory overloads. We conducted an experiment to directly test whether the eye-mimicry or the conspicuousness hypothesis better explain eyespot efficacy. We used great tits (Parus major) as model predator, and tested their reaction towards animated images on a computer display. Birds were tested against images of butterflies without eyespots, with …

medicine and health careeyespotsMedicineLife sciencesmimicryIRTree GLMMs
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Sopravvivenze del mimetismo animale: lo sguardo, l’aptico e il postumano

2022

La ricerca di Roger Caillois sul mimetismo animale, avviata in ambito surrealista già negli anni Trenta, si fondava su alcuni interessi per l’entomologia e le società primitive, su solidi studi sul mito e alcune incursioni nella psicopatologia, mentre le spiegazioni fornite riconducevano il fenomeno a una necessità di assimilazione allo spazio e a una inerzia dello slancio di vita, in aperto contrasto con le teorie darwiniane della selezione naturale. Una interpretazione non utilitaristica faceva del mimetismo un “lusso dispendioso” di alcune specie animali che, per ragioni non adattive, mettono in campo alcune tipologie precise di comportamenti: l’invisibilità, il travestimento e l’initimi…

posthumanmimetismo animalesguardoanimal mimicrySettore L-FIL-LET/14 - Critica Letteraria E Letterature ComparatemediaRoger Cailloipostumanogaze
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Hard to catch: Experimental evidence supports evasive mimicry

2021

Most research on aposematism has focused on chemically defended prey, but the signalling difficulty of capture remains poorly explored. Similar to classical Batesian and Müllerian mimicry related to distastefulness, such ‘evasive aposematism' may also lead to convergence in warning colours, known as evasive mimicry. A prime candidate group for evasive mimicry areAdelphabutterflies, which are agile insects and show remarkable colour pattern convergence. We tested the ability of naive blue tits to learn to avoid and generalizeAdelphawing patterns associated with the difficulty of capture and compared their response to that of birds that learned to associate the same wing patterns with distast…

prey defence0106 biological sciencesEvolutionComputer scienceAposematismModels Biological010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyMüllerian mimicryPredationSongbirds03 medical and health sciencesAvoidance learningGeneralization (learning)AnimalsWings AnimalGeneral Environmental Science030304 developmental biology[SDV.EE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment0303 health sciencesWingconvergenceGeneral Immunology and Microbiologybiology[SDV.BA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Animal biologyBiological MimicryGeneral MedicineAdelphabiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionBatesian mimicrypredator learningEvolutionary biologyPredatory Behavior1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyMimicryevasive aposematismAdelphaGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesdistastefulnessButterflies
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Warning signalling in European vipers and their mimics : implications for conservation of the smooth snake

2014

smooth snakekyykäärmeetsuojautuminenaposematismiCoronella austricaconservationVipera berusvaroitusväritsaalistussuojaväritkangaskäärmevaroitussignaalitmatkiminenaposematismsignaalitsaalistuksenvälttämisstrategiatmimicrymalli-matkijasysteemitviper
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Antipredatory Function of Head Shape for Vipers and Their Mimics

2011

Most research into the adaptive significance of warning signals has focused on the colouration and patterns of prey animals. However, behaviour, odour and body shape can also have signal functions and thereby reduce predators' willingness to attack defended prey. European vipers all have a distinctive triangular head shape; and they are all venomous. Several non-venomous snakes, including the subfamily Natricinae, commonly flatten their heads (also known as head triangulation) when disturbed. The adaptive significance of this potential behavioural mimicry has never been investigated. We experimentally tested if the triangular head shape typical of vipers offers protection against predation.…

snakeNatrix mauraViperaaposematismbehavioural mimicry
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Synthesis and Biological Evaluation of a Multiantigenic Tn/TF-Containing Glycopeptide Mimic of the Tumor-Related MUC1 Glycoprotein

2006

solid-phase synthesisMolecular Sequence DataBreast Neoplasms010402 general chemistrymedicine.disease_cause01 natural sciencesBiochemistryantitumor agentsSolid-phase synthesisAntigenAntigens NeoplasmantigensCell Line TumorDrug DiscoverymedicineHumansAmino Acid SequenceGeneral Pharmacology Toxicology and PharmaceuticsPeptide sequenceMUC1Pharmacologychemistry.chemical_classification010405 organic chemistryMolecular MimicryMucin-1Organic ChemistryTransferringlycopeptidesoxime chemical ligationGlycopeptide0104 chemical sciencesMolecular mimicrychemistryBiochemistryTransferrinMolecular MedicineFemaleGlycoproteinChemMedChem
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