Search results for "Myodes"

showing 10 items of 56 documents

Is Mating Alone Enough to Inhibit Infanticide in Male Bank Voles?

2010

Infanticide, the killing of conspecific young, is commonly recognized as an adaptive behavioural strategy enhancing the fitness of the perpetrator. Infanticide is supposed to be inhibited in several male rodent species after mating with a time lag to the time when perpetrators own offspring would be born. This is because males with no parental care do not recognize their own offspring. It has been suggested that copulation alone is enough to inhibit infanticidal behaviour in male rodents. Infanticidal behaviour occurs in more than 50% of male bank voles (Myodes glareolus), and offspring loss because of infanticide may have a great effect on breeding success and population recruitment. In a …

0106 biological scienceseducation.field_of_studyRodentbiologyOffspring05 social sciencesPopulationZoologyMyodes glareolus010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesDevelopmental psychologyHarembiology.animalWeaning0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesAnimal Science and Zoology050102 behavioral science & comparative psychologyMatingeducationPaternal careEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEthology
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Exposure to environmental radionuclides alters mitochondrial DNA maintenance in a wild rodent

2020

AbstractMitochondria are sensitive to oxidative stress, including that derived from ionizing radiation. To quantify the effects of exposure to environmental radionuclides on mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) dynamics in wildlife, bank voles (Myodes glareolus) were collected from the chernobyl exclusion zone (CEZ), where animals are exposed to elevated levels of radionuclides, and from uncontaminated areas within the CEZ and elsewhere in Ukraine. Brains of bank voles from outside the CEZ were characterized by low mtDNA copy number and low mtDNA damage; by contrast, bank voles within the CEZ had high mtDNA copy number and high mtDNA damage, consistent with putative damaging effects of elevated radiat…

0301 basic medicineIonizing radiationMitochondrial DNARodentmetsämyyrämitokondriotZoologyMyodes glareolusBiologyMitochondrionmedicine.disease_cause03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinebiology.animalMyodes glareolusmedicineGeneEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmitokondrio-DNACopy numberionisoiva säteilyDNAMitochondria030104 developmental biologyMitochondrial biogenesisAnimal ecology030220 oncology & carcinogenesisDNA damage[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyOxidative stress
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Transcriptional Upregulation of DNA Damage Response Genes in Bank Voles (Myodes glareolus) Inhabiting the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone

2018

Exposure to ionizing radiation (IR) from radionuclides released into the environment can damage DNA. An expected response to exposure to environmental radionuclides, therefore, is initiation of DNA damage response (DDR) pathways. Increased DNA damage is a characteristic of many organisms exposed to radionuclides but expression of DDR genes of wildlife inhabiting an area contaminated by radionuclides is poorly understood. We quantified expression of five central DDR genes Atm, Mre11, p53, Brca1, and p21 in the livers of the bank vole Myodes glareolus that inhabited areas within the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone (CEZ) that differed in levels of ambient radioactivity, and also from control areas ou…

0301 basic medicinevauriotDNA damagetuhotZoologyMyodes glareolusDNA repairBiologydnamedicine.disease_causeChernobyl03 medical and health sciencesDownregulation and upregulationkorjausmedicineMre11oxidative stressExclusion zoneGeneoksidatiivinen stressichernobyllcsh:Environmental sciencesGeneral Environmental Sciencelcsh:GE1-350ionising radiationionisoiva säteilyDNAbiology.organism_classificationBank volebody regions030104 developmental biologyAtmta1181DNA damageionizing radiationOxidative stressFrontiers in Environmental Science
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State-dependent foraging: lactating voles adjust their foraging behavior according to the presence of a potential nest predator and season

2015

Parental care often produces a trade-off between meeting nutritional demands of offspring and the duties of offspring protection, especially in altricial species. Parents have to leave their young unattended for foraging trips, during which nestlings are exposed to predators. We investigated how rodent mothers of altricial young respond to risk of nest predation in their foraging decisions. We studied foraging behavior of lactating bank voles (Myodes glareolus) exposed to a nest predator, the common shrew (Sorex araneus). We conducted the experiment in summer (high resource provisioning for both species) and autumn (less food available) in 12 replicates with fully crossed factors “shrew pre…

2. Zero hungerOriginal PaperbiologyEcologyeducationShrewForagingSeasonalityCommon shrewbiology.organism_classificationOptimal foraging theoryPredationNestAnimal ecologybiology.animal1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyMyodes glareolusNest protectionAnimal Science and ZoologyInterferencePaternal careEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsInstitut für Biochemie und BiologieOptimal foragingSorex araneus
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Reducing Mortality of Shrews in Rodent Live Trapping — a Method Increasing Live-Trap Selectivity with Shrew Exits

2013

Shrews have very high metabolic rates and are often unintentionally starved in rodent live-traps during capture-mark-recapture (CMR) studies. Here, we suggest a shrew exit as a modification to rodent traps. To test whether this modification is (1) saving shrews and (2) not jeopardizing results of rodent captures, we compared captures in Ugglan traps with and without shrew exits, studying bank voles (Myodes glareolus) in a spruce forest in central Finland. Numbers of captured bank voles and body size of smallest juvenile bank voles were not affected by the shrew exit, while the number of captured common shrews (Sorex araneus) was reduced from 31 to 0 individuals per 100 trap nights. However,…

AraneusSpruce forestEcologybiologyRodentEcologyShrewMyodes glareolusTrappingSorexbiology.organism_classificationBody weightbiology.animalta1181Animal Science and ZoologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape ConservationAnnales Zoologici Fennici
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Polyandrous females produce sons that are successful at post-copulatory competition.

2014

Some of the genetic benefit hypotheses put forward to explain multiple male mating (polyandry) predict that sons of polyandrous females will have an increased competitive ability under precopulatory or post-copulatory competition via paternally inherited traits, such as attractiveness or fertilization efficiency. Here, we tested these predictions by comparing the competitive ability of sons of experimentally monandrous and polyandrous female bank voles (Myodes glareolus), while controlling for potential material and maternal effects. In female choice experiments, we found no clear preference for sons of either monandrous or polyandrous mothers. Moreover, neither male type was dominant over …

AttractivenessMaleEcologyArvicolinaemedia_common.quotation_subjectMonandrousMaternal effectZoologyMyodes glareolusBiologyhumanitiesCompetition (biology)Sexual Behavior AnimalMate choiceCopulationta1181AnimalsFemaleMatingScramble competitionEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsInstitut für Biochemie und Biologiemedia_commonJournal of evolutionary biology
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Chronic Background Radiation Correlates With Sperm Swimming Endurance in Bank Voles From Chernobyl

2022

Sperm quantity and quality are key features explaining intra- and interspecific variation in male reproductive success. Spermatogenesis is sensitive to ionizing radiation and laboratory studies investigating acute effects of ionizing radiation have indeed found negative effects of radiation on sperm quantity and quality. In nature, levels of natural background radiation vary dramatically, and chronic effects of low-level background radiation exposure on spermatogenesis are poorly understood. The Chernobyl region offers a unique research opportunity for investigating effects of chronic low-level ionizing radiation on reproductive properties of wild organisms. We captured male bank voles (Myo…

Ecologymetsämyyräionisoiva säteilytaustasäteilylisääntyminensperm morphometrysäteilybiologiareproductionbackground radiationsiittiötMyodes glareolusEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsperformancefysiologiset vaikutukset
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Variable mode of estrus affects female decision for multiple mating

2011

Investigating patterns of variation in mating strategies may shed light on their evolutionary importance as well as their impact on the strength and shape of sexual selection. Multimale mating (polyandry) and mate choice are intensely studied subjects in the area of sexual selection, but little is known about intraspecific patterns of variation that may respond to dynamic cost-benefit balances. In a laboratory study, we investigated the mating behavior of female bank voles (Myodes glareolus) with distinctly different time and energy budgets: They were either in cycling estrus (CE) or postpartum estrus (PPE) shortly after delivery. Postpartum mating is highly constrained by time and energy d…

Estrous cyclePostpartum estrusMate choiceEcologySexual selectionMyodes glareolusZoologyAnimal Science and ZoologyBiologyreproductive and urinary physiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsIntraspecific competitionBehavioral Ecology
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A large panel of novel microsatellite markers for the bank vole (Myodes glareolus)

2008

We describe a set of 66 highly polymorphic microsatellite loci isolated from the bank vole, Myodes (Clethrionomys) glareolus. These microsatellites were characterized for a long-term study on periodically fluctuating density of the bank vole population in Central Finland. We detected six to 38 alleles per locus in the population sampled at two different density phases, and the levels of observed and expected heterozygosities varied between 0.17 and 1.00, and between 0.72 and 0.95, respectively. This microsatellite panel serves as an informative tool for population and molecular genetic studies.

Geneticseducation.field_of_studybiologyPopulationMyodes glareolusZoologyLocus (genetics)biology.organism_classificationBank voleGeneticsMicrosatelliteAlleleeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBiotechnologyMolecular Ecology Resources
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The effects of Borrelia infection on its wintering rodent host

2022

AbstractIn seasonal environments, appropriate adaptations are crucial for organisms to maximize their fitness. For instance, in many species, the immune function has been noticed to decrease during winter, which is assumed to be an adaptation to the season’s limited food availability. Consequences of an infection on the health and survival of the host organism could thus be more severe in winter than in summer. Here, we experimentally investigated the effect of a zoonotic, endemic pathogen, Borrelia afzelii infection on the survival and body condition in its host, the bank vole (Myodes glareolus), during late autumn–early winter under semi-natural field conditions in 11 large outdoor enclos…

Lyme DiseaseIxodesArvicolinaemetsämyyräRodentiazoonosisisäntälajitwinterBorrelia-bakteerittaudinaiheuttajatBorrelia burgdorferi GroupBorrelia afzeliiMyodes glareolustalviisäntäeläimetAnimalssyksySeasonsautumnBorrelia InfectionsEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicshost–pathogen interactions
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