Search results for "NEA"

showing 10 items of 16082 documents

A Tale of Big Game and Small Bugs

1999

Animal populations undergo repetitive cycles of rising and falling numbers. In a Perspective, [Ranta and colleagues][1] discuss the value of time-series analyses for examining the changing dynamics of animal populations. A large time series gathered by the Hudson Bay Company based on the fur trade has provided invaluable data on the rise and fall of the Canadian lynx population from 1821 to the present. Analysis of this time series reveals that climate as well as factors influencing birth and death rates are important in regulating the lynx population ([ Stenseth et al .][2]). In a separate study, mathematical modeling combined with fieldwork revealed the importance of predators in determin…

0106 biological sciences0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyMultidisciplinarybiologyFur tradePopulationCanadian lynxbiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGenealogy03 medical and health sciencesGeographyBig gameeducation030304 developmental biologyScience
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Harvesting‐induced population fluctuations?

2003

It has recently been shown that damped endogenous dynamics is a common feature in Finnish grouse species; In this paper, we demonstrate that time-variant harvesting may turn damped dynamics to quasi-periodic fluctuations. Exploited populations, e.g. grouse, may therefore fluctuate more than expected if we do not manage to keep the harvest fraction constant over time. However, the harvest fraction of Finnish grouse varies with the phase of the cycle. Such a harvesting strategy could potentially change the periodicity of the fluctuations, as can a threshold harvest strategy where a constant fraction is harvested above a density threshold. The two non-linear harvesting strategies investigated …

0106 biological sciences0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studybiologyEcologyPopulationLinear modelGrouseManagement Monitoring Policy and Lawbiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciencesDensity dependence14. Life underwatereducationConstant (mathematics)Biological sciencesEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biologyNature and Landscape ConservationWildlife Biology
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Forage silica and water content control dental surface texture in guinea pigs and provide implications for dietary reconstruction.

2019

Significance Ingesta leave characteristic wear features on the tooth surface, which enable us to reconstruct the diet of extant and fossil vertebrates. However, whether dental wear is caused by internal (phytoliths) or external (mineral dust) silicate abrasives is controversially debated in paleoanthropology and biology. To assess this, we fed guinea pigs plant forages of increasing silica content (lucerne < grass < bamboo) without any external abrasives, both in fresh and dried state. Abrasiveness and enamel surface wear increased with higher forage phytolith content. Additionally, water loss altered plant material properties. Dental wear of fresh grass feeding was similar to lucerne brows…

0106 biological sciences10253 Department of Small Animals01 natural sciencesPHYTOLITHSsurface textureGRASSTEETHMICROWEARGrazingphytolithsWater content2. Zero hungerTimothy-grassMultidisciplinarybiologyEnamel paint630 AgricultureEcologymicrotextureTRIBOLOGYfood and beveragesPlantsBiological SciencesSilicon DioxideVARIABILITYPhytolithvisual_artMAMMALSvisual_art.visual_art_mediumFemale010506 paleontologyBambooGuinea PigsForage010603 evolutionary biologyFEEDING ECOLOGYAnimal sciencestomatognathic systemHardnessAnimalsgrazingDental Enamel0105 earth and related environmental sciences1000 MultidisciplinaryBiology and Life SciencesWater15. Life on landbiology.organism_classificationMolarDietTooth AbrasionWEARTooth wearMECHANICStooth wear570 Life sciences; biologyProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
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Shape, size, and quantity of ingested external abrasives influence dental microwear texture formation in guinea pigs

2020

Food processing wears down teeth, thus affecting tooth functionality and evolutionary success. Other than intrinsic silica phytoliths, extrinsic mineral dust/grit adhering to plants causes tooth wear in mammalian herbivores. Dental microwear texture analysis (DMTA) is widely applied to infer diet from microscopic dental wear traces. The relationship between external abrasives and dental microwear texture (DMT) formation remains elusive. Feeding experiments with sheep have shown negligible effects of dust-laden grass and browse, suggesting that intrinsic properties of plants are more important. Here, we explore the effect of clay- to sand-sized mineral abrasives (quartz, volcanic ash, loess,…

0106 biological sciences10253 Department of Small AnimalsGuinea PigsDental WearMineral dustdiet reconstruction010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesTexture (geology)Texture formation010104 statistics & probabilitychemistry.chemical_compoundstomatognathic systemAnimalsHerbivoryParticle Size0101 mathematicsQuartzgrit2. Zero hunger1000 MultidisciplinaryMultidisciplinary630 AgricultureMetallurgyPlantsBiological SciencesAnimal FeedSilicateDietTooth AbrasionchemistryTooth weartooth wear570 Life sciences; biologyParticle sizedustfeeding experimentProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
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Long-term effects of no tillage treatment on soil N availability, N uptake, and 15N-fertilizer recovery of durum wheat differ in relation to crop seq…

2016

Abstract No tillage (NT) soil management has largely been promoted because of its potential to generate both economic and environmental benefits. However, it often leads to reductions in crop yield and quality, which in many cases have been attributed to the effects this technique has on the nitrogen (N) dynamics in the soil–plant system. This 2-year study, performed within a long-term experiment in which NT was continuously applied for over 15 years, aimed to verify whether and to what extent the use of NT affects soil N availability, recovery of 15 N-labeled fertilizer, and N use efficiency (NUE) and its components (N uptake efficiency, NUpE; N utilization efficiency, NUtE). Durum wheat w…

0106 biological sciences15N-fertilizer recoveryMediterranean environmentSoil ScienceBiologyengineering.material01 natural sciencesCropSoil managementNUENUpENUtEConventional tillageConventional tillageCrop yieldNo tillage04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesCrop rotationSettore AGR/02 - Agronomia E Coltivazioni ErbaceeTillageAgronomy040103 agronomy & agricultureengineering0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesFertilizerPlant nutritionAgronomy and Crop Science010606 plant biology & botany
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Prevention of Fusarium head blight infection and mycotoxins in wheat with cut-and-carry biofumigation and botanicals

2020

Fusarium head blight (FHB) is a devastating fungal disease of wheat worldwide causing yield losses and grain contamination with mycotoxins that jeopardise food and feed safety. Field experiments using mulch layers or botanicals were conducted in two consecutive years to investigate prevention measures with the potential to suppress FHB and reduce mycotoxins in wheat. We simulated a system with high disease pressure, i.e. maize-wheat rotation under no-tillage, by applying maize residues artificially inoculated with Fusarium graminearum in field plots after wheat sowing. For mulch layers, a novel cut-and-carry biofumigation approach was employed. Cover crops grown in separate fields were harv…

0106 biological sciences2. Zero hungerbiologyCrop yieldBrassicaSoil ScienceSowing04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesbiology.organism_classificationFusarium graminearum; Mycotoxin; Wheat; Mustard; Clover01 natural scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundAgronomychemistry040103 agronomy & agriculture0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesCover cropMycotoxinAgronomy and Crop ScienceZearalenoneMulchWhite mustard010606 plant biology & botanyField Crops Research
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Phylogenomics Identifies an Ancestral Burst of Gene Duplications Predating the Diversification of Aphidomorpha

2019

Aphids (Aphidoidea) are a diverse group of hemipteran insects that feed on plant phloem sap. A common finding in studies of aphid genomes is the presence of a large number of duplicated genes. However, when these duplications occurred remains unclear, partly due to the high relatedness of sequenced species. To better understand the origin of aphid duplications we sequenced and assembled the genome of Cinara cedri, an early branching lineage (Lachninae) of the Aphididae family. We performed a phylogenomic comparison of this genome with 20 other sequenced genomes, including the available genomes of five other aphids, along with the transcriptomes of two species belonging to Adelgidae (a close…

0106 biological sciences:Informàtica::Aplicacions de la informàtica::Bioinformàtica [Àrees temàtiques de la UPC]Gene duplicationAphidomorphaLineage (evolution)010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGenomeSyntenyDNA sequencingFilogèniaEvolution Molecular03 medical and health sciencessequencia genómicaSpecies SpecificityPhylogenomicsGene duplicationBioinformaticaGeneticsAdelgidaeAnimalsMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDiscoveriesPhylogeny030304 developmental biologySegmental duplication0303 health sciencesAphidbiologyWhole Genome SequencingGene Expression Profilinggene duplicationfood and beveragesHigh-Throughput Nucleotide SequencingAfidomorfabiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationaphidsGenòmicaGene Expression RegulationEvolutionary biologyAphidsInsect ProteinsGenèticaMolecular Biology and Evolution
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Drivers of plant richness patterns of Mediterranean riparian forests at local and regional scales have bottom-up and top-down effects

2019

Questions: It has been long recognized that community species richness depends on factors operating at different spatial scales. Most frequently, across-scale studies have focused on the impact of regional factors on local richness (top-down effects) while few have analyzed the importance of local factors on regional richness (bottom-up) and even fewer have tried to integrate effects on both directions. Our objectives were to reveal the key factors shaping plant species richness of Mediterranean riparian forests and to test whether empirical models based on top-down or bottom-up relationships are able to explain the spatial scaling of richness. Location: Southern half of Spain, SW Europe. M…

0106 biological sciencesAbiotic componentMediterranean climategeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologyEcologyBiodiversityPlant ScienceVegetation010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGeographyHabitatRiparian forestSpecies richness010606 plant biology & botanyRiparian zone
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Dental microwear texture gradients in guinea pigs reveal that material properties of the diet affect chewing behaviour

2021

ABSTRACT Dental microwear texture analysis (DMTA) is widely used for diet inferences in extant and extinct vertebrates. Often, a reference tooth position is analysed in extant specimens, while isolated teeth are lumped together in fossil datasets. It is therefore important to test whether dental microwear texture (DMT) is tooth position specific and, if so, what causes the differences in wear. Here, we present results from controlled feeding experiments with 72 guinea pigs, which received either fresh or dried natural plant diets of different phytolith content (lucerne, grass, bamboo) or pelleted diets with and without mineral abrasives (frequently encountered by herbivorous mammals in natu…

0106 biological sciencesAbrasion (dental)10253 Department of Small Animals1109 Insect SciencePhysiologyEvolutionGuinea PigsBiologyAquatic Science010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciencesPosterior ToothAnimal sciencestomatognathic systemBehavior and Systematicsmedicine1312 Molecular BiologyAnimalsMasticationMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAnterior teeth030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesHerbivore630 Agriculture1104 Aquatic ScienceEcology1314 Physiologymedicine.diseaseAnimal FeedDietBite force quotientstomatognathic diseases1105 Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhytolithTooth wearInsect ScienceMastication570 Life sciences; biologyAnimal Science and ZoologyTooth Wear1103 Animal Science and ZoologyTooth
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A taxonomic revision helps to clarify differences between the Atlantic invasive Ptilohyale littoralis and the Mediterranean endemic Parhyale plumicor…

2018

Ptilohyaleexplorator (formerly Parhyaleexplorator), described by Arresti (1989), can be considered to be a synonym of west-Atlantic Ptilohyalelittoralis (Stimpson, 1853), based on morphological observations of paratypes and specimens recently collected in the type locality of Ptilohyaleexplorator. The first collections of Ptilohyalelittoralis, from the eastern Atlantic were from the port of Rotterdam (The Netherlands) in 2009 and later in Wimereux, Opal Coast (France) in 2014; however, the synonymy of Ptilohyaleexplorator with Ptilohyalelittoralis backdates to the first European record of Ptilohyalelittoralis in 1985 at La Vigne, Bay of Arcachon (France). This indicates that Ptilohyalelitto…

0106 biological sciencesAmphipodaArthropodaParhyaleSynonymAtlantic Hyalidae Invasive species Mediterranean Sea Parhyale plumicornis Ptilohyale littoralisSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaNephrozoaZoologyProtostomia010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesCircumscriptional names of the taxon underInvasive speciesMediterranean seaGenusCrustacealcsh:ZoologyParhyaleMediterranean SeaBilateriaAnimaliaAmphipodalcsh:QL1-991MalacostracaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsbiologyPtilohyaleInvasive species010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyHyalidaeplumicornisCephalornisbiology.organism_classificationGeographyNotchiaAtlanticEcdysozoaAnimal Science and ZoologyType localityParhyale plumicornislittoralisPtilohyale littoralisBayCoelenterata
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