Search results for "Natural selection"

showing 10 items of 129 documents

Productivity increases with variation in aggression among group members in Temnothorax ants

2011

Social insect societies are characterized not only by a reproductive division of labor between the queen and workers but also by a specialization of workers on different tasks. However, how this variation in behavior or morphology among workers influences colony fitness is largely unknown. We investigated in the ant Temnothorax longispinosus whether aggressive and exploratory behavior and/or variation among nest mates in these behavioral traits are associated with an important fitness measure, that is, per worker offspring production. In addition, we studied how body size and variation in size among workers affect this colony fitness correlate. First, we found strong differences in worker b…

Natural selectionTemnothoraxbiologyEcologyAggressionmedia_common.quotation_subjectAnt colonybiology.organism_classificationAffect (psychology)Competition (biology)NestmedicineAnimal Science and Zoologymedicine.symptomEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDivision of labourDemographymedia_commonBehavioral Ecology
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Rapid growth of Atlantic salmon juveniles in captivity may indicate poor performance in nature

2011

Abstract The hatchery environment often favours completely different traits than natural selection in the wild. Consequently, hatchery-reared fish are usually larger and more aggressive than their wild counterparts. Increased growth rate and aggression are predicted to be beneficial in feeding competition in hatcheries, but not necessarily in nature, where food resources are spatially and temporally more variable. We compared the growth, condition and mortality of landlocked Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) juveniles in a common hatchery environment and when feeding on natural prey in semi-natural channels. We found that the growth and survival probability of the fish in the hatchery was ne…

Natural selectionbiologyDirectional selectionmedia_common.quotation_subjectCaptivitybiology.organism_classificationCompetition (biology)HatcheryPredationFisherySalmoEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSelection (genetic algorithm)Nature and Landscape Conservationmedia_commonBiological Conservation
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Mammalian nest predator feces as a cue in avian habitat selection decisions

2012

Breeding habitat selection is expected to be adaptive. Animals should respond to strong agents of natural selection, such as expected offspring mortality due to nest predators, in their settlement decisions. In birds, mammalian nest predators are a significant mortality source and birds are known to respond to their presence. However, the mechanism used by birds to perceive mammalian nest predators and estimate the nest predation risk remains unknown, in particular at larger spatial scales while comparing potential breeding habitat patches. We experimentally tested whether the farmland bird community can detect and perceive cues of a mammalian nest predator (urine and feces), and how this p…

Natural selectionbiologyEcologyCommunity structurePasserinePredationNestHabitatAbundance (ecology)biology.animalta1181Animal Science and ZoologyPredatorEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBehavioral Ecology
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An improved version of the Atlantic cod genome and advancements in functional genomics: implications for the future of cod farming

2016

Abstract Recent advancements within state-of-the-art genomic tools and the generation of the first version of the Atlantic cod genome (Star et al., 2011) have proven to be valuable resources, improving our understanding of this species’ biology. In this chapter we describe some aspects and implications of using these resources to identify genes and molecular pathways involved in Atlantic cod growth and development, as well as responses to nutritional changes, pathogens and other immune stimuli, and environmental stressors (e.g., temperature, stress, or pollutants). Additionally, we highlight the immunological puzzle of the Atlantic cod that lacks components of the adaptive immune system pre…

Natural selectionbiologyEcologyEvolutionary biologySystems biologyPhenotypic traitAtlantic codbiology.organism_classificationGeneGenomeFunctional genomicsLocal adaptation
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NATURAL SELECTION AND THE ORGAN-SPECIFIC DIFFERENTIATION OF HIV-1 V3 HYPERVARIABLE REGION

2004

The existence of organ-specific HIV-1 populations within infected hosts has been studied for many years; nonetheless results reported by different authors are somewhat discrepant. To tackle this problem, we used a population genetics approach to analyze previously published data from the V3 hypervariable region of the envelope env gene. Our results are compatible with a population subdivision by organs in 95% of individuals analyzed at autopsy. In addition, populations infecting the nervous system and testicles clearly appear as differentiated subsets of the so-called macrophage-tropic variants. Liver and kidney may harbor differentiated populations as well. Although it is widely accepted t…

Nonsynonymous substitutionPopulationPopulation geneticsHIV Envelope Protein gp120BiologyEvolution MolecularGeneticsCluster AnalysisHumansSelection GeneticeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeneticsAnalysis of VarianceLikelihood Functionseducation.field_of_studyNatural selectionBase SequenceModels GeneticMechanism (biology)HIVPeptide FragmentsHypervariable regionGenetics PopulationOrgan SpecificityViral evolutionAdaptationDatabases Nucleic AcidGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesSequence AlignmentEvolution
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The fitness effects of synonymous mutations in DNA and RNA viruses.

2011

Despite being silent with respect to protein sequence, synonymous nucleotide substitutions can be targeted by natural selection directly at the DNA or RNA level. However, there has been no systematic assessment of how frequent this type of selection is. Here, we have constructed 53 single random synonymous substitution mutants of the bacteriophages Qb and UX174 by site-directed mutagenesis and assayed their fitness. Analysis of this mutant collection and of previous studies undertaken with a variety of single-stranded (ss) viruses demonstrates that selection at synonymous sites is stronger in RNA viruses than in DNA viruses. We estimate that this type of selection contributes approximately …

Nonsynonymous substitutionvirusesBiologymedicine.disease_causeVirusKa/Ks ratioEvolution Molecularchemistry.chemical_compoundGeneticsmedicineRNA VirusesBacteriophagesSelection GeneticCodonMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeneticsMutationNatural selectionModels GeneticDNA VirusesRNAVirologychemistryMutationMutagenesis Site-DirectedGenetic FitnessSynonymous substitutionDNAMolecular biology and evolution
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Co-mimics have a mutualistic relationship despite unequal defences

2007

Defensive mimicry, where species have evolved to resemble others in order to evade predators, is quite common in the animal kingdom. The two extremes of the mimicry spectrum are known as 'batesian' and 'mullerian'. Batesian mimics develop signals — visual cues for instance — that are similar to those of species being mimicked, but stop short of adopting the attribute that makes it unprofitable prey to predators. Mullerian mimics both resemble the model species and share the anti-predation attribute — by being dangerous or unpalatable. These different types of mimic were identified a century ago, but the dynamics of mimicry between unequally defended prey remain unresolved. In an experiment …

ParusMultidisciplinaryNatural selectionEcologyAdaptation BiologicalBiologybiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionModels BiologicalBatesian mimicryMüllerian mimicryPredationParasemia plantaginisPredatory BehaviorAvoidance LearningMimicryAnimalsPasseriformesPredatorNature
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2021

Interactions between organisms and their environments are central to how biological diversity arises and how natural populations and ecosystems respond to environmental change. These interactions involve processes by which phenotypes are affected by or respond to external conditions (e.g., via phenotypic plasticity or natural selection) as well as processes by which organisms reciprocally interact with the environment (e.g., via eco-evolutionary feedbacks). Organism-environment interactions can be highly dynamic and operate on different hierarchical levels, from genes and phenotypes to populations, communities, and ecosystems. Therefore, the study of organism-environment interactions requir…

Phenotypic plasticityNatural selectionEcologybiologyEcologyBiodiversityAsellus aquaticusEcosystemEvolutionary ecologyKeystone speciesbiology.organism_classificationFreshwater ecosystemEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsFrontiers in Ecology and Evolution
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A Study of the Coevolution of Digital Organisms with an Evolutionary Cellular Automaton

2021

This article belongs to the Section Evolutionary Biology.

QH301-705.5Phenotypic plasticityBiologyphenotypic plasticityArticleGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyCross-species cooperationBiology (General)SymbiosisEvolutionary dynamicsCoevolutionMutualism (biology)Flexibility (engineering)Phenotypic plasticityEvolutionary altruismNatural selectionGeneral Immunology and Microbiologyevolutionary altruismsex ratioCellular automatonsymbiosisGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesBiological systemEvolution strategySex ratiocross-species cooperationBiology
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Evolution of oncolytic viruses.

2015

Owing to their replicative capacity, oncolytic viruses (OVs) can evolve under the action of natural selection. Reversion to virulence and recombination with wild-type strains may compromise OV safety, therefore requiring evolutionary risk assessment studies. On the other hand, evolution can be directed in the laboratory to create more potent and safer OVs. Previous work in the experimental evolution field provides a background for OV directed evolution, and has identified interesting exploitable features. While genetic engineering has greatly advanced the field of oncolytic virotherapy, this approach is sometimes curtailed by the complexity and diversity of virus-host interactions. Directed…

Replicative capacityGeneticsOncolytic VirotherapyExperimental evolutionNatural selectionExtramuralNeoplasms therapyComputational biologyBiologyDirected evolutionOncolytic virusEvolution MolecularOncolytic VirusesVirologyNeoplasmsAnimalsHumansCurrent opinion in virology
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