Search results for "PET"

showing 10 items of 12749 documents

Fruit size in relation to competition for resources: A common model shared by two species and several genotypes grown under contrasted carbohydrate l…

2012

International audience; Fruit size is one important criterion of fruit external quality affecting consumer acceptance. The effects of seed number on fruit size in two fleshy fruits, grape and tomato, of different genotypes and grown under distinct carbohydrate availability levels were analyzed with a model. The two-parameter model described within-fruit resource competition and was able to well represent the commonly observed decrease in fresh weight per seed along with the increase in number of seeds, regardless of species, genotypes, and carbohydrate levels that were evaluated in this study. However, carbohydrate levels largely modified the correlation between seed number and fresh weight…

0106 biological sciences[SDV.SA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciencesCompetition levelmodel selectionmedia_common.quotation_subjectModel parametersQuantitative trait locusBiologytomatofruit load01 natural sciencessizeCompetition (biology)03 medical and health sciencesquantitative trait locusGenotype[SDV.BV]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal BiologyVitis[SDV.BV] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal BiologyDomestication030304 developmental biologymedia_common2. Zero hungerresource competition0303 health sciences[SDV.SA] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciencesfungiFresh weightfood and beveragesCarbohydrateHorticultureAgronomyseed010606 plant biology & botany
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Physiological and Structural Changes in Tobacco Leaves Treated with Cryptogein, a Proteinaceous Elicitor fromPhytophthora cryptogea

1991

Cryptogein was applied on the petiole section of excised tobacco leaves. It elicited necroses that can be correlated with histological alterations, such as rapid chloroplast breakdown and a collapse of cells leading to disorganization of the parenchyma tissue. In addition, it induced ethylene production and accumulation of capsidiol. In order to detect an early response, we analyzed the kinetics of chlorophyll fluorescence induction (...)

0106 biological sciences[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Nicotiana tabacumPlant Science01 natural sciencesPetiole (botany)MicrobiologyCapsidiol03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundParenchymaChlorophyll fluorescenceComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesbiologyPhytophthora cryptogeafood and beveragesbiology.organism_classificationElicitor[SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio]ChloroplastchemistryBiophysicsAgronomy and Crop Science010606 plant biology & botanyPhytopathology
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Bank vole alarm pheromone chemistry and effects in the field

2021

Chemical communication plays an important role in mammalian life history decisions. Animals send and receive information based on body odour secretions. Odour cues provide important social information on identity, kinship, sex, group membership or genetic quality. Recent findings show, that rodents alarm their conspecifics with danger-dependent body odours after encountering a predator. In this study, we aim to identify the chemistry of alarm pheromones (AP) in the bank vole, a common boreal rodent. Furthermore, the vole foraging efficiency under perceived fear was measured in a set of field experiments in large outdoor enclosures. During the analysis of bank vole odour by gas chromatograph…

0106 biological sciencesalarm pheromoneRodentpredator-prey interactionsmetsämyyräForagingZoology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesPheromoneshaju03 medical and health sciencesALARMmammalian body odournisäkkäätbiology.animalBody odourparasitic diseasespetoeläimetmedicineAnimalsbank volePredatorEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biologyferomonit0303 health sciencessaaliseläimetbiologyArvicolinaeBank voleBehavioral Ecology–Original ResearchfungiFearbiology.organism_classificationBank voleMammalian body odourAlarm pheromoneOdorantsbehavior and behavior mechanismsPheromoneVoleCuesmedicine.symptomPredator–prey interactions
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Social phenotype extended to communities: Expanded multilevel social selection analysis reveals fitness consequences of interspecific interactions

2015

In social species, fitness consequences are associated with both individual and social phenotypes. Social selection analysis has quantified the contribution of conspecific social traits to individual fitness. There has been no attempt, however, to apply a social selection approach to quantify the fitness implications of heterospecific social phenotypes. Here, we propose a novel social selection based approach integrating the role of all social interactions at the community level. We extended multilevel selection analysis by including a term accounting for the group phenotype of heterospecifics. We analyzed nest activity as a model social trait common to two species, the lesser kestrel (Falc…

0106 biological sciencesbiologyEcologyFalco naumanniKestrelInterspecific competitionbiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesPhenotype010601 ecologyNestGeneticsTraitGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSelection (genetic algorithm)CoevolutionEvolution
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Decomposition of nest material in tree holes and nest-boxes occupied by European Starlings Sturnus vulgaris: an experimental study

2017

Numerous bird species depend on the availability of tree cavities, and most non-excavators fill their cavities with considerable amounts of nest material. If not removed, this material can accumulate and render cavities unusable, as recorded in some nest-box studies. Data from earlier studies of tree cavities, however, showed that nest material can decrease mostly due to in situ decomposition, but the relative difference between nest decomposition in tree holes and nest-boxes is still unknown. We undertook parallel studies of decay in tree holes and nest-boxes used by European Starlings Sturnus vulgaris in oak-hornbeam stands (SW Poland). We inserted into its tree holes and nest-boxes litte…

0106 biological sciencesbiologyEcologylitter-bagsmedia_common.quotation_subjectbird nestsMicroclimateZoologybiology.organism_classificationBird nest010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesDecompositionCompetition (biology)010605 ornithologyTree (data structure)NestSturnusnest site choiceAnimal Science and Zoologynest material decompositioncavity nesting birdsnest-site cleaningmedia_commonActa Ornithologica
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A comparative analysis of patch-leaving decision rules in a parasitoid family

2003

The proximate behavioural rules adopted by parasitoid females to manage their foraging time on patches of hosts were studied, under standardized laboratory conditions, in different species (and populations) of the Trichogrammatidae (Hymenoptera) family. Seventeen species/populations were compared and the behavioural mechanisms adopted by the females were identified by means of a Cox's proportional hazards model. On average, females increased their patch-leaving tendency each time a healthy host was attacked and each time a parasitized host was rejected. Strong variation was observed in these patch-leaving mechanisms among the different species. Moreover, the interspecific variation in these…

0106 biological sciencesbiologyHost (biology)Proportional hazards modelEcologyForagingZoologyHymenopteraInterspecific competitionPhylogenetic comparative methodsbiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesParasitoid010602 entomologyTrichogrammatidaeAnimal Science and ZoologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Animal Ecology
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The cost-effectiveness of using raptor nest sites to identify areas with high species richness of other taxa

2016

Abstract Given the limited resources available for conservation, it is important that the areas to preserve are selected in a cost effective manner. However, the cost effectiveness of the surrogate species strategy (the use of information on one or more species to identify areas of value for other species for which there is no, or more limited, available information) has seldom been evaluated. In this study, we investigate the opportunity cost of setting aside breeding sites of two forest raptor species (the surrogate species) by evaluating their individual and combined contribution to preserve diversity of polypores (wood-decaying fungi) and birds against the contributions of previously es…

0106 biological sciencescost efficiencyCost effectivenessmedia_common.quotation_subjectta1172BiodiversityGeneral Decision SciencesBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesCompetition (biology)indicator speciestop predatorUmbrella speciesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsApex predatormedia_commonNature reserveEcologyEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiology15. Life on landreserve selectionraptorIndicator speciesta1181Species richnesslocal umbrella speciesEcological Indicators
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Resource availability and competition shape the evolution of survival and growth ability in a bacterial community

2013

Resource availability is one of the main factors determining the ecological dynamics of populations or species. Fluctuations in resource availability can increase or decrease the intensity of resource competition. Resource availability and competition can also cause evolutionary changes in life-history traits. We studied how community structure and resource fluctuations affect the evolution of fitness related traits using a two-species bacterial model system. Replicated populations of Serratia marcescens (copiotroph) and Novosophingobium capsulatum (oligotroph) were reared alone or together in environments with intergenerational, pulsed resource renewal. The comparison of ancestral and evol…

0106 biological sciencesecological nichesBACTERIAL BIOFILMSResource (biology)media_common.quotation_subjectScienceAdaptation BiologicalBiologyco-evolutionEnvironment010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesCompetition (biology)Bacterial evolution03 medical and health sciencesSpecies SpecificityAdaptive radiationCopiotrophSerratia marcescens030304 developmental biologymedia_commonEcological niche0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinaryEcologyMicrobiotaQCommunity structureRInterspecific competitionbiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionSurvival AnalysisSphingomonadaceaeSerratia marcescens1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyLinear ModelsMedicineMicrobial Interactionsta1181competitionResearch ArticlePLOS ONE
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Environmental Fluctuations Drive Species' Competitive Success in Experimental Invasions

2020

Climate change is presumed to increase both the number and frequency of fluctuations in environmental conditions. Fluctuations can affect the ecological and evolutionary processes that make species more successful competitors. For example, fluctuating conditions can create selection pressures for traits that are profitable in adaptation to fast climate change. On an ecological timescale, environmental fluctuations can facilitate species competitive success by reducing other species’ population sizes. Climate change could then enhance species invasions into new areas if fluctuation-adapted invaders displace their native competitors in chancing environments. We tested experimentally whether f…

0106 biological scienceseducation.field_of_studyEcologyEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologymedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationevoluutioClimate changeCompetitor analysis010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesCompetition (biology)populaatioekologiaEnvironmental scienceAnimal Science and ZoologyvieraslajitAdaptationeducationympäristönmuutoksetEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape Conservationmedia_commonAnnales Zoologici Fennici
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Interventions have limited effects on the population dynamics of Ips typographus and its natural enemies in the Western Carpathians (Central Europe)

2020

Abstract Outbreaks of the European spruce bark beetle Ips typographus kill extensive areas of Norway spruce forests in Central Europe, affecting both protected areas and neighboring commercial forests. In protected areas, uncontrolled (non-intervention) management allows natural beetle-induced tree mortality, while in commercial forests infested trees are salvage-logged in order to lower I. typographus numbers and stabilize wood production. However, the effects of active pest controls on I. typographus population are often ambiguous, and little is known about how antagonists, beetle density, or intraspecific competition help terminate I. typographus outbreaks. To answer this question, we st…

0106 biological scienceseducation.field_of_studyWood productionEcologyPopulationBiodiversityForestryManagement Monitoring Policy and LawBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesIntraspecific competitionPredationBark (sound)EcosystemPEST analysiseducation010606 plant biology & botanyNature and Landscape ConservationForest Ecology and Management
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