Search results for "PLASTICITY"

showing 10 items of 765 documents

From glacial refugia to hydrological microrefugia: Factors and processes driving the persistence of the climate relict tree Zelkova sicula

2021

Abstract With only two tiny populations, the climate relict Zelkova sicula (Sicily, Italy) is one of the rarest trees in the world. It also represents the most marginal member of genus Zelkova that was widespread in the broadleaved forests thriving in warm–temperate climates throughout Eurasia until the Last Glacial Age. Occurring at the westernmost range of the genus under typical Mediterranean climate, the micro‐topographic settings have always appeared crucial for the survival of this relict. However, the factors and processes actually involved in its persistence in the current refugia, as well as the response of similar relict trees in arid environments, are poorly understood worldwide.…

0106 biological sciencesMediterranean climateRange (biology)marginal habitatsrear edge populations010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences03 medical and health scienceslcsh:QH540-549.5Glacial periodtopographic attribute analysesecological plasticityEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsZelkova siculaOriginal Research030304 developmental biologyNature and Landscape Conservation0303 health sciencesEcologybiologyResistance (ecology)ZelkovaEcologybiology.organism_classificationCenozoic relictsAridGeographyCenozoic relicts ecological plasticity marginal habitats rear edge populations soil moisture topographic attribute analysesSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataSpatial ecologylcsh:Ecologysoil moisture
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The way wear goes: phytolith-based wear on the dentine–enamel system in guinea pigs (Cavia porcellus)

2019

The effect of phytoliths on tooth wear and function has been contested in studies of animal–plant interactions. For herbivores whose occlusal chewing surface consists of enamel ridges and dentine tissue, the phytoliths might particularly erode the softer dentine, exposing the enamel ridges to different occlusal forces and thus contributing to enamel wear. To test this hypothesis, we fed guinea pigs (Cavia porcellus; n = 36 in six groups) for threeweeks exclusively on dry or fresh forage of low(lucerne), moderate (fresh timothy grass) or very high (bamboo leaves) silica content representing corresponding levels of phytoliths. We quantified the effect of these treatments with measuremen…

0106 biological sciencesMolar10253 Department of Small AnimalsDentistry01 natural sciences2300 General Environmental ScienceLower body2400 General Immunology and MicrobiologyphytolithsGeneral Environmental Science2. Zero hunger630 AgricultureEcologybiologyEnamel paintOcclusal forcesGeneral Medicinemedicine.anatomical_structurePhytolithvisual_artvisual_art.visual_art_mediumGeneral Agricultural and Biological Sciences010506 paleontologygrowthGuinea PigsCaviaGenetics and Molecular Biology1100 General Agricultural and Biological Sciences010603 evolutionary biologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biologystomatognathic systemIncisor1300 General Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologymedicineAnimalsHerbivoryDental Enamel0105 earth and related environmental sciencesGeneral Immunology and Microbiologybusiness.industrybiology.organism_classificationAnimal FeedMolarDietstomatognathic diseasesTooth wearplasticityGeneral BiochemistryDentin570 Life sciences; biologyMasticationTooth Weardental wearbusinessProceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
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A review of transgenerational effects of ocean acidification on marine bivalves and their implications for sclerochronology

2020

Abstract Ocean acidification can negatively impact marine bivalves, especially their shell mineralization processes. Consequently, whether marine bivalves can rapidly acclimate and eventually adapt in an acidifying ocean is now increasingly receiving considerable attention. Projecting the fate of this vulnerable taxonomic group is also pivotal for the science of sclerochronology – the study which seeks to deduce records of past environmental changes and organismal life-history traits from various geochemical properties of periodically layered hard tissues (bivalve shells, corals, fish otoliths, etc.). In this review, we provide a concise overview of the long-term and transgenerational respo…

0106 biological sciencesPhenotypic plasticity010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyClimate changeOcean acidificationAquatic ScienceBiologyOceanography01 natural sciencesAcclimatizationIsotopes of oxygenTransgenerational epigeneticsIsotopes of carbonSclerochronology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEstuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
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Estimation of fitness from energetics and life-history data: An example using mussels.

2017

Changing environments have the potential to alter the fitness of organisms through effects on components of fitness such as energy acquisition, metabolic cost, growth rate, survivorship, and reproductive output. Organisms, on the other hand, can alter aspects of their physiology and life histories through phenotypic plasticity as well as through genetic change in populations (selection). Researchers examining the effects of environmental variables frequently concentrate on individual components of fitness, although methods exist to combine these into a population level estimate of average fitness, as the per capita rate of population growth for a set of identical individuals with a particul…

0106 biological sciencesPhenotypic plasticityEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesSurvivorship curveStatisticsPer capitaPopulation growthProduction (economics)Set (psychology)Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSelection (genetic algorithm)OrganismNature and Landscape ConservationEcology and evolution
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Empirical evidence for fast temperature-dependent body size evolution in rotifers

2017

Organisms tend to decrease in size with increasing temperature by phenotypic plasticity (the temperature-size rule; ectotherms) and/or genetically (Bergmann’s rule; all organisms). In this study, the evolutionary response of body size to temperature was examined in the cyclically parthenogenetic rotifer Brachionus plicatilis. Our aim was to investigate whether this species, already known to decrease in size with increasing temperature by phenotypic plasticity, presents a similar pattern at the genetic level. We exposed a multiclonal mixture of B. plicatilis to experimental evolution at low and high temperature and monitored body size weekly. Within a month, we observed a smaller size at hig…

0106 biological sciencesPhenotypic plasticityExperimental evolutionbiologyEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyBergmann’s ruleZoologyEcologia animalRotiferParthenogenesisAquatic SciencePlasticityBrachionusbiology.organism_classificationRotífers010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesBergmann's ruletemperature-size ruleEctothermBrachionus plicatilisexperimental evolutionbody size
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2019

Trade-offs have been shown to play an important role in the divergence of mating strategies and sexual ornamentation, but their importance in explaining warning signal diversity has received less attention. In aposematic organisms, allocation costs of producing the conspicuous warning signal pigmentation under nutritional stress could potentially trade-off with life-history traits and maintain variation in warning coloration. We studied this with an aposematic herbivore Arctia plantaginis (Arctiidae), whose larvae and adults show extensive variation in aposematic coloration. In larvae, less melanic coloration (i.e. larger orange patterns) produces a more efficient warning signal against pre…

0106 biological sciencesPhenotypic plasticityLarvaHerbivoreLow protein010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyMelanismZoologyAposematismBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesLife history theoryAnimal Science and ZoologyGene–environment interactionEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Animal Ecology
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Measuring phenotypes in fluctuating environments

2020

Despite considerable theoretical interest in how the evolution of phenotypic plasticity should be shaped by environmental variability and stochasticity, how individuals actually respond to these aspects of the environment within their own lifetimes remains unclear. We propose that this understanding has been hampered by experimental approaches that expose organisms to fluctuating environments (typically treatments where fluctuations in the environment are cyclical vs. erratic) for a pre‐determined duration while ensuring that the mean environment over that the entire exposure period is invariable. This approach implicitly assumes that responses to the mean and variance/predictability in the…

0106 biological sciencesPhenotypic plasticitybiologyfungiConfoundingDaphnia magnabiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesDaphniaHeat toleranceEnvironment variableStatisticsPredictabilityMean radiant temperatureEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics010606 plant biology & botanyFunctional Ecology
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Immense plasticity of timing of breeding in a sedentary forest passerine, Poecile palustris

2015

Numerous bird species have advanced their breeding seasons in response to climate warming. These changes were mostly brought about by phenotypic plasticity, i.e. flexible reactions of individual birds, rather than by microevolutionary change. Knowing the limits of plasticity is thus of paramount importance in any attempt to predict possible reactions of birds to climate warming. However, the breeding performance of the same individuals in contrasting environmental conditions, necessary to answer this question, is rarely observed. Here, we provide data on the flexibility in timing of egg-laying of individual marsh tit Poecile palustris females breeding in an extremely late (2013) and early (…

0106 biological sciencesPhenotypic plasticitygeographyMarshgeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyRange (biology)National parkEcologyGlobal warmingClimate changebiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesPoecile palustrisPasserine010605 ornithologybiology.animalAnimal Science and ZoologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Avian Biology
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Effects of ocean acidification on embryonic respiration and development of a temperate wrasse living along a natural CO2gradient

2016

We assessed rising CO2 effects on metabolism and development of a nesting wrasse by reciprocal transplant experiments in the field. Offspring brooded under different CO2 conditions exhibited similar responses. However, embryos from High-CO2 site were resilient to a wider range of pCO2 levels than those belonging to current-day conditions.

0106 biological sciencesPhysiological performance010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesPhysiologyOffspringEarly developmentManagement Monitoring Policy and LawBiology01 natural sciencesTemperate fishRespirationGlobal change0105 earth and related environmental sciencesNature and Landscape ConservationLarvaPhenotypic plasticitySymphodus ocellatusHatchingEcologySymphodus ocellatus010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyEcological ModelingOcean acidificationbiology.organism_classificationThemed Issue Article: Conservation Physiology of Marine FishesWrasseEarly development; Global change; Physiological performance; Symphodus ocellatus; Temperate fish; Nature and Landscape Conservation; Management Monitoring Policy and Law; Ecological Modeling; PhysiologySymphodus ocellatuResearch ArticleConservation Physiology
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Do phase-dependent life history traits in cyclic voles persist in a common environment?

2019

Phenotype and life history traits of an individual are a product of environmental conditions and the genome. Environment can be current or past, which complicates the distinction between environmental and heritable effects on the phenotype in wild animals. We studied genome–environment interactions on phenotype and life history traits by transplanting bank voles (Myodes glareolus) from northern and southern populations, originating from low or high population cycle phases, to common garden conditions in large outdoor enclosures. The first experiment focused on the persistence of body traits in autumn-captured overwintering populations. The second experiment focused on population growth and …

0106 biological sciencesPopulation DynamicsPhenotypic plasticitymedicine.disease_cause01 natural sciencesphenotypic plasticityBANK VOLESMaternal effectChitty effectSeasonal breederLife History TraitsOverwintering2. Zero hungereducation.field_of_studyArvicolinaeBank voleReproductionMaternal effectBody sizePOPULATION-CYCLE1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyGROWTHSeasonsmaternal effectympäristötekijätmetsämyyräPopulationZoologyBiologyWINTER FOOD010603 evolutionary biologyLife history theoryHereditymedicineJuvenileAnimalsbank volechitty effecteducationRODENT DYNAMICSEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsperinnöllisyysPhenotypic plasticityMICROTUS-AGRESTIS010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyEVOLUTIONPopulation Ecology–Original ResearchDENSITYCommon gardenfenotyyppicommon gardenbody size
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