Search results for "Population Dynamics"

showing 10 items of 281 documents

Priority versus Brute Force: When Should Males Begin Guarding Resources?

2004

When should males begin guarding a resource when both resources and guarders vary in quality? This general problem applies, for example, to migrant birds occupying territories in the spring and to precopula in crustaceans where males grab females before they molt and become receptive. Previous work has produced conflicting predictions. Theory on migrant birds predicts that the strongest competitors should often arrive first, whereas some models of mate guarding have predicted that the strongest competitors wait and then simply usurp a female from a weaker competitor. We build a general model of resource guarding that allows varying the ease with which takeovers occur. The model is phrased i…

MaleCompetitive BehaviorResource (biology)media_common.quotation_subjectPopulation DynamicsBiologyModels Biologicalmating dynamicsSexual Behavior AnimalRace (biology)Resource Acquisition Is InitializationAnimalsESSQuality (business)Selection GeneticEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commontakeoversmate guardingGuard (information security)Mate guardingEcologycrustaceansResource guardingCompetitor analysisguarding criterionBody ConstitutionFemaleDemographic economicsThe American Naturalist
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Predation as a landscape effect: the trading off by prey species between predation risks and protection benefits.

2007

1. Predators impose costs on their prey but may also provide benefits such as protection against other (e.g. nest) predators. The optimal breeding location in relation to the distance from a nesting raptor varies so as to minimize the sum of costs of adult and nest predation. We provide a conceptual model to account for variation in the relative predation risks and derive qualitative predictions for how different prey species should respond to the distance from goshawk Accipiter gentilis nests. 2. We test the model predictions using a comprehensive collection of data from northern Finland and central Norway. First, we carried out a series of experiments with artificial bird nests to test if…

MaleCost-Benefit AnalysisOvipositionForagingPopulation DynamicsRisk AssessmentPredationNesting BehaviorBirdsSongbirdsNestSpecies SpecificityAbundance (ecology)AnimalsNest boxEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPopulation DensitybiologyRaptorsEcologyReproductionAccipiterBird nestbiology.organism_classificationHabitatPredatory BehaviorAnimal Science and ZoologyFemaleThe Journal of animal ecology
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Simulated poaching affects global connectivity and efficiency in social networks of African savanna elephants-An exemplar of how human disturbance im…

2022

Selective harvest, such as poaching, impacts group-living animals directly through mortality of individuals with desirable traits, and indirectly by altering the structure of their social networks. Understanding the relationship between disturbance-induced, structural network changes and group performance in wild animals remains an outstanding problem. To address this problem, we evaluated the immediate effect of disturbance on group sociality in African savanna elephants—an example, group-living species threatened by poaching. Drawing on static association data from ten free-ranging groups, we constructed one empirically based, population-wide network and 100 virtual networks; performed a …

MaleElephantsPopulation DynamicsInformation TheorySocial SciencesPlant ScienceSociologyCentralityPsychologyBiology (General)MammalsAnimal BehaviorEcologyEukaryotaTerrestrial EnvironmentsSocial NetworksComputational Theory and MathematicsAnimal SocialityGrasslandsModeling and SimulationVertebratesPhysical SciencesFemaleCrimeNetwork AnalysisResearch ArticleVDP::Matematikk og Naturvitenskap: 400::Zoologiske og botaniske fag: 480::Systematisk zoologi: 487Conservation of Natural ResourcesComputer and Information SciencesSocial PsychologyQH301-705.5Animals WildNetwork ResilienceCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceClustering CoefficientsGeneticsAnimalsHumansHuntingSocial BehaviorPlant CommunitiesMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBehaviorPlant EcologyEcology and Environmental SciencesOrganismsSocial InfluenceComputational BiologyBiology and Life SciencesGraph TheorySciences de l'environnement/Biodiversité et EcologieAmniotesZoologyMathematicsVDP::Matematikk og Naturvitenskap: 400::Zoologiske og botaniske fag: 480
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Developmental and Reproductive Effects of Low Cadmium Concentration onArtemiaparthenogenetica

2003

Hatching, reproductive, and lifespan characteristics of an Artemia parthenogenetica population from La Mata (Alicante, Spain) exposed to cadmium were studied. No effects on percentage of cyst hatched nor time of hatching were observed on cysts exposed from 0.01 to 5 mg Cd/L. Cohorts of Artemia were chronically exposed to cadmium in life-table experiments to test whether ecologically relevant impacts may occur after several generations of exposure to a very low concentration of cadmium. Chronic toxicity tests were performed using neonates of a third generation of shrimps exposed to 0.08 mg Cd/L (1/1000 of the LOEC for 24 h acute toxicity test). No significant reduction in the intrinsic rate …

MaleEnvironmental EngineeringPopulation DynamicsPopulationArtemia parthenogeneticachemistry.chemical_elementBrine shrimpBiologyToxicologyAnimal scienceAnimalsWater PollutantseducationChronic toxicityCadmiumeducation.field_of_studyHatchingEnvironmental ExposureGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationFecundityAcute toxicityFertilitychemistryFemaleArtemiaCadmiumJournal of Environmental Science and Health, Part A
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Variable male potential rate of reproduction: high male mating capacity as an adaptation to parasite–induced excess of females?

2003

Numerous animals are known to harbour intracytoplasmic symbionts that gain transmission to a new host generation via female eggs and not male sperm. Bacteria of the genus Wolbachia are a typical example. They infect a large range of arthropod species and manipulate host reproduction in several ways. In terrestrial isopods (woodlice), Wolbachia are responsible for converting males into females (feminization (F)) in some species, or for infertility in certain host crosses in other species (cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI)). Wolbachia with the F phenotype impose a strong excess of females on their host populations, while Wolbachia expressing CI do not. Here, we test the possibility that male m…

MaleFeminization (biology)Population DynamicsPopulationBiologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biologyparasitic diseasesAnimalsFeminizationSex RatioMatingBirth RateeducationComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSreproductive and urinary physiologyGeneral Environmental ScienceGeneticseducation.field_of_study[SDV.GEN.GPO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Genetics/Populations and Evolution [q-bio.PE]General Immunology and MicrobiologyHost (biology)General Medicinebiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classification[SDE.BE] Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyFertility[SDV.GEN.GPO] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Genetics/Populations and Evolution [q-bio.PE]bacteriaFemaleWolbachia[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyAdaptationGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesWolbachiaCytoplasmic incompatibilitySex ratioIsopodaResearch ArticleProceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences
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Population structure and recruitment of the ectoparasite Argulus coregoni Thorell (Crustacea: Branchiura) on a fish farm

2003

The population structure and recruitment of Argulus coregoni was monitored at a Finnish fish farm during the open water periods of 1999 and 2001 by weekly sampling of attached argulids. In 2001 the numbers of rainbow trout examined increased in the autumn when the A. coregoni population was declining. When the water temperature exceeded 10 degrees C, at the end of May, A. coregoni egg hatching commenced. A mean number of 98 (S.D. +/- 5.4) juvenile A. coregoni was recorded on each fish, before the start of female egg laying in July 1999. The abundance of lice was lower in 2001. The main recruitment of A. coregoni juveniles occurred in early summer, but the hatching of eggs continued until Se…

MaleFish farmingPopulation DynamicsPopulationFisheriesZoologyFresh WaterHost-Parasite InteractionsAquacultureAnimalsJuvenileSex RatioeducationOverwinteringeducation.field_of_studybiologyHatchingBranchiurabusiness.industryTemperaturebiology.organism_classificationFisheryInfectious DiseasesArguloidaOncorhynchus mykissFemaleAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologybusinessSex ratioParasitology
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Numerical solution of a spatio-temporal gender-structured model for hantavirus infection in rodents.

2017

In this article we describe the transmission dynamics of hantavirus in rodents using a spatio-temporal susceptible-exposed-infective-recovered (SEIR) compartmental model that distinguishes between male and female subpopulations [L.J.S. Allen, R.K. McCormack and C.B. Jonsson, Bull. Math. Biol. 68 (2006), 511--524]. Both subpopulations are assumed to differ in their movement with respect to local variations in the densities of their own and the opposite gender group. Three alternative models for the movement of the male individuals are examined. In some cases the movement is not only directed by the gradient of a density (as in the standard diffusive case), but also by a non-local convolution…

MaleHantavirus InfectionsPopulation DynamicsContext (language use)Rodentia010103 numerical & computational mathematics01 natural sciencesModels BiologicalConvolutionSex FactorsSpatio-Temporal AnalysisOscillometryApplied mathematicsAnimals0101 mathematicsStructured modelEcosystemMathematicsPartial differential equationFourier AnalysisApplied MathematicsNumerical analysisSpatio-Temporal AnalysisGeneral Medicine010101 applied mathematicsComputational MathematicsTime steppingModeling and SimulationFemaleSeasonsGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesHantavirus InfectionAlgorithmsMathematical biosciences and engineering : MBE
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Evidence for an Association between Post-Fledging Dispersal and Microsatellite Multilocus Heterozygosity in a Large Population of Greater Flamingos

2013

10 pages; International audience; DISPERSAL CAN BE DIVIDED INTO THREE STAGES: departure, transience and settlement. Despite the fact that theoretical studies have emphasized the importance of heterozygosity on dispersal strategies, empirical evidence of its effect on different stages of dispersal is lacking. Here, using multi-event capture-mark-recapture models, we show a negative association between microsatellite multilocus heterozygosity (MLH; 10 loci; n = 1023) and post-fledging dispersal propensity for greater flamingos, Phoenicopterus roseus, born in southern France. We propose that the negative effects of inbreeding depression affects competitive ability and therefore more homozygous…

MaleHeterozygoteAnimal sexual behaviourPopulation Dynamicslcsh:MedicineBiologyLoss of heterozygosityBirdsInbreeding depressionAnimalslcsh:ScienceGenetics[ SDE.BE ] Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyMultidisciplinaryGeographyNull modellcsh:RFledgeModels Theoretical[ SDV.GEN.GPO ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Genetics/Populations and Evolution [q-bio.PE]Evolutionary biologyGenetic LociBiological dispersalMicrosatellitelcsh:QAnimal MigrationFemaleFranceSeasonsInbreedingAlgorithmsResearch ArticleMicrosatellite RepeatsPLoS ONE
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Laboratory relationships between adult lifetime reproductive success and fitness surrogates in a Drosophila littoralis population.

2011

The difficulties in measuring total fitness of individuals necessitate the use of fitness surrogates in ecological and evolutionary studies. These surrogates can be different components of fitness (e.g. survival or fecundity), or proxies more uncertainly related to fitness (e.g. body size or growth rate). Ideally, fitness would be measured over the lifetime of individuals; however, more convenient short-time measures are often used. Adult lifetime reproductive success (adult LRS) is closely related to the total fitness of individuals, but it is difficult to measure and rarely included in fitness estimation in experimental studies. We explored phenotypic correlations between female adult LRS…

MaleLRSAgingTime FactorsAnimal EvolutionPopulation Dynamicslcsh:MedicineEvolutionary SelectionToxicologykokoNatural Selectionlcsh:Sciencemedia_commoneducation.field_of_studyelinkiertopiirteetMultidisciplinaryEcologyReproductionMortality rateLongevityFecundityBiological EvolutionPhenotypeDrosophilaFemaleReproductionfekunditeettiResearch ArticleEvolutionary ProcessesGenotypeOffspringmedia_common.quotation_subjectfecundityLongevityPopulationFertilityBiologyForms of EvolutionAnimalsMicroevolutioneducationBiologylife history traitsEvolutionary BiologyReproductive successelinikälcsh:RagingpitkäikäisyysOrganismal EvolutionFertilityikääntyminenEvolutionary Ecologyta1181lcsh:QDemography
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Identifying Genetic Traces of Historical Expansions: Phoenician Footprints in the Mediterranean

2008

10 páginas, 1 figura, 4 páginas.-- et al.

MaleMediterranean climatePopulation DynamicsPopulationHomelandBiologyPolymorphism Single NucleotideHaplogroup03 medical and health sciencesMediterranean seaGene FrequencyReportEthnicityMediterranean SeaGeneticsHumansAnalytical strategyGenetics(clinical)educationAllelesHistory AncientGenetics (clinical)Historical record030304 developmental biologyGenetics0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyChromosomes Human YGeography030305 genetics & heredityEmigration and Immigrationlanguage.human_languageGenealogyGenetics PopulationHaplotypeslanguagePhoenician
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