Search results for "SYMBIOSIS"

showing 10 items of 627 documents

Personality predicts social dominance in female zebra finches, Taeniopygia guttata, in a feeding context.

2011

6 pages; International audience; Although personality has been defined as a suite of correlated behaviours, most studies of animal personality actually consider correlations between a few traits. We examined the repeatability and correlational structure of five potential personality traits (activity, neophobia, exploratory tendencies, risk-taking behaviour and obstinacy), in female zebra finches. In addition, we assessed to what extent personality influenced social dominance in a feeding context in this gregarious species. All personality traits were found to be highly repeatable within individuals. In addition, except for obstinacy, all of them were related to each other, thus defining a b…

media_common.quotation_subjectContext (language use)hierarchyPersonality psychologydominancefeeding successDevelopmental psychologybehavioural syndrome10127 Institute of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies[ SDV.EE.IEO ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/SymbiosisPersonalityBig Five personality traitsrepeatabilityZebra finchEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_common[ SDE.BE ] Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecologylife history productivityzebra finchAlternative five model of personalitySocial relationDominance (ethology)1105 Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematicspersonality570 Life sciences; biology590 Animals (Zoology)Animal Science and Zoologyfalse discovery rate[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecology1103 Animal Science and ZoologyPsychologySocial psychologycompetition[SDV.EE.IEO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/Symbiosis
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Dioecious species and arbuscular mycorrhizal symbioses: the case of Antennaria dioica.

2013

Sex-specific interactions with herbivores and pollinators have been observed in female and male plants of dioecious species. However, only a limited number of studies have revised sex-specific patterns in mycorrhizal symbiosis. To test whether female and male plants of Antennaria dioica differ in their relationship with arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi, we examined the temporal and spatial variation in AM fungi in female, male and non-reproductive A. dioica plants in three natural populations in Finland during flowering and after seed production. Our results are consistent with previous studies both under greenhouse and field conditions with the same species showing differences in AM colon…

media_common.quotation_subjectShort CommunicationAntennaria dioicaPlant ScienceFlowersAsteraceaePlant RootsSymbiosisPollinatorMycorrhizaeBotanyColonizationSymbiosisFinlandmedia_commonHerbivorebiologyEcologyReproductionfungiFungifood and beveragesAsteraceaebiology.organism_classificationSeedsta1181ReproductionArbuscular mycorrhizalPlant signalingbehavior
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Data from: Multi-modal defenses in aphids offer redundant protection and increased costs likely impeding a protective mutualism

2018

1.The pea aphid, Acyrthosiphon pisum, maintains extreme variation in resistance to its most common parasitoid wasp enemy, Aphidius ervi, which is sourced from two known mechanisms: protective bacterial symbionts, most commonly Hamiltonella defensa, or endogenously encoded defenses. We have recently found that individual aphids may employ each defense individually, occasionally both defenses together, or neither. 2.In field populations, Hamiltonella-infected aphids are found at low to moderate frequencies and while less is known about the frequency of resistant genotypes, they show up less often than susceptible genotypes in field collections. To better understand these patterns, we sought t…

medicine and health careHamiltonella defensaAphidius erviAcyrthosiphon pisumLife SciencesMedicinefood and beveragesnatural enemy defenseInsect symbiosismicrobe mediatedPopulation Ecologygenotype by genotype
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Data from: The cotton stainer's gut microbiota suppresses infection of a co-transmitted trypanosomatid parasite

2018

The evolutionary and ecological success of many insects is attributed to mutualistic partnerships with bacteria that confer hosts with novel traits including food digestion, nutrient supplementation, detoxification of harmful compounds and defense against natural enemies. Dysdercus fasciatus firebugs (Hemiptera: Pyrrhocoridae), commonly known as cotton stainers, possess a simple but distinctive gut bacterial community including B-vitamin supplementing Coriobacteriaceae symbionts. In addition, their guts are often infested with the intestinal trypanosomatid parasite Leptomonas pyrrhocoris (Kinetoplastida: Trypanosomatidae). In this study, using experimental bioassays and fluorescence in situ…

medicine and health careLeptomonas pyrrhocorisGordonibacter spec.defensive symbiosiscotton stainerDysdercus fasciatusMedicinetrypanosomatidsCoriobacterium glomeransLife sciences
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Data from: Burying beetles regulate the microbiome of carcasses and use it to transmit a core microbiota to their offspring

2017

Necrophagous beetles utilize carrion, a highly nutritious resource that is susceptible to intense microbial competition, by treating it with antimicrobial anal and oral secretions. However, how this regulates the carcass microbiota remains unclear. Here, we show that carcasses prepared by the burying beetle Nicrophorus vespilloides undergo significant changes in their microbial communities subsequent to their burial and ‘preparation’. Prepared carcasses hosted a microbial community that was more similar to that of beetles’ anal and oral secretions than to the native carcass community or the surrounding soil, indicating that the beetles regulated the carcass microbiota. A core microbial comm…

medicine and health carefluids and secretionsanimal diseasespreservationdigestive oral and skin physiologymicrobial successiontechnology industry and agricultureLife SciencesMedicinefood and beveragesYarrowiasymbiosis
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Patterns and rates of nucleotide substitution, insertion and deletion in the endosymbiont of antsBlochmannia floridanus

2009

Genome reduction is a general process that has been studied in numerous symbiotic bacteria associated with insects. We investigated the last stages of genome degradation in Blochmannia floridanus, a mutualistic bacterial endosymbiont of the ant Camponotus floridanus. We determined the tempo (rates of insertion and deletion) and mode (size and number of insertion-deletion events) of the process in the last 200,000 years by analysing a total of 16 intergenic regions in several strains of this endosymbiont from different ant populations. We provide the first calculation of the reduction rate for noncoding DNA in this endosymbiont (2.2 x 10(-8) lost nucleotides/site/year) and compare it with th…

medicine.disease_causePolymerase Chain ReactionPolymorphism Single NucleotideGenomeIntergenic regionGeneticsmedicineAnimalsSymbiosisIndelEscherichia coliEcosystemPhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSequence DeletionGeneticsGenomeBase SequencebiologyAntsbiology.organism_classificationNoncoding DNADNA Transposable ElementsFloridaMicrosatelliteCamponotus floridanusBuchneraMolecular Ecology
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Gut Microbiota Cannot Compensate the Impact of (quasi) Aposymbiosis in Blattella germanica

2021

Simple Summary The German cockroach Blattella germanica is a good model to study complex symbiotic relationships because the following two symbiotic systems coexist in a single individual: the endosymbiont Blattabacterium (living inside specialized cells called bacteriocytes) and the gut microbiota. Although the role of the endosymbiont has been fully elucidated, the function of the gut microbiota remains unclear. The study of the gut microbiota will benefit from the availability of insects deprived of Blattabacterium. Our goal is to determine the effect of the removal (or, at least, the reduction) of the endosymbiont population on the cockroach’s fitness, in a normal gut microbiota communi…

medicine.drug_classQH301-705.5AntibioticsPopulationMicrobiologia<i>Blattella germanica</i>Gut florarifampicindigestive systemBacterisGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyArticleMicrobiologyBlattabacteriumSymbiosisbiology.animalmedicineBiology (General)educationCockroacheducation.field_of_studyBlattabacteriumGeneral Immunology and Microbiologybiologygut microbiotaHost (biology)Bacteriocyteaposymbiontfungibiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationsymbiosisBlattella germanicabacteriaGeneral Agricultural and Biological Sciences<i>Blattabacterium</i>
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Ecologists overestimate the importance of predictor variables in model averaging: a plea for cautious interpretations.

2014

Abstract: Information-theory procedures are powerful tools for multimodel inference and are now standard methods in ecology. When performing model averaging on a given set of models, the importance of a predictor variable is commonly estimated by summing the weights of models where the variable appears, the so-called sum of weights (SW). However, SWs have received little methodological attention and are frequently misinterpreted. We assessed the reliability of SW by performing model selection and averaging on simulated data sets including variables strongly and weakly correlated to the response variable and a variable unrelated to the response. Our aim was to investigate how useful SWs are …

model selectionInformation theorymultimodel inferenceBayesian information criterionStatisticsEconometricsRange (statistics)Akaike Information Criterion[ SDV.EE.IEO ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/Symbiosisbaseline sum of weightsSet (psychology)BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMathematicsinformation theory[STAT.AP]Statistics [stat]/Applications [stat.AP]Ecological ModelingModel selection[ STAT.AP ] Statistics [stat]/Applications [stat.AP]model averagingBayesian information criterionChemistryVariable (computer science)Sample size determinationvariable importanceAkaike information criterion[SDV.EE.IEO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/Symbiosis
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A genomic reappraisal of symbiotic function in the aphid/Buchnera symbiosis: reduced transporter sets and variable membrane organisations.

2011

International audience; Buchnera aphidicola is an obligate symbiotic bacterium that sustains the physiology of aphids by complementing their exclusive phloem sap diet. In this study, we reappraised the transport function of different Buchnera strains, from the aphids Acyrthosiphon pisum, Schizaphis graminum, Baizongia pistaciae and Cinara cedri, using the re-annotation of their transmembrane proteins coupled with an exploration of their metabolic networks. Although metabolic analyses revealed high interdependencies between the host and the bacteria, we demonstrate here that transport in Buchnera is assured by low transporter diversity, when compared to free-living bacteria, being mostly bas…

multidisciplinary scienceslcsh:MedicinePlant ScienceinterdépendanceBiochemistryTransmembrane Transport ProteinsBacterial Physiologylcsh:ScienceIntegral membrane proteinGeneticsbactérie0303 health sciencesPlant PestsMultidisciplinaryMicroscopy ConfocalbiologyMembrane transport protein030302 biochemistry & molecular biologybuchnera aphidicolamicroscopy confocalGenomicsHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationTransmembrane proteinFunctional GenomicsBiochemistrysymbiosis geneticsMetabolic PathwaysMetabolic Networks and PathwaysResearch Articlecell membrane ultrastructurescience and technologyMicrobiology03 medical and health sciencesMetabolic NetworksBuchneraAnimalsSymbiosisBiology030304 developmental biologyObligateCell Membranelcsh:RProteinsComputational BiologyMembrane Transport ProteinsBiological TransportBacteriologyPlant Pathologybiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationAcyrthosiphon pisumTransmembrane ProteinsaphidsMESH: SymbioseMetabolismMembrane proteinGenes Bacterialbiology.proteinlcsh:QBuchnerabuchnera aphidicola;aphids;microscopy confocal;symbiosis genetics;cell membrane ultrastructure;multidisciplinary sciences;science and technologyFunction (biology)[SDV.EE.IEO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/SymbiosisPLoS ONE
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Regulatory networks underlying mycorrhizal development delineated by genome-wide expression profiling and functional analysis of the transcription fa…

2017

Background: Ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fungi develop a mutualistic symbiotic interaction with the roots of their host plants. During this process, they undergo a series of developmental transitions from the running hyphae in the rhizosphere to the coenocytic hyphae forming finger-like structures within the root apoplastic space. These transitions, which involve profound, symbiosis-associated metabolic changes, also entail a substantial transcriptome reprogramming with coordinated waves of differentially expressed genes. To date, little is known about the key transcriptional regulators driving these changes, and the aim of the present study was to delineate and functionally characterize the trans…

polypeptidelcsh:QH426-470Transcription factors; symbiosis; secreted proteins; transcriptional activator trap assay; yeast; transcriptome; ectomycorrhiza developmentlcsh:BiotechnologyTranscription Factors/geneticslaccaria bicolorpopulusyeastectomycorrhizasecreted proteinsLaccariadéveloppement biologiquelcsh:TP248.13-248.65MycorrhizaeTranscription factorsgenomicsGene Regulatory Networkstranscriptional activator trap assayLaccaria/geneticsectomycorrhiza developmentGene Expression ProfilingMycorrhizae/geneticsfungiMicrobiology and Parasitologypseudotsuga menziesiisymbiosisMicrobiologie et Parasitologielcsh:Genetics[SDV.MP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and ParasitologyontogenyectomycorhizeTranscription factors;ectomycorrhiza development;secreted proteins;symbiosis;transcriptional activator trap assay;transcriptome;yeastsymbiosetranscriptomefacteur de transcriptionResearch Article
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