Search results for "Systematics"

showing 10 items of 6702 documents

Prey preparation by adult Great Tits Parus major feeding nestlings

1996

Some birds prepare food items before giving them to their nestlings. We studied the relationships between the degree of prey preparation and prey size, nestling age, brood size and time of season. We estimated the degree of preparation of 513 animal prey items, taken by using neck collars, brought to nestling Great Tits Parus major. Prey preparation increased with prey size and decreased as the nestlings grew older, as brood size increased and as the season progressed. Other factors, such as nutrient concentration (through removal of low-quality or deleterious parts) or palatability (considering scaly moth forewings unpalatable), seem also to be important in determining prey preparation. Ou…

ParusbiologyEcologyZoologybiology.organism_classificationBroodDegree (temperature)PredationNutrientbehavior and behavior mechanismsIngestionAnimal Science and ZoologyPalatabilityDigestionEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsIbis
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Post-fledging survival of individual great tits: the effect of hatching date and fledging mass

2002

Pre-breeeding survival is one of the major sources of individual variation in lifetime reproductive success. However, very little is known about the reasons for differences in survival among individuals during this important phase of the life cycle. Some studies, using local return rates as indices of survival, have shown a relationship between post-fledging survival and fledging date and mass in birds, most of them suggesting directional selection towards heavy masses and early fledging dates. Recent development of capture-recapture models allows the separate estimate of survival and recapture probabilities, as well as the inclusion of individual covariates into the modelling process. We u…

ParusbiologyReproductive successEcologyDirectional selectionHatchingFledgebiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDemographyOikos
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Population differentiation in the marginal populations of the great tit (Paridae: Parus major)

2007

The major subspecies group of the great tit, Parus major, has experienced demographic and spatial expansions during the last century in several sites at the edges of its distribution range. These expansions, although temporarily very even, have resulted in dissimilar patterns of molecular diversity. Populations locating at regions of contact to other subspecies groups (in Amur, Kirghizia–Kazakhstan, and Iran) show divergence from central population by nuclear and mitochondrial markers. In Amur, gene flow from minor group could be detected based on the existence of private minor alleles in the major population. In Kirghizia and Kazakhstan, the bokharensis and major groups share almost all th…

Paruseducation.field_of_studyMitochondrial DNARange (biology)EcologyPopulationPopulation geneticsZoologyBiologySubspeciesbiology.organism_classificationGene flowMicrosatelliteeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBiological Journal of the Linnean Society
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Environmental DNA analysis indicates that migration barriers are decreasing the occurrence of European eel (Anguilla anguilla) in distance from the s…

2020

Abstract The European eel (Anguilla L.) is considered critically endangered by the IUCN Red List, and recruitment remains low. One of the challenges for the species today is migration barriers that limit their habitat. Along the Norwegian coast, like in other countries, the abundance of eels appears to decrease with distance from the sea. This pattern may be a result of factors like water temperature, water quality, competition, and habitat suitability and availability. This study aims to use environmental DNA (eDNA) analysis to investigate the potential relationship between migration barriers and the decreasing occurrence of eels in distance from the sea by the coast of southern Norway. Si…

Passage barriers0106 biological sciencesanimal structuresmedia_common.quotation_subjectEnvironmental DNAConservation010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesCompetition (biology)Upstream and downstream (DNA)Critically endangeredAbundance (ecology)lcsh:QH540-549.5VDP::Matematikk og Naturvitenskap: 400::Basale biofag: 470IUCN Red ListEnvironmental DNAEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape Conservationmedia_commonEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyFisheryGeographyHabitatAnguilla Anguillalcsh:EcologyWater qualityReal-time PCRGlobal Ecology and Conservation
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Modelling the spatial and temporal constrains of the GABAergic influence on neuronal excitability

2021

GABA (γ-amino butyric acid) is an inhibitory neurotransmitter in the adult brain that can mediate depolarizing responses during development or after neuropathological insults. Under which conditions GABAergic membrane depolarizations are sufficient to impose excitatory effects is hard to predict, as shunting inhibition and GABAergic effects on spatiotemporal filtering of excitatory inputs must be considered. To evaluate at which reversal potential a net excitatory effect was imposed by GABA (EGABAThr), we performed a detailed in-silico study using simple neuronal topologies and distinct spatiotemporal relations between GABAergic and glutamatergic inputs. These simulations revealed for GABAe…

Patch-Clamp TechniquesAction potentialPhysiologyAction PotentialsSynaptic TransmissionNervous SystemBiochemistryMiceNerve FibersAnimal CellsMedicine and Health SciencesGABAergic NeuronsBiology (General)gamma-Aminobutyric AcidNeuronsMembrane potentialEcologyChemistryPyramidal CellsDepolarizationNeurochemistryNeurotransmittersCA3 Region HippocampalElectrophysiologyReceptors GlutamateComputational Theory and MathematicsModeling and SimulationExcitatory postsynaptic potentialGABAergicAnatomyCellular TypesShunting inhibitionResearch Articlemedicine.drugQH301-705.5Models NeurologicalNeurophysiologyAMPA receptorMembrane Potentialgamma-Aminobutyric acidCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceGlutamatergicSpatio-Temporal AnalysisGeneticsmedicineAnimalsComputer SimulationReceptors AMPAReversal potentialMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsComputational BiologyBiology and Life SciencesNeural InhibitionDendritesCell BiologyNeuronal DendritesAxonsMice Inbred C57BLAnimals Newbornnervous systemCellular NeuroscienceSynapsesDepolarizationNeuroscienceNeurosciencePLOS Computational Biology
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Inflammation-Induced Intussusceptive Angiogenesis in Murine Colitis

2010

Intussusceptive angiogenesis is a morphogenetic process that forms new blood vessels by the division of a single blood vessel into two lumens. Here, we show that this process of intraluminal division participates in the inflammation-induced neovascularization associated with chemically induced murine colitis. In studies of both acute (4-7 days) and chronic (28-31 days) colitis, intravital microscopy of intravascular tracers demonstrated a twofold reduction in blood flow velocity. In the acute colitis model, the decreased velocity was associated with marked dilatation of the mucosal plexus. In contrast, chronic inflammation was associated with normal caliber vessels and duplication (and trip…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyHistologyColonAngiogenesisBiologyCorrosion CastingArticleMicrocirculationNeovascularizationMicemedicineAnimalsColitisIntussusceptive angiogenesisEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAcute colitisFluorescent DyesSprouting angiogenesisMice Inbred BALB CMucous MembraneNeovascularization PathologicStaining and LabelingEndothelial CellsColitismedicine.diseaseAdaptation PhysiologicalCapillariesMice Inbred C57BLDisease Models Animalmedicine.anatomical_structureRegional Blood FlowMicroscopy Electron ScanningNanoparticlesInflammation MediatorsAnatomymedicine.symptomIntussusceptionBiotechnologyBlood vesselThe Anatomical Record: Advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology
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Cardiac Stem Cell Research: An Elephant in the Room?

2009

Heart disease is the leading cause of death in the industrialized world, and stem cell therapy seems to be a promising treatment for injured cardiac tissue. To reach this goal, the scientific community needs to find a good source of stem cells that can be used to obtain new myocardium in a very period range of time. Since there are many ethical and technical problems with using embryonic stem cells as a source of cells with cardiogenic potential, many laboratories have attempted to isolate potential cardiac stem cells from several tissues. The best candidates seem to be cardiac "progenitor" and/or "stem" cells, which can be isolated from subendocardial biopsies from the same patient or from…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyHistologyHeart Diseasesmedicine.medical_treatmentCD34heart failureStem-cell therapyBiologyEmbryonic stem cellCell therapyEmbryo ResearchAmniotic epithelial cellsmedicineHumanscardiac immature cellcell therapyAnatomyStem cellEmbryonic Stem CellsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsStem Cell TransplantationBiotechnologyAdult stem cellStem cell transplantation for articular cartilage repairThe Anatomical Record: Advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology
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Characteristic intraepidermal nerve fibre endings of the intervibrissal fur in the mystacial pad of the rat: morphological details revealed by intrav…

1999

Light microscopic observations employing intravital methylene blue staining and impregnation by the zinc iodide-osmium tetroxide technique are presented for intraepidermal nerve fibre endings of the intervibrissal fur in the mystacial pad of the rat snout. Both procedures revealed anatomical details of the intraepidermal nerve fibre plexus in epidermal hillocks often located very close to the mouths of hairs. These nerve fibres appeared to resemble those described in previous immunohistochemical studies as cluster or bush endings. The methylene blue preparations demonstrated the existence of an intensely stained enlargement at the site of the branching point of the nerve fibres which seemed…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyHistologyNerve fibreOsmium TetroxideZinc iodide-osmium tetroxidechemistry.chemical_compoundNerve FibersmedicineAnimalsColoring AgentsMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPlexusBranching pointsAnatomyCell BiologyStainingRatsMethylene BlueNociceptionmedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryZinc CompoundsEpidermisAnatomyEpidermisMechanoreceptorsMethylene blueDevelopmental BiologyHairResearch ArticleJournal of anatomy
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The role ofSphagnummosses in the methane cycling of a boreal mire

2010

Peatlands are a major natural source of atmospheric methane (CH4). Emissions from Sphagnum-dominated mires are lower than those measured from other mire types. This observation may partly be due to methanotrophic (i.e., methane-consuming) bacteria associated with Sphagnum. Twenty-three of the 41 Sphagnum species in Finland can be found in the peatland at Lakkasuo. To better understand the Sphagnum-methanotroph system, we tested the following hypotheses: (1) all these Sphagnum species support methanotrophic bacteria; (2) water level is the key environmental determinant for differences in methanotrophy across habitats; (3) under dry conditions, Sphagnum species will not host methanotrophic ba…

Peat010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesMethanotroph01 natural sciencesSphagnumSoilMireBotanySphagnopsidaBogEcosystemEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics0105 earth and related environmental sciencesgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyArctic RegionsEcologyAtmospheric methane04 agricultural and veterinary sciences15. Life on landbiology.organism_classificationMossTransplantation13. Climate action040103 agronomy & agriculture0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesEnvironmental scienceSchizosaccharomyces pombe ProteinsSeasonsMethaneOxidation-ReductionEcology
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Effects of habitat restoration on peatland bird communities

2020

Restoration of damaged ecosystems has become an important tool to slow down the biodiversity loss and to maintain ecosystem services. Peatland bird populations have shown a substantial decline during the recent decades in Northern Europe as a consequence of peatland drainage. We studied whether restoration of peatlands drained for forestry affects bird communities. We conducted bird surveys at 11 peatlands in Western Finland, where each of the restored and their pristine counterparts were surveyed before restoration and yearly after restoration during 2010–2018. We used linear mixed effect models to analyze whether restoration affected the number of species and territories of peatland speci…

PeatBiodiversitysoidensuojelumire birdsEcosystem servicesEcosystemennallistaminenRestoration ecologydrainingturvemaatEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape ConservationbiodiversitydisturbanceEcologyCommunityEcologyconservationlintukannatluonnon monimuotoisuusekosysteemit (ekologia)GeographyekosysteemipalvelutDisturbance (ecology)luonnonsuojelucommunity ecologyGlobal biodiversity
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