Search results for "Systematics"

showing 10 items of 6702 documents

Mid-Triassic to Early Liassic clastic/evaporitic deposits over the Maghreb Platform

2003

Abstract The development of Triassic to Lower Liassic clastic/evaporitic series over the epicratonic Maghreb Platform is closely associated with the eastern opening of a Tethyan marine domain between Africa and Europe. West of the platform, Morocco became separated from North America in Late Triassic times by rifting along the axis of the Proto-Atlantic Ocean. In addition, NE–SW and ENE–WSW trending Atlasic half-grabens formed, essentially in Morocco, as part of a Late Triassic/Early Liassic Atlas rifting episode. This is the tectonic context in which the red bed to evaporite sequences were deposited. A first depositional pattern is illustrated by the areally extensive onlapping of Upper Tr…

Red bedsTectonic subsidenceEvaporitePaleontologyLadinianOceanographySedimentary depositional environmentPaleontologyPassive marginClastic rockFaciesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesPalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
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Horn growth rate and longevity: implications for natural and artificial selection in thinhorn sheep (Ovis dalli).

2007

We used horn measurements from natural and hunted mortalities of male thinhorn sheep Ovis dalli from Yukon Territory, Canada, to examine the relationship between rapid growth early in life and longevity. We found that rapid growth was associated with reduced longevity for sheep aged 5 years and older for both the hunted and natural mortality data sets. The negative relationship between growth rate and longevity in hunted sheep can at least partially be explained by morphologically biased hunting regulations. The same trend was evident from natural mortalities from populations that were not hunted or underwent very limited hunting, suggesting a naturally imposed mortality cost directly or in…

Reduced longevityMaleSheepbiologyEcologyHorn (anatomy)media_common.quotation_subjectLongevityLongevityAge Factorsbiology.organism_classificationTrade-offMortality dataAnimalsGrowth rateSelection GeneticOvisEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSelection (genetic algorithm)media_commonHornsJournal of evolutionary biology
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Density and activity patterns of Pallas's cats, Otocolobus manul, in central Mongolia

2021

Abstract Context. The ranges of many small, at-risk felid species occur almost entirely in unprotected areas, where research efforts are minimal; hence data on their density and activity patterns are scare. Aims. We estimated density and activity patterns of Pallas’s cats on unprotected lands in central Mongolia during two periods (May–August and September–November) in 2019. Methods. We used spatially explicit capture–recapture models to estimate population density at 15.2 ± 4.8 individuals per 100 km2. Key results. We obtained 484 Pallas’s cat images from 153 detections during 4266 camera-days. We identified Pallas’s cats using pelage markings and identified 16 individuals from 64 detectio…

Reduced riskdensityCATSEcologycamera-trappingactivitySettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaContext (language use)MongoliaManagement Monitoring Policy and LawBiologyPopulation densityPredationCrepuscularHabitatmanulEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
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BythinellaMoquin-Tandon, 1856 (Gastropoda: Rissooidea: Bythinellidae) in Romania: species richness in a glacial refugium

2009

Mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I (COI) and ribosomal internal transcribed spacer 1 (ITS-1) sequences were analysed in 12 Romanian Bythinella populations. Phylogenetic relationships were inferred using maximum parsimony, maximum likelihood and Bayesian techniques. For COI, the Kimura two-parameter (K2P) distances and haplotype networks were computed. Two sympatric and four allopatric groups were distinguished. The K2P distances are similar to those for congeneric rissooids, so each of the six groups represents a species. Two are identified as Bythinella molcsanyi H. Wagner, 1941, and Bythinella dacica Grossu, 1946. The other four groups cannot be ascribed to any known Bythinella. The occur…

Refugium (population biology)biologyPhylogenetic treeSympatric speciationEcologyRissooideaAllopatric speciationZoologyBythinellaInternal transcribed spacerbiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMaximum parsimonyJournal of Natural History
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SEQUENCE EVOLUTION OF THE SPERM LIGAND ZONADHESIN CORRELATES NEGATIVELY WITH BODY WEIGHT DIMORPHISM IN PRIMATES

2007

Sexual selection has repeatedly been shown to be the probable driving force behind the positive Darwinian evolution of genes affecting male reproductive success. Here we compare the sequence evolution of the sperm ligand zonadhesin with body mass dimorphism in primates. In contrast to previous related studies, the present approach takes into account not only catarrhine primates, but also platyrrhines and lemurs. In detail, we analyze the sequence evolution of concatenated zonadhesin fragments (555 bp) of four Lemuroidea, five Platyrrhini, and seven Catarrhini, using the rate ratio of nonsynonymous to synonymous substitutions (dn/ds=omega). Unexpectedly, subsequent regression analyzes betwee…

Reproductive successCatarrhiniZoologyBiologyMating systembiology.organism_classificationSpermSexual dimorphismMate choiceSexual selectionGeneticsGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesSperm competitionEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEvolution
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Male reproductive senescence as a potential source of sexual conflict in a beetle

2011

The link between senescence and reproductive success is a contentious yet crucial issue to our understanding of mate choice, sexual conflict, and the evolution of ageing. By imposing direct (i.e., male fertility) or indirect (i.e., zygote viability) reproductive costs to females, male senescence may lead to sexual conflict at different levels. For example, ageing may affect male ability to deliver sperm, thus setting the scene for sexual conflict over mating, and/or may affect the quality of individual sperm cells, generating the potential for sexual conflict over fertilizing strategies. We addressed these issues by studying the mating behavior, reproductive fitness, and fertilization patte…

Reproductive successEcologyAntagonistic CoevolutionBiologySexual conflictReproductive senescenceMate choiceSexual selectionSpermatophoreAnimal Science and ZoologySperm competitionEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsreproductive and urinary physiologyDemographyBehavioral Ecology
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Delayed maturation in plumage colour: Evidence for the female-mimicry hypothesis in the kestrel

1993

In many sexually dichromatic species, young males have female-like plumage during their first potential breeding year. The female-mimicry hypothesis (FMH) supposes that by possessing female-like plumage young males deceive older conspicuous males into believing that they are females, thus reducing competition from adult males. The status-signalling hypothesis (SSH) supposes that adult males can distinguish sex, but postulates that young males reduce competition from adult males by reliably signaling low status with their dull plumage. We tested these hypotheses in the European kestrel (Falco tinnunculus). Female-like young males settled to breed closer to adult males than did other adult ma…

Reproductive successEcologyFalconidaeKestrelBiologybiology.organism_classificationFalco tinnunculusMate choiceAnimal ecologyPlumageSeasonal breederAnimal Science and ZoologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDemographyBehavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
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Alternative reproductive tactics and the propensity of hybridization

2009

One explanation for hybridization between species is the fitness benefits it occasionally confers to the hybridizing individuals. This explanation is possible in species that have evolved alternative male reproductive tactics: individuals with inferior tactics might be more prone to hybridization provided it increases their reproductive success and fitness. Here we experimentally tested whether the propensity of hybridization in the wild depends on male reproductive tactic in Calopteryx splendens damselflies. Counter to our expectation, it was males adopting the superior reproductive tactic (territoriality) that had greatest propensity to hybridize than males adopting the inferior tactics (…

Reproductive successEcologyZoologyReproductive isolationTerritorialityBiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSelection (genetic algorithm)Journal of Evolutionary Biology
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The effect of male-male competition and ornament size on mean and variance of courtship intensity towards heterospecific and conspecific females

2015

Discrimination between hetero- and conspecifics is the elementary choice an individual performs when searching for potential mates. The level of selectivity and strength of species discrimination is modified by variance in the quality of females, level of the male’s reproductive investment, mate search costs, and the competitive environment. The effect of the competitive environment on both species discrimination and conspecific mate choice has seldom been studied simultaneously. We experimentally manipulated territorial competition ofCalopteryx splendensdamselfly males in the wild, and asked two questions. First, does increased competition influence the territorial males’ responses towards…

Reproductive successEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectZoologyOrnamentsVariance (accounting)BiologyTerritorialityCompetition (biology)CourtshipMate choiceAnimal Science and ZoologyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonAnimal Biology
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2014

Oviparous females have three main options to increase their reproductive success: investing into egg number, egg mass and/or egg care. Although allocating resources to either of these three components is known to shape offspring number and size, potential trade-offs among them may have key impacts on maternal and offspring fitness. Here, we tested the occurrence of phenotypic trade-offs between egg number, egg mass and maternal expenditure on egg care in the European earwig, Forficula auricularia, an insect with pre- and post-hatching forms of maternal care. In particular, we used a series of laboratory observations and experiments to investigate whether these three components non-additivel…

Reproductive successOffspringHatchingmedia_common.quotation_subjectZoologyBiologybiology.organism_classificationForficula auriculariaembryonic structuresReproductionOviparityPaternal careHatchlingEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonBMC Evolutionary Biology
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