Search results for "Systematics"

showing 10 items of 6702 documents

Effects of temperature and desiccation on ex situ conservation of nongreen fern spores

2012

Premise of the study Fern spores are unicellular and haploid, making them a potential model system to study factors that regulate lifespan and mechanisms of aging. Aging rates of nongreen spores were measured to compare longevity characteristics among diverse fern species and test for orthodox response to storage temperature and moisture. Methods Aging of spores from 10 fern species was quantified by changes in germination and growth parameters. Storage temperature ranged from ambient room to -196°C (liquid nitrogen); spores were dried to ambient relative humidity (RH) or using silica gel. Key results Survival of spores varied under ambient storage conditions, with one species dying within …

SporesConservation of Natural Resourcesmedia_common.quotation_subjectGerminationPlant ScienceBiologyFreezingBotanyGeneticsRelative humidityDesiccationEcosystemEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonMoistureOrthodox seedfungiTemperatureLongevitybiology.organism_classificationSporeGerminationFernsRegression AnalysisFernDesiccationAmerican Journal of Botany
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Dispersal of microarthropods in forest soil

2001

Summary This experiment was a part of a research on the soil community in anthropogenous birch stands in Finland. In that study it was found that communities of Collembola are similar in birch stands of different origin (cultivated field or spruce forest), while the communities of Oribatida are essentially different. When compared to original spruce forest, the communities of both groups are different. Cultivation eliminates the populations of most microarthropod species, that have to disperse after reforestation from the surrounding areas. The aim of the experiment was to study the ambulatory dispersal of soil microarthropods. It was carried out in plastic boxes filled with an intact block…

Spruce forestAgronomySoil testbiologyEcologySoil ScienceBiological dispersalReforestationAcaribiology.organism_classificationOribatidaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCollembola <class>Pedobiologia
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Ultraviolet reflectance and cryptic sexual dichromatism in the ocellated lizard, Lacerta (Timon) lepida (Squamata: Lacertidae)

2009

Ultraviolet (UV) colorations have garnered extensive theoretical and empirical treatment in recent years, although the majority of studies have concerned themselves with avian taxa. However, many lizards have acute visual systems with retinal photoreceptors that are sensitive to UV wavelengths, and also display UV-reflecting colour patches. In the present study, we used UV photography and full-spectrum reflectance spectrophotometry to describe intra- and intersexual colour variation in adult ocellated lizards Lacerta (Timon) lepida and to obtain evidence of UV-based ornamentation. We also investigated whether any colour traits correlate with morphological traits potentially related to indiv…

SquamataDichromatismbiologyEcologyLizardZoologybiology.organism_classificationbiology.animalLacertaLacertidaeBody regionSauriaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsVentral scalesBiological Journal of the Linnean Society
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Consistent isotopic differences between Schistocephalus spp. parasites and their stickleback hosts

2015

Published version available at http://dx.doi.org/10.3354/dao02893 Parasite−host systems show markedly variable patterns in isotopic fractionation: parasites can be either depleted or enriched in 15N and 13C as compared to their hosts. However, it remains unknown whether isotopic fractionation patterns are similar in comparable parasite−host systems from markedly different ecosystems. Results of this study show that large-sized Schistocephalus spp. endoparasites are consistently depleted in 15N (by on average −2.13 to −2.20‰) as compared to their nine-spined stickleback Pungitius pungitius and three-spined stickleback Gasterosteus aculeatus hosts. The differences between parasites and host f…

Stable isotope analysisVDP::Matematikk og Naturvitenskap: 400::Zoologiske og botaniske fag: 480::Parasittologi: 484Pungitius pungitiusZoologyGasterosteusAquatic SciencePlatyhelminthFish DiseasesPungitiusAnimalsEcosystemGasterosteus aculeatusEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsIsotope analysisCarbon IsotopesVDP::Mathematics and natural science: 400::Zoology and botany: 480::Parasitology: 484biologyHost (biology)Stable isotope ratioFishesSticklebackTapewormbiology.organism_classificationCestode InfectionsEndoparasitePlatyhelminthsta1181Nutrient assimilationSchistocephalusDiseases of aquatic organisms
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Changes in diets of individual Baltic ringed seals (Phoca hispida botnica) during their breeding season inferred from stable isotope analysis of mult…

2008

The stable isotope ratios (� 13 C and � 15 N) of three tissues with different metabolic rates (plasma, liver, and muscle) were used to investigate temporal variation in diet among nine individual Baltic ringed seals (Phoca hispida botnica Gmelin) from the Bothnian Bay, northeast Baltic Sea. The isotope values from plasma should reflect the most recent diet, values from liver the diet of the past weeks prior to sampling, and values from muscle should integrate diet over almost the entire breeding season of the ringed seals. In general, � 13 C values of liver were more enriched in 13 C than were those of either muscle or plasma, suggesting that the diet of the seals may have included a higher…

Stable isotope ratioEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectForagingZoologyAquatic ScienceBiologybiology.organism_classificationPhocaPredationSeasonal breederReproductionBayEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsIsotope analysismedia_commonMarine Mammal Science
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The breeding system of Fumana ericifolia: first evidence of autogamy in woody Cistaceae

2001

Fumana ericifolia belongs to the family Cistaceae, in which all perennial species previously studied have been reported to be self-incompatible and xenogamous. Here we show that F. ericifolia is self-compatible and autogamous. Its flowers last only four to eight hours and produce a small amount of pollen and ovules. Self-pollination depends on changes in the relative position of the stigma and the anthers, triggered by the abscission of the petals; this in turn causes closing of the sepals, which push the anthers onto the stigma. Pollen remains highly viable and germinable, and the stigma keeps its receptivity several hours after the loss of the petals. Hand pollination treatments revealed …

StamenPlant ScienceCistaceaeBiologymedicine.disease_causebiology.organism_classificationPollinatorPollenSelf-pollinationBotanymedicinePollen tubePetalEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsHand-pollinationNordic Journal of Botany
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Starvation endurance in the antTemnothorax nylanderidepends on group size, body size and access to larvae

2013

Social interactions in animal groups can buffer environmental stress and may enhance survival under unfavourable conditions. In the present study, the impact on starvation endurance of social group, access to larvae and cold shock is studied in the ant Temnothorax nylanderi Forster. Resource sharing is expected to lead to grouped workers surviving longer than isolated ones. Access to larvae may increase longevity if larvae serve as food, or may interfere with survival if they induce caring behaviour in workers. Cold shock serves as a stress factor and a negative influence on survival is expected. The results show that isolated workers have a shorter lifespan than grouped workers, which in t…

StarvationLarvaTemnothorax nylanderiPhysiologyved/biologyEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectfungived/biology.organism_classification_rank.speciesLongevityZoologyBody sizeBiologyANTSocial groupAnimal groupsInsect Sciencemedicinemedicine.symptomEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonPhysiological Entomology
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Effects of morphometric descriptor changes on statistical classification and morphospaces

2004

Ten morphometric descriptors (five pairs of form and shape parameters) are used to describe the complex morphology of the first lower molar of two morphologically similar species, Microtus arvalis and M. agrestis. These descriptors are derived either from linear measurements or from outline analysis. The effects of these different descriptors on classical analysis as used in biology or palaeobiology are explored. First, the reliability of results in statistical classification is assessed. All of the descriptors discriminate well between the two species. The initial morphometric scheme (linear or outline) does not induce marked differences in statistical classification and the major discrepa…

Statistical classificationMultivariate analysisSimilarity (network science)business.industryPartial least squares analysisPattern recognitionBiological evolutionArtificial intelligenceBiologybusinessEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsIntraspecific competitionBiological Journal of the Linnean Society
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Stochastic dynamics of leukemic cells under an intermittent targeted therapy

2009

The evolutionary dynamics of cancerous cell populations in a model of Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML) is investigated in the presence of an intermittent targeted therapy. Cancer development and progression is modeled by simulating the stochastic evolution of initially healthy cells which can experience genetic mutations and modify their reproductive behavior, becoming leukemic clones. Front line therapy for the treatment of patients affected by CML is based on the administration of tyrosine kinase inhibitors, namely imatinib (Gleevec) or, more recently, dasatinib or nilotinib. Despite the fact that they represent the first example of a successful molecular targeted therapy, the development o…

Statistics and ProbabilityComplex systemsmedicine.medical_treatmentModels BiologicalPiperazinesSettore FIS/03 - Fisica Della MateriaCancer evolutionTargeted therapyLeukemia Myelogenous Chronic BCR-ABL Positivehemic and lymphatic diseasesStochastic dynamics; Cancer evolution; Complex systemsHumansMedicineComputer SimulationStochastic dynamicMolecular Targeted TherapyProtein Kinase InhibitorsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsStochastic Processesbusiness.industryApplied MathematicsMyeloid leukemiaImatinibmedicine.diseaseSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)DasatinibLeukemiaPyrimidinesImatinib mesylateNilotinibStochastic dynamics Monte Carlo simulationBenzamidesImmunologyCancer cellDisease ProgressionImatinib MesylateCancer researchbusinessmedicine.drug
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ERG signal analysis using wavelet transform

2009

The wavelet analysis is a powerful tool for analyzing and detecting features of signals characterized by time-dependent statistical properties, as biomedical signals. The identification and the analysis of the components of these signals in the time-frequency domain, give meaningful information about the physiological mechanisms that govern them. This article presents the results of the wavelet analysis applied to the a-wave component of the human electroretinogram. In order to deepen and improve our knowledge about the behavior of the early photoreceptoral response, including the possible activation of interactions and correlations among the photoreceptors, we have detected and identified …

Statistics and ProbabilitySignal processingComputer scienceApplied MathematicsWavelet AnalysisMexican hat waveletWavelet transformLuminanceRetinaSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)Electroretinogram – a-wave – Photoreceptoral response – Wavelet analysis – Mexican hat waveletRange (mathematics)Identification (information)WaveletOrder (biology)ElectroretinographyHumansPhotoreceptor CellsBiological systemPhotic StimulationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTheory in Biosciences
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