Search results for "Systematics"

showing 10 items of 6702 documents

Improving stock unearthing method to measure soil erosion rates in vineyards

2018

Abstract Vineyard soils experience high erosion rates compared to soils from other agricultural land uses. The high soil losses in vineyards limits the sustainability of traditional production schemes and warrants comprehensive research aimed at thwarting the main erosion processes affecting vineyard systems. However, long-term measurements, which include spatial variability of soil erosion rates at the plot scale, are uncommon, as most of the measurements have taken place either at the hillslope or watershed scales. Against this background, the stock unearthing method (SUM) can be considered a useful methodology. However, the current method falls short because it assumes that the topograph…

Watershed010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesEcologyEcologyGeneral Decision SciencesSoil science04 agricultural and veterinary sciences01 natural sciencesVineyardAgricultural landSoil water040103 agronomy & agricultureSpatial ecologyErosion0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesEnvironmental scienceSpatial variabilityEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsStock (geology)0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEcological Indicators
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Crystalline wax coverage of the imaginal cuticle inCalopteryx splendens(Odonata: Calopterygidae)

2009

Abstract In this study we use high resolution SEM to describe the diversity of wax crystals and their distribution on different morphological structures in male individuals of Calopteryx splendens. The entire cuticle surface of this damselfly, with the exception of ommatidia and ocelli, is covered with crystalline wax in dimensions from submicron to micron range. It is shown that shape - rod-like, plate like, filamentous, etc. -, size, and density of crystals vary on different surfaces and in individuals of different ages. Additionally, we demonstrate different types of damage to the crystalline wax layer: scratches, compressions, wear, and contamination. The primary function of the wax cry…

WaxbiologyCuticleSimple eye in invertebratesHigh resolutionOdonatabiology.organism_classificationDamselflyCalopterygidaeOmmatidiumInsect Sciencevisual_artBotanyvisual_art.visual_art_mediumsense organsComposite materialEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsInternational Journal of Odonatology
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Ophichthids (Ophichthidae: Anguilliformes) within the body cavity of marine fishes: pseudoparasites?

2011

4 pages, 2 figures, 1 table

Western MediterraneanCommon pandoraPagellusAquatic ScienceOceanographypseudoparasitimPredationErythrinusCentro Oceanográfico de BalearesfoodApterichtusPseudoparasitismmedicineCommon pandoraMedio MarinoBody cavityEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEcologybiologyAnguilliformescommon pandoraPreyOphichthidaebiology.organism_classificationfood.foodFisheryOphichthidaemedicine.anatomical_structureFish <Actinopterygii>preywestern Mediterranean
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Chryseobacterium potabilaquae sp. nov., Chryseobacterium aquaeductus sp. nov. and Chryseobacterium fistulae sp. nov., from drinking water systems

2021

A polyphasic taxonomic study was conducted on three strains isolated from drinking water systems that had previously been deposited as Chryseobacterium species at the Spanish Type Culture Collection in order to complete their classification. Strains CECT 9293T, CECT 9390T and CECT 9393T were isolated from sites in Barcelona, Spain, in the framework of a project aimed at generating the first MALDI-TOF database specific for bacteria present in water for human consumption. Their partial 16S rRNA sequences showed that their closest relatives among the type strains of Chryseobacterium exhibited 98 % similarity or less, supporting their taxonomic novelty. At the same time, comparison between them…

Whole genome sequencingChryseobacteriumNew TaxabiologyBacteroidetesStrain (biology)drinking waterGenus ChryseobacteriumMicrobiologiaGeneral MedicineChryseobacterium16S ribosomal RNAbiology.organism_classificationMicrobiologyAigua potableMicrobiologyChryseobacterium speciesClosest relativesSpecies levelBacteris patògensWeeksellaceaetaxogenomicsEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
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Wickerhamomyces sylviae f.a., sp. nov., an ascomycetous yeast species isolated from migratory birds.

2013

In the present work, we investigated the phylogenetic position and phenotypic characteristics of eight yeast isolates collected from migratory birds on the island of Ustica, Italy. A phylogenetic analysis based on the D1/D2 region of the large-subunit rRNA gene showed that all isolates clustered as a single separate lineage within the Wickerhamomyces clade. They exhibited distinct morphological and physiological characteristics and were clearly separated from their closest relatives, Wickerhamomyces lynferdii, Wickerhamomyces anomalus and Wickerhamomyces subpelliculosus, in blastn searches. On the basis of the isolation source, physiological features and molecular strain typing carried out …

Wickerhamomyces anomalusLineage (evolution)Molecular Sequence DataWickerhamomyces; Birds; YeastZoologyMinisatellite RepeatsBiologyWickerhamomyceMicrobiologyBirdsWickerhamomycesBirdPhylogeneticsBotanyRibosome SubunitsAnimalsDNA FungalMycological Typing TechniquesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyIslandsPhylogenetic treeFungal geneticsDNAGeneral MedicineSequence Analysis DNARibosomal RNARibosome Subunits Large EukaryoticDNA FingerprintingYeastRAPDRandom Amplified Polymorphic DNA TechniqueFungalAnimal Migration; Animals; Birds; DNA Fingerprinting; DNA Fungal; Islands; Italy; Minisatellite Repeats; Molecular Sequence Data; Mycological Typing Techniques; Random Amplified Polymorphic DNA Technique; Ribosome Subunits Large Eukaryotic; Saccharomycetales; Sequence Analysis DNA; PhylogenyItalySaccharomycetalesLargeEukaryoticAnimal MigrationSequence AnalysisSettore AGR/16 - Microbiologia AgrariaInternational journal of systematic and evolutionary microbiology
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Competitive selection in mono-, di- and tri-genotype cultures of Drosophila melanogaster

2009

Viability and larva-to-adult development of three strains of Drosophila melanogaster (one wild strain and two eye mutant strains: cardinal and sepia) were studied under three different situations: A. Monocultures of wild, cardinal and sepia respectively. B. Dicultures with the combinations wild/cardinal, wild/sepia and cardinal/sepia respectively. Seven points of different genetical composition were chosen for each of the three systems. C. Tricultures with wild/cardinal/sepia. Seventy composition points were chosen. The points arranged in a three dimensional diagram with the axes wild, cardinal and sepia, make up an equilateral triangle hyperplane. An analysis of optimal density and intrins…

Wild strainOptimal densitybiologyGenotypeGeneticsStable equilibriumAnimal Science and ZoologySepiaDrosophila melanogasterbiology.organism_classificationMolecular BiologyMolecular biologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research
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Show me your tail, if you have one! Is inbreeding depression occurring in wildcats (Felis silvestris silvestris) from Italy?

2022

Knowledge of genetic diversity is important to wildlife conservation because genetically depleted populations experience an increased risk of extinction. Mammalian carnivores are characterized by small and fragmented populations and low dispersal, so that genetic erosion can lead to the fixation of deleterious genes relatively quickly, leading to morphological abnormalities. Kinked tails and cowlicks are indicative of inbreeding depression and have been described in two wild cat species so far, the puma (Puma concolor) and the cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus). Here we report the first records of morphological abnormalities in five populations of the European wildcat (Felis silvestris silvestris) …

WildcatsKinked tailsBrachyuria; Cowlicks; Genetic diversity; Inbreeding depression; Kinked tails; WildcatsBrachyuriaAnimal Science and ZoologyCowlicksInbreeding depressionGenetic diversityEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMammal Research
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Risk of predation and foraging sites of individuals in mixed-species tit flocks

1993

Abstract Abstract. Foraging sites of individual willow tits, Parus montanus, and crested tits, P. cristatus, on spruce were studied in a winter when the risk of predation from pygmy owls, Glaucidium passerinum, was high and in a winter when it was low. Mixed-species flocks consisted of two crested tits (a pair) and three to six willow tits. The risk of predation from owls is likely to be highest on the most exterior tree parts. Female crested tits foraged further out on the branches than other individuals when predation risk was low, but foraged in the safer sites close to the tree trunk when the risk was high. Male crested tits retained both their relative distance to the trunk and their r…

WillowMixed speciesbiologyEcologyForagingTree trunkAnimal Science and ZoologyFlockGlaucidium passerinumbiology.organism_classificationTrunkEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPredationAnimal Behaviour
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Alarm calling by individual willow tits, Parus montanus

1990

Abstract Alarm responses of wild-captured individual willow tits to model sparrowhawks, Accipiter nisus, flying over a test chamber were studied. Tits did not usually give alarm calls if the apparent predator was passing nearby (at a height of 10 m), while over half of the individuals responded by alarm calling for a more distant predator (40 m). This suggests that alarm calling involves a risk to the caller. Second, there was individual variation in the responses, with older males giving the call more frequently than females or young males. The greater responsiveness of adult males may indicate that different individuals in a flock gain different benefits by warning the others. The tendenc…

WillowbiologyEcologyAccipiterbiology.organism_classificationAlarm signalALARMParus montanusAnimal Science and ZoologyFlockPredatorEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsYoung maleDemographyAnimal Behaviour
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Food Caching By Willow and Crested Tits: A Test of Scatterhoarding Models

1995

In coniferous forests of Central Finland, Willow (Parus montanus) and Crest- ed Tits (P. cristatus) store seeds in a scattered distribution within their territory during the autumn. Individuals cache and recover food items while moving together as members of mixed-species flocks. The purpose of this study was to test certain predictions of scatter- hoarding models (Stapanian and Smith 1978, Clarkson et al. 1986), which predict how the animal should hoard food items from a superabundant source to maximize the number of caches recovered. Our field experiments gave support to most of the predictions of the models. Individual tits stored seeds closer to the food source when food had been availa…

WillowbiologyFood storingEcologySeed dispersalmedia_common.quotation_subjectParus cristatusbiology.organism_classificationCompetition (biology)Parus montanusFlockEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsHoarding (animal behavior)media_commonEcology
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