Search results for "Systematics"

showing 10 items of 6702 documents

Delayed mixis in rotifers: an adaptive response to the effects of density-dependent sex on population growth

2004

In most cyclically parthenogenetic life cycles, sex is needed to produce resting stages. In several species of cyclically parthenogenetic rotifers, some generations of clones are not responsive to a density-dependent signal that triggers sexual female production. These unresponsive rotifers hatch from resting eggs and typically pass 8–12 generations of female parthenogenesis before becoming receptive to the mixis signal. We addressed the selection for mixis delay using a simulation model. A delay of sexual reproduction could increase population growth through parthenogenesis and thus the number of resting eggs ultimately produced. In a monomorphic population without mixis delay, we determin…

education.field_of_studyEcologyEcologyPopulationZoologyParthenogenesisAquatic ScienceBiologyPopulation densitySexual reproductionDensity dependentPopulation growtheducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Plankton Research
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Seed dormancy and germination of an endangered coastal plantEryngium maritimum(Apiaceae)

2013

INTRODUCTION Eryngium maritimum L. is a littoral species growing on sand dunes and shingle beaches. Although it is listed among the species widespread in western and southern Europe, overall its population is declining (Van der Maarel & Van der Maarel-Versluys, 1996). The species is included in the Red Data Book of Latvia (Fatare, 2003) and is protected in several other European countries. In northern Europe and in the Baltic Region it grows near the limits of its current area of distribution and therefore is at a greater risk of extinction because in small and isolated populations there is a risk of inbreeding depression. For example, in Eryngium alpinum partial self-incompatibility causes…

education.field_of_studyEcologyEcologySeed dispersalPopulationSeed dormancyfood and beveragesBiologyEryngium maritimumbiology.organism_classificationStratification (seeds)GerminationBotanyDormancyGibberellineducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEstonian Journal of Ecology
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Sex-Specific Habitat Selection in an Edge Habitat Specialist, the Western Barbastelle Bat

2011

The niche variation hypothesis suggests that a population's ability to react to varying environmental conditions depend on the behavioural variability of its members. However, most studies on bats, including the work on the habitat use of the western barbastelle bat, Barbastella barbastellus, have not considered sex-specific and individual variability. We studied the habitat use of 12 female and five male western barbastelle bats within their home ranges with respect to available habitat types by applying kernel methods and Euclidean distances. Our results indicate individual habitat preferences within and among sexes of this species. Females preferred deciduous forest and linear elements w…

education.field_of_studyEcologyEcologyfungiNichePopulationBiologybiology.organism_classificationSex specificBarbastella barbastellusDeciduousHabitatAnimal Science and ZoologyeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSelection (genetic algorithm)Nature and Landscape ConservationAnnales Zoologici Fennici
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Inbreeding depression in perennial Lychnis viscaria (Caryophyllaceae): effects of population mating history and nutrient availability.

2005

We studied inbreeding depression in a perennial plant, Lychnis viscaria, in three populations differing in their inbreeding history and population size by measuring several traits at two nutrient levels over the plant's life cycle. The observed levels of inbreeding depression (cumulative inbreeding depression, from -0.057 to 0.629) were high for a plant with a mixed mating system. As expected, the population with a low level of isozyme variation expressed the least inbreeding depression for seed germination. Highest inbreeding depression for germination was found in the largest and genetically most variable population. No clear differences between populations in expression of inbreeding dep…

education.field_of_studyEcologyOutbreeding depressionPopulation sizePopulationZoologyPlant ScienceBiologyMating systembiology.organism_classificationLychnisGerminationGeneticsInbreeding depressioneducationInbreedingEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAmerican journal of botany
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Studies on the Sicilian populations ofAnacolia webbii(Mont.) Schimp. (Bartramiaceae, Bryophyta), rare moss in Europe

2014

New data on the distribution, biology, intra- and inter-population variability and conservation state of Sicilian populations of Anacolia webbii are provided. Two new localities are reported, so that total five fragmented populations occur in the island, all of them in a rather small area in the western part of the province of Palermo. They live on wet limestone or sandstone cliffs with base at 900–1200 m a.s.l. and N, N-NE aspect, within communities of Aceri campestris-Querco-ilicis sigmetum. The plants are particularly vigorous, but some data suggest a condition of vulnerability of the populations. In fact, in addition to specificity to a rare habitat on the island, a morphometric and all…

education.field_of_studyEcologyPopulationAnacolia webbiiLocus (genetics)Plant ScienceBiologybiology.organism_classificationMosslanguage.human_languageHabitatlanguageBartramiaceaeeducationSicilianEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsThreatened taxa population studies distribution morphological features allozyme analysisPlant Biosystems - An International Journal Dealing with all Aspects of Plant Biology
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2014

Captive breeding for conservation purposes presents a serious practical challenge because several conflicting genetic processes (i.e., inbreeding depression, random genetic drift and genetic adaptation to captivity) need to be managed in concert to maximize captive population persistence and reintroduction success probability. Because current genetic management is often only partly successful in achieving these goals, it has been suggested that management insights may be found in sexual selection theory (in particular, female mate choice). We review the theoretical and empirical literature and consider how female mate choice might influence captive breeding in the context of current genetic…

education.field_of_studyEcologyPopulationContext (language use)BiologyAnimal dataMate choiceGenetic driftSexual selectionCaptive breedingGeneticsInbreeding depressionMarketingGeneral Agricultural and Biological ScienceseducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEvolutionary Applications
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Influences of geographic differentiation in the forewing warning signal of the wood tiger moth in Alaska

2014

Aposematic organisms have warning signals advertising their unpalatability to predators, and because signal efficiency is better in higher densities, positive frequency-dependent selection is expected to select against less common signals. The wood tiger moth (Parasemia plantaginis) occurs across the Holarctic and its conspicuous hindwings serve as warning signals to predators. It also has conspicuous black and white forewing patterns that could act as warning signals, or help to hide the moth by preventing predators from seeing the outline of the moth’s body (a strategy known as disruptive coloration). In Alaska, the predominant forewing pattern changes distinctly between the regions aroun…

education.field_of_studyEcologyPopulationFrequency-dependent selectionAposematismBiologybiology.organism_classificationGene flowPredationDisruptive colorationParasemia plantaginisAnimal ecologyeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEvolutionary Ecology
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Climate-driven changes in winter abundance of a migratory waterbird in relation to EU protected areas

2015

AimSpecies are responding to climate change by changing their distributions, creating debate about the effectiveness of existing networks of protected areas. As a contribution to this debate, we assess whether regional winter abundances and distribution of the Smew Mergellus albellus, a migratory waterbird species listed on Annex I (EU Birds Directive) that overwinters exclusively in European wetlands, changed during 1990-2011, the role of global warming in driving distributional changes and the effectiveness of the network of Special Protection Areas (SPAs, EU Birds Directive) in the context of climate change. LocationEurope. MethodsWe used site-specific counts (6,883 sites) from 16 countr…

education.field_of_studyEcologyPopulationGlobal warmingClimate changeContext (language use)15. Life on landBirds DirectiveGeography13. Climate actionAbundance (ecology)FlywayNatura 2000educationEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
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2014

The free-living planktonic freshwater bacterium Polynucleobacter necessarius subspecies asymbioticus (> 99% 16S rRNA similarity) represents a taxon with a cosmopolitan distribution and apparently ubiquitous occurrence in lentic freshwater habitats. We tested for intra-taxon biogeographic patterns by combining cultivation-independent and cultivation methods. A culture collection of 204 strains isolated from globally distributed freshwater habitats (Arctic to Antarctica) was investigated for phylogeographic patterns based on sequences of two markers, the 16S–23S internal transcribed spacers and the glutamine synthetase gene (glnA). Genetic distance between isolates showed significant geograph…

education.field_of_studyEcologyPopulationPantropicalZoologyBiologybiology.organism_classificationMicrobiologyPhylogeographyTaxonCosmopolitan distributionPolynucleobacter necessarius14. Life underwatereducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsIsolation by distancePolynucleobacterEnvironmental Microbiology
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Mate‐Search Efficiency Can Determine the Evolution of Separate Sexes and the Stability of Hermaphroditism in Animals

2002

Limited availability of mating partners has been proposed as an explanation for the occurrence of simultaneous hermaphroditism in animals with pair mating. When low population density or low mobility of a species limits the number of potential mates, simultaneous hermaphrodites may have a selective advantage because, first, they are able to adjust the allocation of resources between male and female functions in order to maximize fitness; second, in a hermaphroditic population the likelihood of meeting a partner is higher because all individuals are potential mates; and, third, in the absence of mating partners, many simultaneously hermaphroditic animals have the option of reproducing throug…

education.field_of_studyEcologyPopulationTime allocationLimited availabilityBiologyPopulation densitySelf-FertilizationEvolutionary biologyMatingeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSex allocationSelection (genetic algorithm)The American Naturalist
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