Search results for "evolution"

showing 10 items of 11096 documents

Allozyme variation in populations of scallops, Pecten jacobaeus (L.) and P. maximus (L.) (Bivalvia: Pectinidae), across the Almeria–Oran front

2002

Abstract The scallops Pecten jacobaeus and P. maximus have been traditionally considered as different species which shared a common ancestor some 5 Ma ago. This view has been challenged by recent reports of genetic distances based on allozymes and mitochondrial DNA which are incompatible with such a long period of isolation and are more typical of conspecific populations. To explain the slight allozyme differentiation opposed to a clear morphological distinctiveness, two main hypotheses have been proposed. One hypothesis views interpopulation allozyme differentiation as an outcome of simple population genetic processes such isolation by distance. The other considers that the intertaxa alloz…

education.field_of_studyPecten jacobaeusEcologyPopulationAquatic ScienceBiologybiology.organism_classificationGenetic divergenceGenetic distanceEvolutionary biologyGenetic structureGenetic variationPecten maximuseducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsIsolation by distanceJournal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
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RAPD evidence for a sister group relationship of the presumed progenitor-derivative species pairSenecio nebrodensis andS. viscosus (Asteraceae)

1998

The phylogenetic and phenetic analysis of 109 RAPD polymorphisms inS. nebrodensis, a perennial and self-incompatible endemic of four mountain ranges in Spain, andS. viscosus, a self-compatible annual widespread in Europe, as well asS. lividus, S. sylvaticus andS. vulgaris revealed a sister group relationship between the first two species. This result contrasts sharply with the earlier hypothesis based on isozyme variation thatS. viscosus originated from within a paraphyleticS. nebrodensis and that the two species represent a progenitor-derivative pair. After considering possible reasons for the sister group relationship found, including the possibility of rooting artefacts, it is concluded …

education.field_of_studyPhylogenetic treePopulationZoologyPlant ScienceBiologyAsteraceaebiology.organism_classificationRAPDTaxonSister groupGenetic variationBotanyBiological dispersaleducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPlant Systematics and Evolution
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The phylogeny and biogeography of Gentiana L. sect. Ciminalis (Adans.) Dumort.: A historical interpretation of distribution ranges in the European hi…

1998

Abstract Gentiana sect. Ciminalis consists of seven mostly ecologically or geographically vicariant and closely related species which are distributed throughout the South and Central European high mountains. The analysis of a RAPD data set and trn L-intron and ITS sequences resulted in slightly different phylogenetic hypotheses. In the preferred hypothesis the group consists of two completely resolved main lineages: 1) G. clusii and G. alpina. 2) G. dinarica, G. acaulis, G. ligustica, G. angustifolia and G. occidentalis. The most important conclusions we have drawn from this phylogenetic hypothesis and from the observed patterns of molecular variation are: 1) The calcifuge ecology of G. aca…

education.field_of_studyPhylogenetic treeRange (biology)Lineage (evolution)CalcicolePopulationPlant ScienceBiologyCladogramEvolutionary biologyBotanyVicarianceeducationMolecular clockEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPerspectives in Plant Ecology, Evolution and Systematics
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Reproductive biology and conservation implications of three endangered snapdragon species (Antirrhinum, Plantaginaceae)

2009

About 32% of Antirrhinum species are considered to be endangered; however, no field studies have focused on their reproductive biology. In this work, several aspects of the reproductive biology (flowering phenology, floral biology, breeding system) and potential limits on seed quantity and quality (pollen limitation, inbreeding depression) were studied in natural populations of three endangered species of the genus (Antirrhinum charidemi, Antirrhinum subbaeticum, Antirrhinum valentinum). Results disclose that all three species need insect visitors for seed production since fruit set after autonomous self-pollination was lower than under hand cross-pollination. A. charidemi and A. valentinum…

education.field_of_studyPollinationEcologyAntirrhinumPopulationEndangered speciesAntirrhinum subbaeticumBiologybiology.organism_classificationPollinatorInbreeding depressionConservation biologyeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape ConservationBiological Conservation
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Population-level consequences of risky dispersal

2014

Achieving sufficient connectivity between populations is essential for persistence, but costs of dispersal may select against individual traits or behaviours that, if present, would improve connectivity. Existing dispersal models tend to ignore the multitude of risks to individuals: while many assess the effect of mortality costs, there is also a risk of failing to find new habitat, especially when the entire inhabitable area remains both small and fragmented. There are few known rules governing whether individuals evolve to disperse more, or less, than what is ideal for population connectivity and persistence. Here we aim to fill this gap, while also noting that evolution might not only pr…

education.field_of_studyPopulation levelHabitatIndividual heterogeneityEcologyEcology (disciplines)Populationta1181Biological dispersalBiologyeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBirth rateOikos
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Time evolution of non-lethal infectious diseases: a semi-continuous approach.

2005

A model describing the dynamics related to the spreading of non-lethal infectious diseases in a fixed-size population is proposed. The model consists of a non-linear delay-differential equation describing the time evolution of the increment in the number of infectious individuals and depends upon a limited number of parameters. Predictions are in good qualitative agreement with data on influenza.

education.field_of_studyPopulation87.23.Cc Population dynamics and ecological pattern formationPopulations and Evolution (q-bio.PE)Time evolutionCondensed Matter PhysicsQuantitative Biology - Quantitative MethodsElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsFOS: Biological sciencesInterdisciplinary PhysicsQuantitative Biology::Populations and EvolutionStatistical physicseducationQuantitative Biology - Populations and EvolutionQuantitative Methods (q-bio.QM)MathematicsThe European physical journal. B
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Mate recognition as a reproductive barrier in sexual and parthenogenetic Eucypris virens (Crustacea, Ostracoda)

2013

Mate selection is one of the motors of evolution and of particular importance in the case of organisms in which sexual and parthenogenetic populations coexist. Sexual populations of the ostracod species complex Eucypris virens are often mixed with parthenogenetic ones. A powerful mate selection mechanism must exist to avoid time, energy and sperm loss, for the maintenance and success of sexual reproduction in these mixed populations. There are four types of E. virens individuals: males (diploid), sexual females (diploid) and asexual females (parthenogenetic and either di- or triploid). From one parthenogenetic population and two populations with males of E. virens, we sampled early stage ju…

education.field_of_studyPopulationAllopatric speciationZoologyParthenogenesisReproductive isolationBiologySexual reproductionMate choiceSympatric speciationSexual selectionAnimal Science and ZoologyeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAnimal Behaviour
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The significance of relatedness and gene flow on population genetic structure in the subsocial spider Eresus cinnaberinus (Araneae: Eresidae)

1998

Interdemic selection, inbreeding and highly structured populations have been invoked to explain the evolution of cooperative social behaviour in the otherwise solitary and cannibalistic spiders. The family Eresidae consists of species ranging from solitary and intermediate subsocial to species exhibiting fully cooperative social behaviour. In this study we, in a hierarchical analysis, investigated relatedness of putative family clusters, inbreeding and population genetic structure of the subsocial spider Eresus cinnaberinus. Five hierarchical levels of investigation ranging from large scale genetic structure (distances of 250 and 50 km level 1 and 2) over microgeographic structure (20 km 2 …

education.field_of_studyPopulationBiologybiology.organism_classificationEresus cinnaberinusGene flowEvolutionary biologyGenetic variationGenetic structureBiological dispersaleducationInbreedingEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSocialityBiological Journal of the Linnean Society
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Stepping stones of life: natal dispersal in the group-living but noncooperative speckled warbler

2003

In most cooperatively breeding birds the offspring of one sex, usually male, delays dispersal to remain on the natal territory and helps its parents to rear subsequent young. Thus delayed dispersal could be the first step in the evolution of cooperative breeding. We studied natal dispersal in a population of the group-living speckled warbler, Chthonicola sagittata, based on observations of a colour-banded population over 3 years. Unlike other group-living members of the Acanthizinae, all juvenile males in this population dispersed to settle on foreign territories as subordinates, which do not help rear the young. Speckled warblers showed all the life history traits that are thought to resul…

education.field_of_studyPopulationBiologybiology.organism_classificationLife history theoryNatal homingCooperative breedingBiological dispersalAnimal Science and ZoologyPhilopatryeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSex ratioDemographySpeckled warblerAnimal Behaviour
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The Horseshoe whip snake (Hemorrhois hippocrepis) on Ibiza: predator release in an invasive population

2020

Abstract The key to fighting a biological invasion may lie in understanding every variable that can explain its success. The Enemy Release Hypothesis (ERH) states that when an invader arrives to a new environment, the absence of its common enemies (predators, parasites and competitors) facilitates the invasion success. The Horseshoe whip snake (Hemorrhois hippocrepis) has been recently introduced from the Iberian Peninsula to the island of Ibiza, and it is currently threatening the only endemic vertebrate, the Ibiza wall lizard (Podarcis pityusensis). We hypothesized that the snake invasion success is caused by the absence of natural predators, and we checked the ERH by relating the tail br…

education.field_of_studyPopulationZoologyAnimal Science and ZoologyBiologyWhip (tree)educationPredatorEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsHorseshoe (symbol)Hemorrhois hippocrepisAmphibia-Reptilia
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