Search results for "evolutionary biology"

showing 10 items of 3886 documents

Can evolution of sexual dimorphism be triggered by developmental temperatures?

2012

Genetic prerequisites for the evolution of sexual dimorphism, sex-specific heritabilities and low or negative genetic correlations between homologous traits in males and females are rarely found. However, sexual dimorphism is evolving rapidly following environmental change, suggesting that sexual dimorphism and its genetic background could be environmentally sensitive. Yet few studies have explored the sensitivity of the genetic background of sexual dimorphism on environmental variation. In this study, on Drosophila melanogaster, we used a large nested full-sib–half-sib breeding design where families were split into four different developmental temperatures: two constant temperature treatme…

Sexual conflictGeneticsSexual dimorphismbiologyEvolutionary biologyGenetic variationQuantitative geneticsDrosophila melanogasterHeritabilityGene–environment interactionbiology.organism_classificationGenetic correlationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Evolutionary Biology
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Sexual Selection Within the Female Genitalia in Lepidoptera

2015

The genitalia of male and female Lepidoptera are complex organs, composed of several structures that exhibit great diversity of shapes, sizes, and positions, suggesting that they have evolved in a relatively rapid and divergent way. In this chapter, we explore the selective pressures responsible for the evolution of genital morphology in the Lepidoptera , emphasizing the possible role of post-copulatory intersexual selection (PCIS) mechanisms (cryptic female choice and sexual conflict). Our exploration is in great extent speculative because knowledge on the functional morphology of genitalia in this group is limited. We start by describing the complexity and diversity of genitalia in Lepido…

Sexual conflictLepidoptera genitaliaFemale sperm storageEvolutionary biologymedia_common.quotation_subjectSexual selectionTraitSex organMorphology (biology)BiologyDiversity (politics)media_common
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The Peculiarities of Gonad Transformation in Teleosts

1983

In teleosts the problem of sex determination and sex differentiation is more puzzling than in other vertebrates. It is not known whether the intriguing variety in the conditions of sex results from the position of these fishes within the vertebrate pedigree. They represent the final products of actinopterygian evolution toward the end of the age of reptiles, that is late in the Jurassic era. However, with that evolutionary fact in mind it is more plausible that teleosts deviate in many ways from the pattern that we are used to attribute to vertebrates in general. The following features of sex differentiation are striking examples of teleost peculiarity: (1) In both sexes there is no morphol…

Sexual differentiationGonadmedicine.anatomical_structurebiologyEvolutionary biologybiology.animalmedicineInversion (evolutionary biology)VertebrateSex organ
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Much more than a clasp: Evolutionary pattern of amplexus diversity in anurans

2019

ABSTRACTThe evolution and diversification of animal reproductive modes have been pivotal questions in behavioral ecology. Amphibians present the highest diversity of reproductive modes among vertebrates, involving various behavioral, physiological and morphological traits. One of such features is the amplexus, the clasp or embrace of males on females during reproduction, which is almost universal to anurans. Hypotheses about the origin amplexus are limited and have not been thoroughly tested, nor had they taken into account evolutionary relationships in most comparative studies. However, these considerations are crucial to understand the evolution of reproductive modes. Here, using an evolu…

Sexual dimorphismAmplexusPhylogenetic treeEvolutionary biologyBehavioral ecologymedia_common.quotation_subjectTraitBiologyEvolutionary transitionsDiversity (politics)media_common
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False dichotomies and human sexual size dimorphism: A comment of Dunsworth (2020)

2021

Sexual dimorphismArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)DichotomyEvolutionary biologyExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyBiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEvolution and Human Behavior
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2021

Because of its parasitic habits, reproduction costs of the common cuckoo (Cuculus canorus) are mostly spent in pre-laying activities. Female costs are limited to searching host nests and laying eggs, whereas, males spend time in performing intense vocal displays, possibly with territorial purpose. This last aspect, together with a sexual plumage dimorphism, points to both intra- and inter-sexual selections operating within this species. One element triggering sexual selection is a differential fitness accrued by different phenotypes. Before analyzing possible sexual selection mechanisms operating in cuckoos, it is therefore necessary to verify whether there is a variability among male secon…

Sexual dimorphismBrood parasiteEcologybiologyEvolutionary biologyPlumageSexual selectionSeasonal breederbiology.organism_classificationCuckooEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCuculusCommon cuckooFrontiers in Ecology and Evolution
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THE EFFECT OF ALTERNATIVE PREY ON THE DYNAMICS OF IMPERFECT BATESIAN AND MÜLLERIAN MIMICRIES

2004

Both Batesian and Müllerian mimicries are considered classical evidence of natural selection where predation pressure has, at times, created a striking similarity between unrelated prey species. Batesian mimicry, in which palatable mimics resemble unpalatable aposematic species, is parasitic and only beneficial to the mimics. By contrast, in classical Müllerian mimicry the cost of predators' avoidance learning is shared between similar unpalatable co-mimics, and therefore mimicry benefits all parties. Recent studies using mathematical modeling have questioned the dynamics of Müllerian mimicry, suggesting that fitness benefits should be calculated in a way similar to Batesian mimicry; that i…

Sexual mimicryFood ChainPopulationObservationAposematismBiologyModels BiologicalMüllerian mimicryPredationSongbirdsAvoidance LearningGeneticsAggressive mimicryAnimalsSelection GeneticeducationFinlandEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicseducation.field_of_studyEcologyBatesian mimicryPhenotypeEvolutionary biologyPredatory BehaviorLinear ModelsMimicryGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesEvolution
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Evolutionary processes in the emergence and recent spread of the syphilis agent, Treponema pallidum

2022

Abstract The incidence of syphilis has risen worldwide in the last decade in spite of being an easily treated infection. The causative agent of this sexually transmitted disease is the bacterium Treponema pallidum subspecies pallidum (TPA), very closely related to subsp. pertenue (TPE) and endemicum (TEN), responsible for the human treponematoses yaws and bejel, respectively. Although much focus has been placed on the question of the spatial and temporary origins of TPA, the processes driving the evolution and epidemiological spread of TPA since its divergence from TPE and TEN are not well understood. Here, we investigate the effects of recombination and selection as forces of genetic diver…

Sexually transmitted diseaseEvolution030231 tropical medicineselection340 Law610 Medicine & healthSubspeciesAcademicSubjects/SCI01180phylogenetic congruenceGenomeUFSP13-7 Evolution in Action: From Genomes to Ecosystems10127 Institute of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies03 medical and health sciences510 Mathematics0302 clinical medicineBehavior and SystematicsGeneticsmedicineHumansSyphilisTreponema pallidumMolecular BiologyGeneDiscoveriesPhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsgenome analysis030304 developmental biologyGenetics0303 health sciencesNatural selectionTreponemaTreponemal InfectionsEcologyPhylogenetic treebiologyAcademicSubjects/SCI0113010177 Dermatology Clinicmedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classification10218 Institute of Legal Medicinerecombination3. Good healthYaws11294 Institute of Evolutionary MedicinetreponematosesSyphilis
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Diplopod hemocyanin sequence and the phylogenetic position of the Myriapoda

2001

Hemocyanins are copper-containing respiratory proteins of the Arthropoda that have so far been thoroughly investigated only in the Chelicerata and the Crustacea but have remained unstudied until now in the Myriapoda. Here we report the first sequence of a myriapod hemocyanin. The hemocyanin of Spirostreptus sp. (Diplopoda: Spirostreptidae) is composed of two distinct subunits that are arranged in a 6 x 6 native molecule. The cloned hemocyanin subunit cDNA codes of for a polypeptide of 653 amino acids (75.5 kDa) that includes a signal peptide of 18 amino acids. The sequence closely resembles that of the chelicerate hemocyanins. Molecular phylogenetic analyses reject with high statistical con…

Signal peptideDNA Complementarymedicine.medical_treatmentMolecular Sequence DataMyriapodachemical and pharmacologic phenomenaBiologycomplex mixturesEvolution MolecularSequence Analysis ProteinGeneticsmedicineAnimalsAmino Acid SequenceCloning MolecularMolecular BiologyArthropodsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyPhylogenetic treeSequence Homology Amino Acidhemic and immune systemsHemocyaninAnatomySequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationSpirostreptusSister groupEvolutionary biologyHemocyaninsChelicerataSequence AlignmentSpirostreptidae
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Paradox lost: variable colour-pattern geometry is associated with differences in movement in aposematic frogs

2014

Aposematic signal variation is a paradox: predators are better at learning and retaining the association between conspicuousness and unprofitability when signal variation is low. Movement patterns and variable colour patterns are linked in non-aposematic species: striped patterns generate illusions of altered speed and direction when moving linearly, affecting predators' tracking ability; blotched patterns benefit instead from unpredictable pauses and random movement. We tested whether the extensive colour-pattern variation in an aposematic frog is linked to movement, and found that individuals moving directionally and faster have more elongated patterns than individuals moving randomly and…

Signal variationEvolutionary Biologypoison frogpredator-prey interactionsEcologyOptical illusionMovement (music)media_common.quotation_subjectIllusionAposematismBiologyBiological SciencesAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)PredationpolymorphismVariable (computer science)Variation (linguistics)Evolutionary biologywarning signalsvisual illusionsta1181Animal BehaviourGeneral Agricultural and Biological Sciencesmedia_common
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