Search results for "evolutionary"

showing 10 items of 4392 documents

Vecchi e nuovi problemi in tema di intervento dei creditori nell’esecuzione (note a margine di Cass. S.U. n. 61 del 7 gennaio 2014)

2015

Nel contributo in oggetto l'autore, muovendo dalla decisione delle Sezioni Unite della Cassazione n. 61 del 7 gennaio 2014, coglie l'occasione per riesaminare le vecchie e nuove problematiche sottese all’intervento dei creditori nel processo esecutivo. Il primo tema affrontato è quello della par condicio creditorum, che viene esaminata nella sua storia evolutiva dal Code Napoleon, al suo periodo di massima estensione, dato dal codice del 1940, fino al suo ridimensionamento a seguito delle riforme del 2005. Esamina quindi la possibilità del possibile superamento quoad effectum della distinzione tra intervento di creditori con titolo e senza titolo, alla luce delle evoluzioni della giurisprud…

b) the same par condicio creditorum principle and the consequent possibility of intervention of third party in the execution. It concludes however that a revolution like the aforesaid explained would be only apparently advantageouOld and new problems related to the intervention of creditors in the expropriation (marginal notes at Cass. Sez. Un. January 7 2014 n. 61) Moving from the decision of the Sezioni Unite n. 61/2014 the author takes the opportunity to re-examine old and new problems related to the intervention of creditors in the forceable execution. The first major theme concerns par condicio creditorum which is examined in its evolutionary history since the Code Napoleon through its period of maximum extension (the Code of 1940) until its reduction as a result of the reforms of 2005. The author examines the possibility to overcome quoad effectum the distinction between sine titulo et cum titulo interveners in light of jurisprudence’s evolution between 1978 2009 and 2014. The possibility in particular concerns those creditors sine titulo the where credit has not been contested (ex art. 499 c.p.c.) by the debtor seek payment and partecipate to distribution. In the last section the author examines the possibilities for other creditors to contest the intervention of the creditor sine titulo ex art. 499 c.p.c. (utendo iuribus in subrogation in case of inaction of the debtor) or in the distribution phase ex art. 512 c.p.c. He concludes that the only person that will be really damaged if he doesn’t contest - ex art. 499 c.p.c. - the credit it is precisely the debtor. He also notes that in the legislation of the last decade the apparent effort to reduce the numbers of judicial enquiry incidental to forceable execution will never be achieved unless it’s eliminated in radice: a) the existence in our system of extrajudicial enforcement titulaSettore IUS/15 - Diritto Processuale Civilesince it would lead to increase autonomous expropriations (one for each creditor who can today intervene) and to increment judicial enquiries in order to form enforceable judgments
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Silent rain: does the atmosphere-mediated connectivity between microbiomes influence bacterial evolutionary rates?

2020

ABSTRACT Air carries a vast number of bacteria and viruses over great distances all the time. This leads to continuous introduction of foreign genetic material to local, established microbial communities. In this perspective, I ask whether this silent rain may have a slowing effect on the overall evolutionary rates in the microbial biosphere. Arguably, the greater the genetic divergence between gene ‘donors’ and ‘recipients’, the greater the chance that the gene product has a deleterious epistatic interaction with other gene products in its genetic environment. This is due to the long-term absence of check for mutual compatibility. As such, if an organism is extensively different from other…

bacteriophagesviruksetRainevoluutioBiologybacterial evolutionApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicrobiologyGenomebakteriofagitEpistatic interactionbakteeritEvolution Molecular03 medical and health sciencesgenetic innovationsBacteriophagesMicrobiomeGeneOrganism030304 developmental biologyilmakehä2. Zero hunger0303 health sciencesGene by environmentEcologyBacteria030306 microbiologyAtmosphereMicrobiotaGenetic compatibilityBiological EvolutionGenetic divergencemikrobisto13. Climate actionEvolutionary biologyatmosphereevolutionary rategenetic compatibilityleviäminenFEMS microbiology ecology
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Regulatory changes in pterin and carotenoid genes underlie balanced color polymorphisms in the wall lizard

2019

Significance Reptiles show an amazing color diversity based on variation in melanins, carotenoids, and pterins. This study reveals genes controlling differences between three color morphs (white, orange, and yellow) in the common wall lizard. Orange pigmentation, due to high levels of orange/red pterins in skin, is caused by genetic changes in the sepiapterin reductase gene. Yellow skin, showing high levels of yellow carotenoids, is controlled by the beta-carotene oxygenase 2 locus. Thus, the color polymorphism in the common wall lizard is associated with changes in two small regions of the genome containing genes with crucial roles in pterin and carotenoid metabolism. These genes are likel…

balanced polymorphismBalanced polymorphismgenetic structuresEvolutionIntrogressionintrogressionColorpterin pigmentationSkin PigmentationDioxygenasesEvolutionsbiologiGeneticAnimalscarotenoid pigmentationPolymorphismPterin pigmentationEvolutionary BiologyPolymorphism GeneticBalanced polymorphism; Carotenoid pigmentation; Introgression; Podarcis muralis; Pterin pigmentation; Alcohol Oxidoreductases; Animals; Carotenoids; Color; Dioxygenases; Lizards; Pigmentation; Polymorphism Genetic; Pterins; Skin PigmentationPigmentationLizardsBiological SciencesCarotenoidsPterinsAlcohol OxidoreductasesPNAS PlusCarotenoid pigmentationPodarcis muralissense organs
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Distinct bhaplotype structure at the innate immune receptor Toll-like receptor 2 across bank vole populations and lineages in Europe

2015

Abstract: Parasite-mediated selection may contribute to the maintenance of genetic variation at host immune genes over long time scales. To date, the best evidence for the long-term maintenance of immunogenetic variation in natural populations comes from studies on the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) genes, whereas evidence for such processes from other immune genes remains scarce. In the present study, we show that, despite pronounced population differentiation and the occurrence of numerous private alleles within populations, the innate immune gene Toll-like receptor 2 (TLR2) displays a distinct haplotype structure in 21 bank vole (Myodes glareolus) populations across Europe. Haplo…

balancing selectionPopulationphylogeographyBalancing selectionMajor histocompatibility complexToxicologydiversitypolymorphismsmall mammalspositive darwinian selectionMyodes glareolusGenetic variationmaintenance of genetic variationTLR2mhceducationclethrionomys-glareolusBiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsToxicologieVLAGGeneticseducation.field_of_studyToll-like receptorInnate immune systembiologyHaplotypebiology.organism_classificationmajor histocompatibility complexparasite resistanceimmunogeneticsBank voleEvolutionary biologynorthern spaingene evolutionbiology.proteinta1181genetic-variationroderentscontrasting patterns
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Domain‐specific neural networks improve automated bird sound recognition already with small amount of local data

2022

1. An automatic bird sound recognition system is a useful tool for collecting data of different bird species for ecological analysis. Together with autonomous recording units (ARUs), such a system provides a possibility to collect bird observations on a scale that no human observer could ever match. During the last decades, progress has been made in the field of automatic bird sound recognition, but recognizing bird species from untargeted soundscape recordings remains a challenge. 2. In this article, we demonstrate the workflow for building a global identification model and adjusting it to perform well on the data of autonomous recorders from a specific region. We show how data augmentatio…

bio-monitoringeläinten äänetEcological ModelingMODELSautonomous recording unitsdeep learningsyväoppiminenneuroverkotbird sound recognitionRECORDERSddc:bioacousticshavainnotkoneoppiminen1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyconvolutional neural networksmodel fine-tuninglinnutddc:630tunnistaminenEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
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Traits and phylogenies modulate the environmental responses of wood-inhabiting fungal communities across spatial scales

2022

Identifying the spatial scales at which community assembly processes operate is fundamental for gaining a mechanistic understanding of the drivers shaping ecological communities. In this study, we examined whether and how traits and phylogenetic relationships structure fungal community assembly across spatial scales. We applied joint species distribution modelling to a European-scale dataset on 215 wood-inhabiting fungal species, which includes data on traits, phylogeny and environmental variables measured at the local (log-level) and regional (site-level) scales. At the local scale, wood-inhabiting fungal communities were mostly structured by deadwood decay stage, and the trait and phyloge…

biogeography and macroecologyASSEMBLY PROCESSESJoint species distribution modelPlant SciencephylogeographyNICHE CONSERVATISMECOLOGYtrait syndromeeliömaantiedeHABITAT MODELSFUNCTIONAL DIVERSITYfylogeografiaWood decaying fungiGRADIENTEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsFungal traitTrait syndromefylogenetiikkaphylogenetic signaleliöyhteisötlahottajasienetjoint species distribution modelekologinen lokeroCLIMATESIZE1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyfungal traitEVOLUTIONARYDEAD WOODwood decaying fungi
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Mate fidelity and coloniality in waterbirds: a comparative analysis

1998

Increased opportunities for information are one potential benefit of sociality. We apply this idea to the advantages of colonial breeding in bird species that are typically monogamous within a breeding season but often form new pair-bonds in subsequent seasons. Individuals may benefit from nesting in colonies at high density by identifying good-quality potential alternative mates among their neighbours. The opportunities for finding a better mating option are likely to increase with colony size and density. We tested this prediction with a comparative analysis of the association between mate fidelity and coloniality in waterbirds (wading birds and seabirds), where there is wide variation in…

biologyComparative methodEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectEvolutionary changeFidelitybiology.organism_classificationSexual reproductionSeasonal breederWaterfowlMatingEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSocialitymedia_commonOecologia
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AN ANALYSIS OF CONTINENT-WIDE PATTERNS OF SEXUAL SELECTION IN A PASSERINE BIRD

2006

Patterns of selection are widely believed to differ geographically, causing adaptation to local environmental conditions. However, few studies have investigated patterns of phenotypic selection across large spatial scales. We quantified the intensity of selection on morphology in a monogamous passerine bird, the barn swallow Hirundo rustica, using 6495 adults from 22 populations distributed across Europe and North Africa. According to the classical Darwin-Fisher mechanism of sexual selection in monogamous species, two important components of fitness due to sexual selection are the advantages that the most attractive males acquire by starting to breed early and their high annual fecundity. W…

biologyDirectional selectionbiology.organism_classificationFecunditySexual dimorphismEvolutionary biologySexual selectionHirundoGeneticsFecundity selectionAdaptationGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesSelection (genetic algorithm)Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEvolution
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Cydnidae (Burrowing Bug) Pigmentation

2015

biologyEcologyEvolutionary biologyDermatologyArthropodbiology.organism_classificationCydnidaeJAMA Dermatology
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Evolutionary significance of the invasion of introduced populations into the native range of Meconopsis cambrica

2011

The long history of the deliberate or accidental and human-mediated dispersal of flowering plants has led to the introduction of foreign genotypes of many species into areas of Europe hitherto occupied by potentially distinct native populations. Studies of the genetic and evolutionary consequences of such changes are handicapped by the difficulty of identifying the surviving native populations of many species in the absence of clear morphological differences. We investigated the relationship between putative native and introduced populations of the herbaceous perennial Meconopsis cambrica (Papaveraceae), as the isolated native populations of this species can be identified by historical and …

biologyEcologyMeconopsis cambricaIntrogressionIntroduced speciesNative plantbiology.organism_classificationInvasive speciesGene flowEvolutionary biologyGeneticsBiological dispersalInternal transcribed spacerEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMolecular Ecology
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