Search results for "evolutionary"

showing 10 items of 4392 documents

Sinophysis and Pseudophalacroma are Distantly Related to Typical Dinophysoid Dinoflagellates (Dinophysales, Dinophyceae)

2011

Dinophysoid dinoflagellates are usually considered a large monophyletic group. Large subunit and small subunit (SSU) rDNA phylogenies suggest a basal position for Amphisoleniaceae (Amphisolenia,Triposolenia) with respect to two sister groups, one containing most Phalacroma species plus Oxyphysis and the other Dinophysis,Ornithocercus, Dinophysoid dinoflagellates are usually considered a large monophyletic group. Large subunit and small subunit (SSU) rDNA phylogenies suggest a basal position for Amphisoleniaceae (Amphisolenia,Triposolenia) with respect to two sister groups, one containing most Phalacroma species plus Oxyphysis and the other Dinophysis,Ornithocercus, Histioneis,Citharistes an…

biologyEcologyMolecular Sequence DataDNA Protozoanbiology.organism_classificationDNA RibosomalMicrobiologyMonophylySister groupPhylogeneticsEvolutionary biologyDinoflagellidaOrnithocercusSeawaterPhalacromaCladeRibosomal DNAPhylogenyDinophyceaeJournal of Eukaryotic Microbiology
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Enamel Prism Patterns of European Hominoids — and Their Phylogenetical Aspects

1981

Everybody concerned with questions of taxonomy and phylogeny knows that a large part of information used to classify fossil vertebrates is derived from teeth. This comes from the reasoning that teeth are the best mineralized portions of the skeleton and thus usually also the best preserved remains. The best preserved portion of teeth is again the most highly mineralized — the enamel. That the enamel shows a so-called prism pattern, which differs markedly within mammals and also within the primates, is well known since Carter (1922) and Regan (1930) published articles concerning the variability of enamel prism patterns. These were for the first time described by Tomes in 1848. An intensive i…

biologyEnamel paintmedia_common.quotation_subjectbiology.organism_classificationEnamel structureArchaeologyPhys anthropolAustralopithecusExtant taxonEvolutionary biologyvisual_artvisual_art.visual_art_mediumTaxonomy (biology)Phyletic gradualismmedia_commonAncestor
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Developmental speed affects ecological stoichiometry and adult fat reserves in Drosophila melanogaster

2020

Abstract The elemental composition of organisms belongs to a suite of functional traits that change during development in response to environmental conditions. However, associations between adaptive variations in developmental speed and elemental body composition are not well understood. We compared body mass, elemental body composition, food uptake and fat metabolism of Drosophila melanogaster male fruit flies in relation to their larval development speed. Slowly developing flies had higher body carbon concentration than rapidly developing and intermediate flies. Rapidly developing flies had the highest body nitrogen concentration, while slowly developing flies had higher body nitrogen lev…

biologyEvolutionary biologyEcological stoichiometryfungiAnimal Science and ZoologyDrosophila melanogasterbiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCarbon-to-nitrogen ratio ; developmental speed ; Drosophila melanogaster ; ecological stoichiometry ; larval development
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Constraining the Deep Origin of Parasitic Flatworms and Host-Interactions with Fossil Evidence

2015

Novel fossil discoveries have contributed to our understanding of the evolutionary appearance of parasitism in flatworms. Furthermore, genetic analyses with greater coverage have shifted our views on the coevolution of parasitic flatworms and their hosts. The putative record of parasitic flatworms is consistent with extant host associations and so can be used to put constraints on the evolutionary origin of the parasites themselves. The future lies in new molecular clock analyses combined with additional discoveries of exceptionally preserved flatworms associated with hosts and coprolites. Besides direct evidence, the host fossil record and biogeography have the potential to constrain their…

biologyEvolutionary biologyHost (biology)BiogeographyCestodaZoologyParasitismbiology.organism_classificationMolecular clockPlatyhelminthsCoevolutionPlatyzoa
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Anatomical Network Analysis of Primate Skull Morphology

2015

Borja Esteve-Altava1,3, Julia Boughner2, Rui Diogo3 and Diego Rasskin-Gutman1. 1Theoretical Biology Research Group, Cavanilles Institute of Biodiversity & Evolutionary Biology, University of Valencia, Valencia, Spain. 2Anatomy & Cell Biology, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada. 3Anatomy, Howard University, Washington, DC USA. boresal@gmail.com, diego.rasskin@uv.es, julia.boughner@gmail.com, rui.diogo@howard.edu

biologyEvolutionary biologybiology.animalGeneticsSkull morphologyPrimateMolecular BiologyBiochemistryBiotechnologyThe FASEB Journal
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Genes of the sea urchin embryo: An annotated list as of December 1994

1995

The main literature regarding gene structure and expression in sea urchin embryos is schematically reported and briefly commented upon. Although the subject has expanded particularly over the last 10 years, to which the review mostly refers, some historical reference is also given. More space is reserved to the regulation of the synthesis of histones and cytoskeletal actins, where the attention of various authors has been especially present; the regulation of such a synthesis is described both at a territorial level and a temporal level during the sea urchin development.

biologyEvolutionary biologybiology.animalembryonic structuresCell BiologyAnatomySea urchin embryoSea urchinGeneDevelopmental BiologyDevelopment, Growth and Differentiation
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Chapter 2 Fasciola, Lymnaeids and Human Fascioliasis, with a Global Overview on Disease Transmission, Epidemiology, Evolutionary Genetics, Molecular …

2009

Abstract Fascioliasis, caused by liver fluke species of the genus Fasciola, has always been well recognized because of its high veterinary impact but it has been among the most neglected diseases for decades with regard to human infection. However, the increasing importance of human fascioliasis worldwide has re‐launched interest in fascioliasis. From the 1990s, many new concepts have been developed regarding human fascioliasis and these have furnished a new baseline for the human disease that is very different to a simple extrapolation from fascioliasis in livestock. Studies have shown that human fascioliasis presents marked heterogeneity, including different epidemiological situations and…

biologyFasciolaMolecular epidemiologyHuman evolutionary geneticsHepaticaFasciola giganticaBiological dispersalZoologybiology.organism_classificationGenetic isolateFasciolidae
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L'arbre de la vie a-t-il une structure fractale?

1999

Abstract We analyse the time sequences of major evolutionary leaps at various scales, from the scale of the global tree of life, to the scales of orders and families such as sauropod dinosaurs, North American fossil Equidae, rodents, and primates including the Hominidae. In each case we find that these data are consistent with a log- periodic law to high level of statistical significance. Such a law is characterized by a critical epoch of convergence Tc specific to the lineage under consideration and that can be interpreted as the end of that lineage's capacity to evolve.

biologyHominidaeLineage (evolution)ZoologyTree of lifeOcean EngineeringSaurischiabiology.organism_classificationTheriaGeographyEutheriaEvolutionary biologyLEAPSEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSauropodaComptes Rendus de l'Académie des Sciences - Series IIA - Earth and Planetary Science
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The Phylogenetic Analysis of Variable-Length Sequence Data: Elongation Factor–1α Introns in European Populations of the Parasitoid Wasp Genus Pauesia…

2001

Elongation factor-1alpha (EF-1alpha) is a highly conserved nuclear coding gene that can be used to investigate recent divergences due to the presence of rapidly evolving introns. However, a universal feature of intron sequences is that even closely related species exhibit insertion and deletion events, which cause variation in the lengths of the sequences. Indels are frequently rich in evolutionary information, but most investigators ignore sites that fall within these variable regions, largely because the analytical tools and theory are not well developed. We examined this problem in the taxonomically problematic parasitoid wasp genus Pauesia (Hymenoptera: Braconidae: Aphidiinae) using con…

biologyPhylogenetic treeMolecular Sequence DataWaspsDNASequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationParasitoid waspEuropeMonophylyPaleontologyGenetics PopulationPeptide Elongation Factor 1TaxonSpecies SpecificityEvolutionary biologyPhylogeneticsGeneticsAnimalsIndelAphidiinaeCladeMolecular BiologyPhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMolecular Biology and Evolution
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The Origin of Metazoan Complexity: Porifera as Integrated Animals

2011

SYNOPSIS. Sponges [Porifera] are the phylogenetically oldest metazoan phylum still extant today; they share the closest relationship with the hypothetical common metazoan ancestor, the Urmetazoa. During the past 8 years cDNAs coding for proteins involved in cell-cell- and cell-tissue interaction have been cloned from sponges, primarily from Suberites domuncula and Geodia cydonium and their functions have been studied in vivo as well as in vitro. Also, characteristic elements of the extracellular matrix have been identified and cloned. Those data confirmed that all metazoan phyla originate from one ancestor, the Urmetazoa. The existence of cell adhesion molecules allowed the emergence of a c…

biologyPhylumCell adhesion moleculePlant Sciencebiology.organism_classificationIn vitroCell biologySuberites domunculaExtracellular matrixEvolutionary biologybiology.proteinAnimal Science and ZoologyOrganismCaspaseAncestorIntegrative and Comparative Biology
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