Search results for "species interaction"

showing 10 items of 40 documents

Data from: Plant – herbivorous beetle networks: molecular characterization of trophic ecology within a threatened steppic environment

2015

DNA barcoding facilitates many evolutionary and ecological studies, including the examination of the dietary diversity of herbivores. In this study, we present a survey of ecological associations between herbivorous beetles and host plants from seriously threatened European steppic grasslands. We determined host plants for the majority (65%) of steppic leaf beetles (55 species) and weevils (59) known from central Europe using two barcodes (trnL and rbcL) and two sequencing strategies (Sanger for mono/oligophagous species and Illumina for polyphagous taxa). To better understand the ecological associations between steppic beetles and their host plants, we tested the hypothesis that leaf beetl…

Larinus obtususOtiorhynchus fulloCassida lineolaWildlife ManagementDibolia schillingiiSitona languidusBruchela rufipesPseudoprotapion elegantulumArgoptochus quadrisignatusAphthona czwalinaiCassida panzeriLongitarsus tabidusCryptocephalus fulvusAphthona cyparissiaeMecinus pascuorumCryptocephalus pygmaeusLife Sciencesfood and beveragesGaleruca pomonaeExapion elongatulumAphthona lacertosaZacladus geraniiGonioctena olivaceaMedicineTychius medicaginisPodagrica fuscicornisOmias globulusTychius crassirostrisSitona inopsCryptocephalus flavipesSphaeroderma testaceumPaophilus afflatusCryptocephalus violaceusAphthona pygmaeaMogulones javetiiLongitarsus exsoletusSibinia subellipticaCryptocephalus quadriguttatusLarinus turbinatusCentricnemus leucogrammusPhilopedon plagiatumRhinusa tetraChrysomelidaefungiLuperus xanthopodaGaleruca tanacetiCleopomiarus graminisCryptocephalus bilineatusSpecies InteractionsEntomoscelis adonidisCryptocephalus bameuliStenocarus ruficornisParafourcartia squamulataHemitrichapion pavidumCleopomiarus distinctusCryptocephalus vittatusLachnaia sexpunctataTychius aureolusSitona lateralisLabidostomis humeralisSmicronyx jungermanniaeEusomus ovulumSitona waterhouseimedicine and health careTychius sharpiPolydrusus inustusCurculionidaeCryptocephalus chrysopusPhyllotreta nodicornisCalomicrus circumfususLarinus sturnusCionus clairvilleiPolydrusus confluensStrophosoma faberCrioceris quinquepunctataTrichosirocalus troglodytesAphthona beckeriSmaragdina auritaSmaragdina affinisPachybrachis hippophaesTychius schneideriCyanapion plataleaHypera fuscocinereaLongitarsus quadriguttatusSitona striatellusPhrydiuchus tauCassida pannonicaLabidostomis longimanaHypocassida subferrugineaCycloderes pilosulusPseudoprotapion ergenenseCryptocephalus virensAphthona euphorbiaePhyllobius brevisSitona longulusChrysochus asclepiadeusPachybrachis tesselatusCrioceris quatuordecimpunctataTrichosirocalus barnevilleiPachybrachis fimbriolatusChrysolina cerealisPseudorchestes ermischiOmias puberulusThamiocolus signatusMesotrichapion punctirostreDiet AnalysisCoptocephala unifasciataSibinia tibialisPsylliodes cucullataMogulones geographicusCassida margaritaceaAphthona ovataSitona humeralisAphthona venustulaSquamapion elongatulumGonioctena fornicataSibinia vittataDibolia cryptocephalaPseudoperapion brevirostreCheilotoma musciformisCoevolutionNeocrepidodera ferrugineaChrysolina sanguinolenta
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Do bank voles (Myodes glareolus) trapped in live and lethal traps show differences in tick burden?

2020

In studies assessing tick abundance, the use of live traps to capture and euthanize rodent hosts is a commonly used method to determine their burden. However, captive animals can experience debilitating or fatal capture stress as a result prior to collection. An alternative method is the use of lethal traps, but this can potentially lead to tick drop-off between the time of capture and collection. In this study, in order to determine whether subjecting animals to capture stress is inevitable, we tested the difference in sheep tick (Ixodes ricinus) larval burdens between bank voles (Myodes glareolus) captured alive and euthanized, and lethally trapped bank voles. During 2017 and 2018, 1318 b…

Male0106 biological sciencesLife CyclesRodentMyodes glareolusDisease Vectors01 natural sciencesLarvaeMedical ConditionsTicks0302 clinical medicineMedicine and Health SciencesFlowering PlantsMammalsAlternative methodsLarvaMultidisciplinaryArvicolinaeNorwayQREukaryotaRuminantsPlantsSpringInfectious DiseasesLarvaEpidemiological MonitoringVertebratesMedicineFemaleSeasonsSex ratioResearch ArticleIxodes ricinusArthropodaScience030231 tropical medicineZoologyBiologyTickRodents010603 evolutionary biology03 medical and health sciencesbiology.animalArachnidaAnimalsCollection methodsIxodesEuthanasiaRicinusDeerVolesOrganismsBiology and Life Sciencesbiology.organism_classificationInvertebratesTick InfestationsSpecies InteractionsAmniotesEarth SciencesZoologyDevelopmental BiologyVDP::Matematikk og Naturvitenskap: 400::Zoologiske og botaniske fag: 480
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Microbial Succession in the Gut: Directional Trends of Taxonomic and Functional Change in a Birth Cohort of Spanish Infants

2014

In spite of its major impact on life-long health, the process of microbial succession in the gut of infants remains poorly understood. Here, we analyze the patterns of taxonomic and functional change in the gut microbiota during the first year of life for a birth cohort of 13 infants. We detect that individual instances of gut colonization vary in the temporal dynamics of microbiota richness, diversity, and composition at both functional and taxonomic levels. Nevertheless, trends discernible in a majority of infants indicate that gut colonization occurs in two distinct phases of succession, separated by the introduction of solid foods to the diet. This change in resource availability causes…

MaleCancer ResearchGene Identification and AnalysisBiodiversityPathogenesisEcological successionGut floraPathology and Laboratory MedicineFecesDiversity indexMedicine and Health SciencesCommunity AssemblyGenome SequencingTaxonomic rankGenetics (clinical)EcologyEcologyMicrobiotaAge FactorsBiodiversityGenomicsBiotaFunctional GenomicsCommunity EcologyHost-Pathogen InteractionsFemaleTaxonomy (biology)Research ArticleAdultDNA Bacteriallcsh:QH426-470Microbial ConsortiaZoologyBiologyMicrobiologyMicrobial EcologyMolecular GeneticsGeneticsHumansMolecular Biology TechniquesSequencing TechniquesCommunity StructureMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics0604 GeneticsBase SequenceEcology and Environmental SciencesInfant NewbornInfantBiology and Life SciencesComputational BiologySequence Analysis DNAComparative Genomicsbiology.organism_classificationDietGastrointestinal Tractlcsh:GeneticsSpecies InteractionsTaxonSpainMetagenomicsSpecies richnessDevelopmental BiologyPLoS Genetics
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Knowledge, stigma, health seeking behaviour and its determinants among patients with post kalaazar dermal leishmaniasis, Bihar, India

2018

Background Lesishmaniasis is a neglected tropical disease endemic in Bihar, India. Inappropriate health seeking behaviour of post kala-azar dermal leishmaniasis (PKDL) patients may increase the disease duration, severity and transmissibility. Simultaneously, lack of knowledge and perceived stigma may also increase the length of delay in receiving treatment. This ultimately effects the kala-azar elimination program. Methods A cross sectional study was conducted in 120 confirmed PKDL patients, aged 18 years and older. Data related to knowledge and health seeking behaviour was collected by a pre-tested questionnaire. EMIC stigma scale was used for assessing the perceived stigma. Patients were …

MaleHealth Knowledge Attitudes PracticePediatricsTime FactorsSocial stigmaCross-sectional studyHealth Care ProvidersHealth BehaviorSocial Stigmalcsh:MedicineDiseaseDisease VectorsPathology and Laboratory Medicine0302 clinical medicineInformed consentZoonosesMedicine and Health SciencesMedicinePublic and Occupational Health030212 general & internal medicineYoung adultlcsh:ScienceLeishmaniasisMultidisciplinaryMiddle AgedInfectious DiseasesLeishmaniasis VisceralFemaleBehavioral and Social Aspects of HealthResearch ArticleNeglected Tropical DiseasesAdultmedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentPatients030231 tropical medicineAntiprotozoal AgentsIndiaLeishmaniasis CutaneousStigma (botany)DermatologySkin DiseasesYoung AdultKala-Azar03 medical and health sciencesSigns and SymptomsDiagnostic Medicineparasitic diseasesParasitic DiseasesHumansAgedProtozoan Infectionsbusiness.industrylcsh:RBiology and Life SciencesTropical diseasePatient Acceptance of Health CareTropical Diseasesmedicine.diseaseInsect VectorsSand FliesHealth CareSpecies InteractionsCross-Sectional StudiesLesionslcsh:QbusinessLeishmania donovaniPatient educationPLOS ONE
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Repeatability of Feather Mite Prevalence and Intensity in Passerine Birds

2014

Understanding why host species differ so much in symbiont loads and how this depends on ecological host and symbiont traits is a major issue in the ecology of symbiosis. A first step in this inquiry is to know whether observed differences among host species are species-specific traits or more related with host-symbiont environmental conditions. Here we analysed the repeatability (R) of the intensity and the prevalence of feather mites to partition within- and among-host species variance components. We compiled the largest dataset so far available: 119 Paleartic passerine bird species, 75,944 individual birds, ca. 1.8 million mites, seven countries, 23 study years. Several analyses and appro…

Mite Infestationslcsh:MedicineBiológiai tudományokHost-Parasite InteractionsSpecies SpecificityTermészettudományokSymbiosisbiology.animalAnimalsParasitologíaPasseriformesSymbiosislcsh:ScienceEcosystemMitesMultidisciplinaryEcologybiologyBird DiseasesHost (biology)EcologyFeather mitelcsh:RBiology and Life SciencesRepeatabilityFeathersbiology.organism_classificationPasserineSpecies InteractionsCommunity EcologyHabitatEvolutionary EcologyFeathervisual_artvisual_art.visual_art_mediumVariance componentsParasitologylcsh:QEctoparasitesAvesResearch ArticlePLoS ONE
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Sialotranscriptomics of the argasid tick ornithodoros moubata along the trophogonic cycle

2021

32 páginas, 8 tablas, 6 figuras

Proteomics0301 basic medicineSwinePhysiologyRC955-962Gene ExpressionDisease VectorsProteomicsBiochemistryTranscriptomeMedical Conditions0302 clinical medicineTicksArctic medicine. Tropical medicineGene expressionMedicine and Health SciencesHuman relapsing feverGeneticsbiologyEukaryotaGenomicsProteasesBody FluidsEnzymesBloodInfectious DiseasesFemaleMetabolic PathwaysAnatomyPublic aspects of medicineRA1-1270Transcriptome analysisVitellogeninsMetabolic Networks and PathwaysResearch ArticleIxodidaeArthropoda030231 tropical medicineTickSalivary glandsArthropod Proteins03 medical and health sciencesExocrine GlandsOrnithodoros moubataArachnidaGeneticsAnimalsXenobiotic MetabolismTick ControlOrnithodorosSalivaIllumina dye sequencingIxodesAsfarviridaeImmunityOrganismsPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthBiology and Life SciencesComputational BiologyProteinsGenome Analysisbiology.organism_classificationInvertebratesOrnithodoros moubataPhospholipases A2Species InteractionsMetabolism030104 developmental biologyAfricaEnzymologyMetalloproteasesAfrican swine feverTranscriptomeDigestive SystemZoology
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Vertical transmission of naturally occurring Bunyamwera and insect-specific flavivirus infections in mosquitoes from islands and mainland shores of L…

2018

Background Many arboviruses transmitted by mosquitoes have been implicated as causative agents of both human and animal illnesses in East Africa. Although epidemics of arboviral emerging infectious diseases have risen in frequency in recent years, the extent to which mosquitoes maintain pathogens in circulation during inter-epidemic periods is still poorly understood. This study aimed to investigate whether arboviruses may be maintained by vertical transmission via immature life stages of different mosquito vector species. Methodology We collected immature mosquitoes (egg, larva, pupa) on the shores and islands of Lake Baringo and Lake Victoria in western Kenya and reared them to adults. Mo…

RNA virusesMale0301 basic medicineViral DiseasesAnopheles GambiaevirusesAnopheles gambiaeRC955-962Marine and Aquatic SciencesDisease VectorsPathology and Laboratory MedicineMosquitoes0302 clinical medicineAedesArctic medicine. Tropical medicineMedicine and Health SciencesChikungunya VirusbiologyPupaAnophelesEukaryotavirus diseasesGene PoolInsectsCulexInfectious DiseasesArboviral InfectionsMedical MicrobiologyViral PathogensLarvaVirusesFemalePublic aspects of medicineRA1-1270PathogensResearch ArticleFreshwater EnvironmentsArthropodaAlphaviruses030231 tropical medicineZoologyMosquito VectorsAedes aegyptiAedes AegyptiMicrobiologyArbovirusTogaviruses03 medical and health sciencesAedes luteocephalusSpecies SpecificityAnophelesparasitic diseasesCulex pipiensGeneticsmedicineAnimalsBunyamwera virusMicrobial PathogensAedesEvolutionary BiologyLife Cycle StagesPopulation BiologyFlavivirusEcology and Environmental SciencesfungiOrganismsPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthBiology and Life SciencesAquatic EnvironmentsBodies of Watermedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationInvertebratesKenyaInsect VectorsSpecies InteractionsLakes030104 developmental biologyVector (epidemiology)Earth SciencesArbovirusesPopulation GeneticsPLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases
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Climate change impact on extrinsic and intrinsic competition between egg parasitoids

2012

Climate changing is a real phenomenon and the last decade was the warmest decade ever. The impact of climate change on animal communities is complex, affecting species interactions in all trophic levels, in different ways and in different bio-geographic zones. Here we will discuss about the possible effects of climate changes in shaping the competition between egg parasitoid species to consume the same hosts. Egg parasitoids are important biological control agents due to their ability to kill the pest before the crop-feeding stages emerge. Competitive effects can be divided in “extrinsic competition”, the indirect interactions between adult females searching for hosts, and “intrinsic compet…

Settore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E Applicataspecies interactions global warming host location multiparasitism
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Morphological Similarity and Ecological Overlap in Two Rotifer Species

2013

Co-occurrence of cryptic species raises theoretically relevant questions regarding their coexistence and ecological similarity. Given their great morphological similitude and close phylogenetic relationship (i.e., niche retention), these species will have similar ecological requirements and are expected to have strong competitive interactions. This raises the problem of finding the mechanisms that may explain the coexistence of cryptic species and challenges the conventional view of coexistence based on niche differentiation. The cryptic species complex of the rotifer Brachionus plicatilis is an excellent model to study these questions and to test hypotheses regarding ecological differentia…

Species complexEcological MetricsScienceNicheRotiferaLimnetic EcologyMorphology (biology)CopepodaSpecies SpecificityLimiting similarityAnimalsBiologyCommunity StructureEcosystemFreshwater EcologyEcological nicheCoexistence theoryMultidisciplinaryEcologybiologyEcologyQRNiche differentiationSpecies DiversityBiodiversityAutecologyBrachionusbiology.organism_classificationTrophic InteractionsSpecies InteractionsCommunity EcologyPredatory BehaviorMedicinePopulation EcologyResearch ArticlePLoS ONE
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Long-Term Coexistence of Rotifer Cryptic Species

2011

Despite their high morphological similarity, cryptic species often coexist in aquatic habitats presenting a challenge in the framework of niche differentiation theory and coexistence mechanisms. Here we use a rotifer species complex inhabiting highly unpredictable and fluctuating salt lakes to gain insights into the mechanisms involved in stable coexistence in cryptic species. We combined molecular barcoding surveys of planktonic populations and paleogenetic analysis of diapausing eggs to reconstruct the current and historical coexistence dynamics of two highly morphologically similar rotifer species, B. plicatilis and B. manjavacas. In addition, we carried out laboratory experiments using …

Species complexEcophysiologymedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulation DynamicsPopulationRotiferalcsh:MedicineMarine BiologyBiologyInvasive speciesAnimalslcsh:ScienceeducationBiologyCommunity StructureEcosystemmedia_commonFreshwater EcologyEcological nicheeducation.field_of_studyMultidisciplinaryEcologyEcologylcsh:RMarine EcologyNiche differentiationBiodiversityStorage effectSalinityLakesSpecies InteractionsSpeciationCommunity EcologyLimnectic Ecologylcsh:QPaleoecologyPopulation EcologyResearch ArticlePLoS ONE
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