31 results on '"Bonisoli-Alquati A"'
Search Results
2. Mercury concentrations in Seaside Sparrows and Marsh Rice Rats differ across the Mississippi River Estuary.
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Bonisoli-Alquati, Andrea, Jackson, Allyson K., Eagles-Smith, Collin A., Moyo, Sydney, Pérez-Umphrey, Anna A., Polito, Michael J., Snider, Allison M., Williams, S. Tyler, Woltmann, Stefan, Stouffer, Philip C., and Taylor, Sabrina S.
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BP Deepwater Horizon Explosion & Oil Spill, 2010 ,POISONS ,BIOMAGNIFICATION ,OIL spills ,SPARROWS - Abstract
Mercury (Hg) concentrations and their associated toxicological effects in terrestrial ecosystems of the Gulf of Mexico are largely unknown. Compounding this uncertainty, a large input of organic matter from the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill may have altered Hg cycling and bioaccumulation dynamics. To test this idea, we quantified blood concentrations of total mercury (THg) in Seaside Sparrows (Ammospiza maritima) and Marsh Rice Rats (Oryzomys palustris) in marshes west and east of the Mississippi River in 2015 and 2016. We also tested for a difference in THg concentrations between oiled and non-oiled sites. To address the potential confounding effect of diet variation on Hg transfer, we used stable nitrogen (δ
15 N) and carbon (δ13 C) isotope values as proxies of trophic position and the source of primary production, respectively. Our results revealed that five to six years after the spill, THg concentrations were not higher in sites oiled by the spill compared to non-oiled sites. In both species, THg was higher at sites east of the Mississippi River compared to control and oiled sites, located west. In Seaside Sparrows but not in Marsh Rice Rats, THg increased with δ15 N values, suggesting Hg trophic biomagnification. Overall, even in sites with the most elevated THg, concentrations were generally low. In Seaside Sparrows, THg concentrations were also lower than previously reported in this and other closely related passerines, with only 7% of tested birds exceeding the lowest observed effect concentration associated with toxic effects across bird species (0.2 µg/g ww). The factors associated with geographic heterogeneity in Hg exposure remain uncertain. Clarification could inform risk assessment and future restoration and management actions in a region facing vast anthropogenic changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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3. From tangled banks to toxic bunnies; a reflection on the issues involved in developing an ecosystem approach for environmental radiation protection.
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Mothersill, Carmel E., Oughton, Deborah H., Schofield, Paul N., Abend, Michael, Adam-Guillermin, Christelle, Ariyoshi, Kentaro, Beresford, Nicholas A., Bonisoli-Alquati, Andrea, Cohen, Jason, Dubrova, Yuri, Geras'kin, Stanislav A., Hevrøy, Tanya Helena, Higley, Kathryn A., Horemans, Nele, Jha, Awadhesh N., Kapustka, Lawrence A., Kiang, Juliann G., Madas, Balázs G., Powathil, Gibin, and Sarapultseva, Elena I.
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RADIATION protection ,POISONS ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,RADIOECOLOGY ,ECOSYSTEMS - Abstract
The objective of this paper is to present the results of discussions at a workshop held as part of the International Congress of Radiation Research (Environmental Health stream) in Manchester UK, 2019. The main objective of the workshop was to provide a platform for radioecologists to engage with radiobiologists to address major questions around developing an Ecosystem approach in radioecology and radiation protection of the environment. The aim was to establish a critical framework to guide research that would permit integration of a pan-ecosystem approach into radiation protection guidelines and regulation for the environment. The conclusions were that the interaction between radioecologists and radiobiologists is useful in particular in addressing field versus laboratory issues where there are issues and challenges in designing good field experiments and a need to cross validate field data against laboratory data and vice versa. Other main conclusions were that there is a need to appreciate wider issues in ecology to design good approaches for an ecosystems approach in radioecology and that with the capture of 'Big Data', novel tools such as machine learning can now be applied to help with the complex issues involved in developing an ecosystem approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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4. Sex and habitat drive hantavirus prevalence in marsh rice rat populations impacted by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill.
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Pérez‐Umphrey, Anna A., Jonsson, Colleen B., Bonisoli‐Alquati, Andrea, Snider, Allison M., Stouffer, Philip C., and Taylor, Sabrina S.
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BP Deepwater Horizon Explosion & Oil Spill, 2010 ,HABITATS ,RICE ,PLANT communities ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,MARSHES ,RATS - Abstract
Bayou orthohantavirus (BAYV) is one of several hantaviruses in the United States that cause hantavirus pulmonary syndrome in humans. Its host reservoir, the marsh rice rat (Oryzomys palustris), inhabits coastal saltmarshes of Louisiana, a region extensively impacted by anthropogenic disturbances, such as the 2010 Deepwater Horizon (DWH) oil spill. The oil spill presents an opportunity to investigate how a large‐scale ecological disturbance can influence the hantavirus host–pathogen dynamic by examining BAYV presence in its reservoir host species in areas with different oiling histories. Here, we: (1) quantify BAYV prevalence in the rice rat in coastal saltmarshes of Louisiana; (2) assess whether prevalence is driven by rice rat demographics, seasonality, or association with habitat characteristics; and (3) determine whether these factors differ by marsh oiling history. We collected mark–recapture data and blood and tissue samples over 5 years (2013–2017) at oiled, unoiled, and reference sites. Testing of the samples for BAYV revealed an antibody and RNA prevalence of 13.7%. Logistic regression analysis found that prevalence varied seasonally and inter‐annually, and in July of 2016 reached 30.8%. Sex (male) and increasing cover of Sporobolus alterniflorus and open water compared to Juncus roemerianus and bare ground were the strongest predictors of hantavirus prevalence. Abundance estimates derived from Huggins closed‐capture models were greatest at oiled sites, but oiling treatment had no residual influence on BAYV prevalence, and abundance and prevalence were not correlated. This study supports the hypothesis that habitat is a main driver of hantavirus prevalence in the host and implies that continued and future disturbances in the region will likely impact the rice rat–BAYV dynamic by altering plant communities and landscape structure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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5. Metabarcoding of stomach contents and fecal samples provide similar insights about Seaside Sparrow diet.
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Snider, Allison M., Bonisoli-Alquati, Andrea, Pérez-Umphrey, Anna A., Stouffer, Philip C., and Taylor, Sabrina S.
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SEASIDE sparrow ,BIRD food ,FECAL analysis ,BIRD diversity ,CYTOCHROME oxidase ,PASSERIFORMES - Abstract
Copyright of Ornithological Applications is the property of Oxford University Press / USA and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
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6. Nest survival of Seaside Sparrows (Ammospiza maritima) in the wake of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill.
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Hart, Megan E., Perez-Umphrey, Anna, Stouffer, Philip C., Burns, Christine Bergeon, Bonisoli-Alquati, Andrea, Taylor, Sabrina S., and Woltmann, Stefan
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BP Deepwater Horizon Explosion & Oil Spill, 2010 ,BIRD nests ,NEST predation ,SPARROWS ,ABSOLUTE sea level change ,POLYCYCLIC aromatic hydrocarbons ,SURVIVAL rate - Abstract
In 2010, the Deepwater Horizon oil spill released an estimated 4.9 million barrels of oil into the Gulf of Mexico, damaging coastal ecosystems. Seaside Sparrows (Ammospiza maritima)—a year-round resident of Gulf Coast salt marshes—were exposed to oil, as shown by published isotopic and molecular analyses, but fitness consequences have not been clarified. We monitored nests around two bays in Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana, USA from 2012–2017 to assess possible impacts on the nesting biology of Seaside Sparrows. A majority of nests failed (76% of known-fate nests, N = 252 nests, 3521 exposure-days) during our study, and predation was the main cause of nest failure (~91% of failed nests). Logistic exposure analysis revealed that daily nest survival rate: (1) was greater at nests with denser vegetation at nest height, (2) was higher in the more sheltered bay we studied, (3) decreased over the course of the breeding season in each year, and (4) was not correlated with either sediment polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon concentrations or estimated predator abundance during the years for which we had those data. Although the Deepwater Horizon spill impacted other aspects of Seaside Sparrow ecology, we found no definitive effect of initial oiling or oiled sediment on nest survival during 2012–2017. Because predation was the overwhelming cause of nest failure in our study, additional work on these communities is needed to fully understand demographic and ecological impacts of storms, oil spills, other pollutants, and sea-level rise on Seaside Sparrows and their predators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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7. Stable isotope analyses identify trophic niche partitioning between sympatric terrestrial vertebrates in coastal saltmarshes with differing oiling histories.
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Moyo, Sydney, Bennadji, Hayat, Laguaite, Danielle, Pérez-Umphrey, Anna A., Snider, Allison M., Bonisoli-Alquati, Andrea, Olin, Jill A., Stouffer, Philip C, Taylor, Sabrina S., López-Duarte, Paola C., Roberts, Brian J., Hooper-Bui, Linda, and Polito, Michael J.
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SALT marshes ,STABLE isotope analysis ,RATS ,VERTEBRATES ,OIL spills ,NITROGEN isotopes - Abstract
Bioindicator species are commonly used as proxies to help identify the ecological effects of oil spills and other stressors. However, the utility of taxa as bioindicators is dependent on understanding their trophic niche and life history characteristics, as these factors mediate their ecological responses. Seaside sparrows (Ammospiza maritima) and marsh rice rats (Oryzomys palustris) are two ubiquitous terrestrial vertebrates that are thought to be bioindicators of oil spills in saltmarsh ecosystems. To improve the utility of these omnivorous taxa as bioindicators, we used carbon and nitrogen stable isotope analysis to quantify their trophic niches at saltmarshes in coastal Louisiana with differing oiling histories. We found that rats generally had lower trophic positions and incorporated more aquatic prey relative to seaside sparrows. The range of resources used (i.e.,trophic niche width) varied based on oiling history. Seaside sparrows had wider trophic niches than marsh rice rats at unoiled sites, but not at oiled sites. Trophic niche widths of conspecifics were less consistent at oiled sites, although marsh rice rats at oiled sites had wider trophic niches than rats at unoiled sites. These results suggest that past oiling histories may have imparted subtle, yet differing effects on the foraging ecology of these two co-occurring species. However, the temporal lag between initial oiling and our study makes identifying the ultimate drivers of differences between oiled and unoiled sites challenging. Even so, our findings provide a baseline quantification of the trophic niches of sympatric seaside sparrows and marsh rice rats that will aid in the use of these species as indicators of oiling and other environmental stressors in saltmarsh ecosystems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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8. Faster Development Covaries with Higher DNA Damage in Grasshoppers (Chorthippus albomarginatus) from Chernobyl.
- Author
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Bonisoli-Alquati, Andrea, Ostermiller, Shanna, Beasley, De Anna E., Welch, Shane M., Møller, Anders P., and Mousseau, Timothy A.
- Abstract
In Chernobyl, chronic exposure to radioactive contaminants has a variety of deleterious effects on exposed organisms, including genetic damage and mutation accumulation. However, the potential for such effects to be transmitted to the next generation is poorly understood. We captured lesser marsh grasshoppers (
Chorthippus albomarginatus ) in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone from sites varying in levels of environmental radiation by more than three orders of magnitude. We then raised their offspring in a common garden experiment in order to assess the effects of parental exposure to radiation on offspring development and DNA damage. Offspring that reached maturity at a younger age had higher levels of DNA damage. Contrary to our hypothesis, parental exposure to radioactive contamination did not affect DNA damage in their offspring possibly because of intervening adaptation or parental compensatory mechanisms. Our results suggest a trade-off between developmental rate and resistance to DNA damage, whereby offspring developing at faster rates do so at the cost of damaging their DNA. This result is consistent with and extends findings in other species, suggesting that faster growth rates cause increased oxidative damage and stress. We propose that growth rates are subject to stabilizing selection balancing the benefits of fast development and the competing need of buffering its damaging effects to macromolecules and tissues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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9. Chronic exposure to low-dose radiation at Chernobyl favours adaptation to oxidative stress in birds.
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Galván, Ismael, Bonisoli‐Alquati, Andrea, Jenkinson, Shanna, Ghanem, Ghanem, Wakamatsu, Kazumasa, Mousseau, Timothy A., Møller, Anders P., and Blount, Jonathan
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OXIDATIVE stress ,RADIATION exposure ,BIRD physiology ,BIRD populations ,ANTIOXIDANTS ,DNA damage - Abstract
Ionizing radiation produces oxidative stress, but organisms can adapt to their exposure with physiological adaptive responses. However, the role of radioadaptive responses in wild populations remains poorly known., At Chernobyl, studies of birds and other taxa including humans show that chronic exposure to radiation depletes antioxidants and increases oxidative damage. Here, we present analyses of levels of the most important intracellular antioxidant (i.e. glutathione, GSH), its redox status, DNA damage and body condition in 16 species of birds exposed to radiation at Chernobyl. We use an approach that allows considering the individual bird as the sampling unit while controlling for phylogenetic effects, thus increasing the statistical power by avoiding the use of species means as done for most previous comparative studies., As a consequence, we found a pattern radically different from previous studies in wild populations, showing that GSH levels and body condition increased, and oxidative stress and DNA damage decreased, with increasing background radiation. Thus, when several species are considered, the overall pattern indicates that birds are not negatively affected by chronic exposure to radiation and may even obtain beneficial hormetic effects following an adaptive response. Analysis of the phylogenetic signal supports the existence of adaptation in the studied traits, particularly in GSH levels and DNA damage., We also show that, under equal levels of radiation, the birds that produce larger amounts of the pigment pheomelanin and lower amounts of eumelanin pay a cost in terms of decreased GSH levels, increased oxidative stress and DNA damage, and poorer body condition. Radiation, however, diminished another potential cost of pheomelanin, namely its tendency to produce free radicals when exposed to radiation, because it induced a change towards the production of less pro-oxidant forms of pheomelanin with higher benzothiazole-to-benzothiazine ratios, which may have facilitated the acclimation of birds to radiation exposure., Our findings represent the first evidence of adaptation to ionizing radiation in wild animals, and confirm that pheomelanin synthesis represents an evolutionary constraint under stressful environmental conditions because it requires GSH consumption. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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10. Nestling rearing is antioxidant demanding in female barn swallows ( Hirundo rustica).
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Costantini, David, Bonisoli-Alquati, Andrea, Rubolini, Diego, Caprioli, Manuela, Ambrosini, Roberto, Romano, Maria, and Saino, Nicola
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Reproduction is a demanding activity, since organisms must produce and, in some cases, protect and provision their progeny. Hence, a central tenet of life-history theory predicts that parents have to trade parental care against body maintenance. One physiological cost thought to be particularly important as a modulator of such trade-offs is oxidative stress. However, evidence in favour of the hypothesis of an oxidative cost of reproduction is contradictory. In this study, we manipulated the brood size of wild barn swallows Hirundo rustica soon after hatching of their nestlings to test whether an increase in nestling rearing effort translates into an increased oxidative damage and a decreased antioxidant protection at the end of the nestling rearing period. We found that, while plasma oxidative damage was unaffected by brood size enlargement, females rearing enlarged broods showed a decrease in plasma non-enzymatic antioxidants during the nestling rearing period. This was not the case among females rearing reduced broods and among males assigned to either treatment. Moreover, individuals with higher plasma oxidative damage soon after the brood size manipulation had lower plasma non-enzymatic antioxidants at the end of the nestling rearing period, suggesting that non-enzymatic antioxidants were depleted to buffer the negative effects of high oxidative damage. Our findings point to antioxidant depletion as a potential mechanism mediating the cost of reproduction among female birds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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11. Aspermy, Sperm Quality and Radiation in Chernobyl Birds.
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Møller, Anders Pape, Bonisoli-Alquati, Andrea, Mousseau, Timothy A., and Rudolfsen, Geir
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SPERM motility ,CHERNOBYL Nuclear Accident, Chornobyl, Ukraine, 1986 ,BIRDS ,RADIOISOTOPES ,RADIOACTIVE contamination of animals ,EJACULATION ,ANIMAL health - Abstract
Background: Following the Chernobyl nuclear power plant accident, large amounts of radionuclides were emitted and spread in the environment. Animals living in such contaminated areas are predicted to suffer fitness costs including reductions in the quality and quantity of gametes. Methodology/Principal Findings: We studied whether aspermy and sperm quality were affected by radioactive contamination by examining ejaculates from wild caught birds breeding in areas varying in background radiation level by more than three orders of magnitude around Chernobyl, Ukraine. The frequency of males with aspermy increased logarithmically with radiation level. While 18.4% of males from contaminated areas had no sperm that was only the case for 3.0% of males from uncontaminated control areas. Furthermore, there were negative relationships between sperm quality as reflected by reduced sperm velocity and motility, respectively, and radiation. Conclusions/Significance: Our results suggest that radioactive contamination around Chernobyl affects sperm production and quality. We are the first to report an interspecific difference in sperm quality in relation to radioactive contamination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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12. Avian genetic ecotoxicology: DNA of the canary in a coalmine.
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BONISOLI-ALQUATI, Andrea
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BIRD ecology ,GENETIC toxicology ,ANIMAL population genetics ,POPULATION genetics ,OXIDATIVE stress ,DNA damage - Abstract
Genotoxic chemicals, through damage and alteration of the genetic material of wild organisms, pose significant threats to the persistence of wild animal populations. Their damaging effects can ultimately impair the health of the ecosystem and its provision of services to human society. Bird species are good candidates for the role of sentinels of the effects of genotoxins, thanks to (i) the diversity of their ecological niches, (ii) their ubiquity across environments, (iii) their conspicuousness, abundance and approachability, together with (iv) their well-known life histories and the availability of historical data series. Avian diversity increases the likelihood that adequate model species be available for monitoring genotoxicants and assessing their impact. This paper reviews the methods utilized by genetic ecotoxicological studies of wild birds, highlighting their benefits and shortcomings. It also summarizes the genetic ecotoxicological studies so far conducted. In spite of a paucity of studies, several classes of genotoxicants have already been investigated across a variety of species and environments, thus supporting the versatility of birds as monitors of genotoxic contamination. Future technical advancements and applications are suggested, with particular reference to the analysis of mutational events, gene expression and methylation patterns. Finally, I argue that the development of avian genetic ecotoxicology will contribute to the understanding of natural variation in the underlying machinery for coping with DNA damage and oxidative stress, both of which are increasingly recognized as proximate factors in the evolution of life history adaptations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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13. Effects of Egg and Circulating Testosterone on Ring-Necked Pheasant ( Phasianus colchicus) Male Traits and Combat Outcome.
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Rubolini, Diego, Fusani, Leonida, Bonisoli‐Alquati, Andrea, Canoine, Virginie, Caprioli, Manuela, Romano, Maria, Ambrosini, Roberto, Dessì‐Fulgheri, Francesco, Saino, Nicola, and Wright, J.
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TESTOSTERONE ,RING-necked pheasant ,OUTCOME assessment (Social services) ,EMBRYOLOGY ,ANIMAL courtship ,EGG incubation ,PHENOTYPES - Abstract
Studies of avian species have shown that maternal effects mediated by the transfer of egg hormones can profoundly affect offspring phenotype and fitness. We previously demonstrated that the injection of a physiological amount of testosterone (T) in the eggs of ring-necked pheasants ( Phasianus colchicus) disrupted the covariation among male morphological traits at sexual maturity and positively affected male mating success. Here, we investigate whether egg T exposure affected adult male circulating T levels at the onset of the breeding season (reflecting gonadal maturation), and the relationship between circulating T and male traits. Egg T exposure did not affect pre-mating plasma T. T levels were not associated with the expression of secondary sexual and non-sexual traits or socio-sexual behaviour (social rank, overall fighting ability and mating success). However, wattle brightness decreased with increasing circulating T in males hatched from T-eggs (T-males) but not among control males. In dyadic encounters during the peak mating period, control males with higher pre-mating T levels had higher chances of being dominant over other control males. However, higher pre-mating T levels did not predict success in male-male competition in encounters involving T-males. We suggest that the long-term effects of egg T on male phenotype do not originate from differential gonadal maturation according to egg T treatment. Rather, prenatal androgens may have priming effects on functioning of target tissues, translating into differential phenotypic effects according to androgen exposure during embryonic development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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14. Tree rings reveal extent of exposure to ionizing radiation in Scots pine Pinus sylvestris.
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Mousseau, Timothy, Welch, Shane, Chizhevsky, Igor, Bondarenko, Oleg, Milinevsky, Gennadi, Tedeschi, David, Bonisoli-Alquati, Andrea, and Møller, Anders
- Abstract
Tree growth has been hypothesized to provide a reliable indicator of the state of the external environment. Elevated levels of background ionizing radiation may impair growth trajectories of trees by reducing the annual growth. Such effects of radiation may depend on the individual phenotype and interact with other environmental factors such as temperature and drought. We used standardized growth rates of 105 Scots pine Pinus sylvestris located near Chernobyl, Ukraine, varying in the level of background radiation by almost a factor 700. Mean growth rate was severely depressed and more variable in 1987-1989 and several other subsequent years, following the nuclear accident in April 1986 compared to the situation before 1986. The higher frequency of years with poor growth after 1986 was not caused by elevated temperature, drought or their interactions with background radiation. Elevated temperatures suppressed individual growth rates in particular years. Finally, the negative effects of radioactive contaminants were particularly pronounced in smaller trees. These findings suggest that radiation has suppressed growth rates of pines in Chernobyl, and that radiation interacts with other environmental factors and phenotypic traits of plants to influence their growth trajectories in complex ways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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15. Variation in sperm morphometry and sperm competition among barn swallow ( Hirundo rustica) populations.
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Laskemoen, Terje, Albrecht, Tomas, Bonisoli-Alquati, Andrea, Cepak, Jaroslav, Lope, Florentino, Hermosell, Ignacio, Johannessen, Lars, Kleven, Oddmund, Marzal, Alfonso, Mousseau, Timothy, Møller, Anders, Robertson, Raleigh, Rudolfsen, Geir, Saino, Nicola, Vortman, Yoni, and Lifjeld, Jan
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SPERMATOZOA ,COMPETITION (Biology) ,BARN swallow ,BIRD populations ,SEXUAL selection ,BIRD diversity ,BIRD breeding ,BIRDS - Abstract
Spermatozoa vary greatly in size and shape among species across the animal kingdom. Postcopulatory sexual selection is thought to be the major evolutionary force driving this diversity. In contrast, less is known about how sperm size varies among populations of the same species. Here, we investigate geographic variation in sperm size in barn swallows Hirundo rustica, a socially monogamous passerine with a wide Holarctic breeding distribution. We included samples from seven populations and three subspecies: five populations of ssp. rustica in Europe (Czech, Italy, Norway, Spain, and Ukraine), one population of ssp. transitiva in Israel, and one population of ssp. erythrogaster in Canada. All sperm traits (head length, midpiece length, tail length, and total length) varied significantly among populations. The variation among the European rustica populations was much lower than the differences among subspecies, indicating that sperm traits reflect phylogenetic distance. We also performed a test of the relationship between the coefficient of between-male variation in total sperm length and extrapair paternity levels across different populations within a species. Recent studies have found a strong negative relationship between sperm size variation and extrapair paternity among species. Here, we show a similar negative relationship among six barn swallow populations, which suggests that the variance in male sperm length in a population is shaped by the strength of stabilizing postcopulatory sexual selection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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16. MHC genotype predicts mate choice in the ring-necked pheasant Phasianus colchicus.
- Author
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BARATTI, M., DESSÌ-FULGHERI, F., AMBROSINI, R., BONISOLI-ALQUATI, A., CAPRIOLI, M., GOTI, E., MATTEO, A., MONNANNI, R., RAGIONIERI, L., RISTORI, E., ROMANO, M., RUBOLINI, D., SCIALPI, A., and SAINO, N.
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AUTOIMMUNE diseases ,MAJOR histocompatibility complex ,RING-necked pheasant ,ANDROGENS ,TESTOSTERONE ,GALLIFORMES ,ANDROSTANE - Abstract
Females of several vertebrate species selectively mate with males on the basis of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) genes. As androgen-mediated maternal effects have long-lasting consequences for the adult phenotype, both mating and reproductive success may depend on the combined effect of MHC genotype and exposure to androgens during early ontogeny. We studied how MHC-based mate choice in ring-necked pheasants ( Phasianus colchicus) was influenced by an experimental in ovo testosterone (T) increase. There was no conclusive evidence of in ovo T treatment differentially affecting mate choice in relation to MHC genotype. However, females avoided mating with males with a wholly different MHC genotype compared with males sharing at least one MHC allele. Females also tended to avoid mating with MHC-identical males, though not significantly so. These findings suggest that female pheasants preferred males with intermediate MHC dissimilarity. Male MHC heterozygosity or diversity did not predict the expression of ornaments or male dominance rank. Thus, MHC-based mating preferences in the ring-necked pheasant do not seem to be mediated by ornaments' expression and may have evolved mainly to reduce the costs of high heterozygosity at MHC loci for the progeny, such as increased risk of autoimmune diseases or disruption of coadapted gene pools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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17. Secondary sex ratio covaries with demographic trends and ecological conditions in the barn swallow.
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Romano, Andrea, Ambrosini, Roberto, Caprioli, Manuela, Bonisoli-Alquati, Andrea, and Saino, Nicola
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BARN swallow ,SECONDARY sex characteristics ,ANIMAL offspring sex ratio ,HABITATS ,FARMS - Abstract
Parents are expected to invest more in the sex that benefits most from the local environment. When the quality of breeding sites varies spatially and natal dispersal of males and females differs, parents in high-quality habitats should skew their progeny sex ratio in favor of the less dispersing sex. We tested this prediction in the barn swallow ( Hirundo rustica L.), by relating the proportion of male offspring around fledging (secondary sex ratio) of first and second broods to the ecological quality (presence of livestock farming and relative surface of hayfields in the foraging range) and local demographic trends of the farms where the colonies were located. Consistent with our predictions, the proportion of male offspring, which are more philopatric than females, increased with the extent of hayfields, which are high quality, preferred foraging habitats. Moreover, the proportion of male offspring in second broods was smaller in colonies with positive demographic trends, possibly indicating density-dependent effects on sex ratio. Independent of the mechanism generating uneven sex ratio (zygote sex ratio adjustment or sex-related pre-fledging mortality), barn swallows breeding under favorable conditions overproduced the sex that is more likely to benefit from such conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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18. Effects of parental radiation exposure on developmental instability in grasshoppers.
- Author
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BEASLEY, D. E., BONISOLI-ALQUATI, A., WELCH, S. M., MØLLER, A. P., and MOUSSEAU, T. A.
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CHORTHIPPUS ,EFFECT of radiation on insects ,INSECT development ,INSECT fertility ,INSECT egg hatchability ,BIOLOGICAL evolution ,LIFE history theory ,ENVIRONMENTAL engineering - Abstract
Mutagenic and epigenetic effects of environmental stressors and their transgenerational consequences are of interest to evolutionary biologists because they can amplify natural genetic variation. We studied the effect of parental exposure to radioactive contamination on offspring development in lesser marsh grasshopper Chorthippus albomarginatus. We used a geometric morphometric approach to measure fluctuating asymmetry (FA), wing shape and wing size. We measured time to sexual maturity to check whether parental exposure to radiation influenced offspring developmental trajectory and tested effects of radiation on hatching success and parental fecundity. Wings were larger in early maturing individuals born to parents from high radiation sites compared to early maturing individuals from low radiation sites. As time to sexual maturity increased, wing size decreased but more sharply in individuals from high radiation sites. Radiation exposure did not significantly affect FA or shape in wings nor did it significantly affect hatching success and fecundity. Overall, parental radiation exposure can adversely affect offspring development and fitness depending on developmental trajectories although the cause of this effect remains unclear. We suggest more direct measures of fitness and the inclusion of replication in future studies to help further our understanding of the relationship between developmental instability, fitness and environmental stress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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19. Elevated Mortality among Birds in Chernobyl as Judged from Skewed Age and Sex Ratios.
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Møller, Anders Pape, Bonisoli-Alquati, Andrea, Rudolfsen, Geir, and Mousseau, Timothy A.
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BIRDS ,DEATH (Biology) ,MORTALITY ,SEX ratio ,CONTAMINATION (Psychology) ,BACKGROUND radiation - Abstract
Background: Radiation has negative effects on survival of animals including humans, although the generality of this claim is poorly documented under low-dose field conditions. Because females may suffer disproportionately from the effects of radiation on survival due to differences in sex roles during reproduction, radiation-induced mortality may result in male-skewed adult sex ratios. Methodology/Principal Finding: We estimated the effects of low-dose radiation on adult survival rates in birds by determining age ratios of adults captured in mist nets during the breeding season in relation to background radiation levels around Chernobyl and in nearby uncontaminated control areas. Age ratios were skewed towards yearlings, especially in the most contaminated areas, implying that adult survival rates were reduced in contaminated areas, and that populations in such areas could only be maintained through immigration from nearby uncontaminated areas. Differential mortality in females resulted in a strongly male-skewed sex ratio in the most contaminated areas. In addition, males sang disproportionately commonly in the most contaminated areas where the sex ratio was male skewed presumably because males had difficulty finding and acquiring mates when females were rare. The results were not caused by permanent emigration by females from the most contaminated areas because none of the recaptured birds had changed breeding site, and the proportion of individuals with morphological abnormalities did not differ significantly between the sexes for areas with normal and higher levels of contamination. Conclusions/Significance: These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that the adult survival rate of female birds is particularly susceptible to the effects of low-dose radiation, resulting in male skewed sex ratios at high levels of radiation. Such skewed age ratios towards yearlings in contaminated areas are consistent with the hypothesis that an area exceeding 30,000 km2 in Chernobyl's surroundings constitutes an ecological trap that causes dramatic excess mortality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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20. Egg testosterone affects wattle color and trait covariation in the ring-necked pheasant.
- Author
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Bonisoli-Alquati, Andrea, Rubolini, Diego, Caprioli, Manuela, Ambrosini, Roberto, Romano, Maria, and Saino, Nicola
- Subjects
RING-necked pheasant ,TESTOSTERONE ,ANIMAL coloration ,PHENOTYPES ,ANIMAL sexual behavior ,ALBUMINS ,CELLULAR immunity ,EGGS - Abstract
Transfer of maternal hormones to the eggs is a major source of offspring phenotypic variation. The developmental and organizational effects of egg hormones can extend into adulthood and affect behavioral and morphological traits involved in sexual and reproductive behavior, with important consequences for offspring fitness. In this study, we injected testosterone (T) in egg albumen of captive ring-necked pheasant ( Phasianus colchicus) eggs. We then assessed the consequences for chick growth, cell-mediated immunity, and multiple male secondary sexual traits at maturity by comparison with a control group. We also compared the covariation between traits in the two experimental groups. We found that control males had redder wattles than males from T-injected eggs, suggesting that attractiveness and reproductive success of the offspring might vary depending on maternal transfer of T to the eggs. T treatment also modified the covariation between cell-mediated immunity and wattle coloration and between the area of the wattle and the expression of another secondary sexual trait, the ear tufts. These effects are likely to translate into fitness differences among the offspring if mate acquisition depends on the simultaneous expression of several traits that are differentially affected by the same maternal contribution. Maternal effects mediated by egg hormones might affect the fitness of the offspring not only by directional modification of phenotypic traits, but also by facilitating or inhibiting their covariation. This suggests the possibility that female choice based on the relative expression of multiple secondary sexual traits exerts a pressure on how maternal transfer of androgens contributes to developmental programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Antioxidant Defenses Predict Long-Term Survival in a Passerine Bird.
- Author
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Saino, Nicola, Caprioli, Manuela, Romano, Maria, Boncoraglio, Giuseppe, Rubolini, Diego, Ambrosini, Roberto, Bonisoli-Alquati, Andrea, and Romano, Andrea
- Subjects
PASSERIFORMES ,POPULATION biology ,ANIMAL classification ,OXIDATIVE stress ,ANIMAL species - Abstract
Background: Normal and pathological processes entail the production of oxidative substances that can damage biological molecules and harm physiological functions. Organisms have evolved complex mechanisms of antioxidant defense, and any imbalance between oxidative challenge and antioxidant protection can depress fitness components and accelerate senescence. While the role of oxidative stress in pathogenesis and aging has been studied intensively in humans and model animal species under laboratory conditions, there is a dearth of knowledge on its role in shaping life-histories of animals under natural selection regimes. Yet, given the pervasive nature and likely fitness consequences of oxidative damage, it can be expected that the need to secure efficient antioxidant protection is powerful in molding the evolutionary ecology of animals. Here, we test whether overall antioxidant defense varies with age and predicts long-term survival, using a wild population of a migratory passerine bird, the barn swallow (Hirundo rustica), as a model. Methodology/Principal Findings: Plasma antioxidant capacity (AOC) of breeding individuals was measured using standard protocols and annual survival was monitored over five years (2006-2010) on a large sample of selection episodes. AOC did not covary with age in longitudinal analyses after discounting the effect of selection. AOC positively predicted annual survival independently of sex. Individuals were highly consistent in their relative levels of AOC, implying the existence of additive genetic variance and/or environmental (including early maternal) components consistently acting through their lives. Conclusions: Using longitudinal data we showed that high levels of antioxidant protection positively predict long-term survival in a wild animal population. Present results are therefore novel in disclosing a role for antioxidant protection in determining survival under natural conditions, strongly demanding for more longitudinal eco-physiological studies of lifehistories in relation to oxidative stress in wild populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Birth order, individual sex and sex of competitors determine the outcome of conflict among siblings over parental care.
- Author
-
Andrea Bonisoli-Alquati
- Subjects
BIRTH order ,COMPETITION (Biology) ,ANIMAL behavior ,CONFLICT (Psychology) ,ANIMAL sound production ,ANIMAL offspring sex ratio - Abstract
Success in competition for limiting parental resources depends on the interplay between parental decisions over allocation of care and offspring traits. Birth order, individual sex and sex of competing siblings are major candidates as determinants of success in sib–sib competition, but experimental studies focusing on the combined effect of these factors on parent–offspring communication and within-brood competitive dynamics are rare. Here, we assessed individual food intake and body mass gain during feeding trials in barn swallow chicks differing for seniority and sex, and compared the intensity of their acoustic and postural solicitation (begging) displays. Begging intensity and success in competition depended on seniority in combination with individual sex and sex of the opponent. Junior chicks begged more than seniors, independently of satiation level (which was also experimentally manipulated), and obtained greater access to food. Females were generally weaker competitors than males. Individual sex and sex of the opponent also affected duration of begging bouts. Present results thus show that competition with siblings can make the rearing environment variably harsh for developing chicks, depending on individual sex, sex of competing broodmates and age ranking within the nest. They also suggest that parental decisions on the allocation of care and response of kin to signalling siblings may further contribute to the outcome of sibling competition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Chernobyl Birds Have Smaller Brains.
- Author
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Møller, Anders Pape, Bonisoli-Alquati, Andea, Rudolfsen, Geir, and Mousseau, Timothy A.
- Subjects
BIRDS ,BRAIN ,OXIDATIVE stress ,ANTIOXIDANTS ,NERVOUS system ,CHEMICAL inhibitors ,RADIATION ,ANIMAL morphology - Abstract
Background: Animals living in areas contaminated by radioactive material from Chernobyl suffer from increased oxidative stress and low levels of antioxidants. Therefore, normal development of the nervous system is jeopardized as reflected by high frequencies of developmental errors, reduced brain size and impaired cognitive abilities in humans. Alternatively, associations between psychological effects and radiation have been attributed to post-traumatic stress in humans. Methodology/Principal Finding: Here we used an extensive sample of 550 birds belonging to 48 species to test the prediction that even in the absence of post-traumatic stress, there is a negative association between relative brain size and level of background radiation. We found a negative association between brain size as reflected by external head volume and level of background radiation, independent of structural body size and body mass. The observed reduction in brain size in relation to background radiation amounted to 5% across the range of almost a factor 5,000 in radiation level. Species differed significantly in reduction in brain size with increasing background radiation, and brain size was the only morphological character that showed a negative relationship with radiation. Brain size was significantly smaller in yearlings than in older individuals. Conclusions/Significance: Low dose radiation can have significant effects on normal brain development as reflected by brain size and therefore potentially cognitive ability. The fact that brain size was smaller in yearlings than in older individuals implies that there was significant directional selection on brain size with individuals with larger brains experiencing a viability advantage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Egg antimicrobials, embryo sex and chick phenotype in the yellow-legged gull.
- Author
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Bonisoli-Alquati, Andrea, Rubolini, Diego, Romano, Maria, Cucco, Marco, Fasola, Mauro, Caprioli, Manuela, and Saino, Nicola
- Subjects
ANTI-infective agents ,EMBRYOS ,PHENOTYPES ,ALBUMINS ,LYSOZYMES ,CHICKS - Abstract
Maternal effects through albumen quality are largely unexplored, despite the fundamental role that albumen exerts as source of proteins and water, as well as for antimicrobial defence of the embryo. We analysed the variation of two major albumen antimicrobials, avidin and lysozyme, by extracting samples from freshly laid eggs of the yellow-legged gull ( Larus michahellis) and by correlating their levels to egg features. Lysozyme concentration increased along the laying sequence, while avidin concentration decreased. Both antimicrobials declined during the season. In addition, avidin concentration declined from first- to last-laid male eggs, whereas the opposite was true among the female eggs. We also analysed chick body mass and size and immune response, in relation to albumen antimicrobial levels in their original egg while controlling for potential covariation between egg quality and rearing conditions by cross-fostering eggs between nests. Tarsus length decreased with avidin concentration, particularly early in the season. Avidin concentration negatively predicted tarsus length of chicks and the phytohaemagglutinin response of females, but not males. However, chick phenotype did not covary with lysozyme albumen concentration. This is the first study where maternal effects mediated by albumen antimicrobials are investigated in relation to both sex and egg features in any wild bird species. Whether the observed patterns of variation in antimicrobial concentration are the by-product of maternal physiological constraints, or reflect adaptive allocation strategies, cannot be ascertained. The covariation between chick cell-mediated immunity and albumen avidin concentration might be causal, according to the documented effects of albumen proteins on immunity in other species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Within-clutch egg size asymmetry covaries with embryo sex in the yellow-legged gull Larus michahellis.
- Author
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Rubolini, Diego, Ambrosini, Roberto, Romano, Maria, Caprioli, Manuela, Fasola, Mauro, Bonisoli-Alquati, Andrea, and Saino, Nicola
- Subjects
ANIMAL behavior ,GULLS ,SEX allocation ,SEX (Biology) ,BIOLOGY education - Abstract
Non-random sex allocation may occur whenever the expected reproductive value of sons and daughters differs, as is the case when the sexes differ in susceptibility to environmental conditions or maternal effects (e.g. egg size and hatch order). Under such circumstances, covariation between egg and clutch characteristics and egg sex may be expected, and this covariation should vary with maternal state or ecological conditions. In this 2-year study (2007–2008), we examined sex allocation in relation to egg and clutch traits in the yellow-legged gull Larus michahellis, a species where male chicks are larger and more susceptible to harsh rearing conditions than female ones. In 2008, eggs were more likely male early in the season in two- but not three-egg clutches, and large eggs were more likely males late in the season. No egg/clutch traits predicted egg sex in 2007. Within-clutch egg mass asymmetry (the difference in egg mass between the first- and last-laid eggs) predicted sex in both years. In 2007, clutches with smaller egg mass variation were more likely to contain males, while in 2008 this relationship held for the last-laid egg and was reversed for the preceding egg(s). Laying order and sex of the previous egg did not predict egg sex, providing no evidence of sex-specific oocyte clustering. Thus, the relationships between egg sex and egg/clutch traits differed among years, suggesting a phenotypically plastic response of females to extrinsic conditions, and involved within-clutch egg mass asymmetry, a trait likely reflecting variation in maternal quality and/or reproductive tactics, which has been largely neglected in previous studies of sex allocation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Phenotypic Correlates of Yolk and Plasma Carotenoid Concentration in Yellow-Legged Gull Chicks.
- Author
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Saino, Nicola, Bertacche, Vittorio, Bonisoli-Alquati, Andrea, Romano, Maria, and Rubolini, Diego
- Subjects
PHENOTYPES ,CAROTENOIDS ,GULLS ,CHICKS ,EGG yolk ,ANTIOXIDANTS - Abstract
Carotenoids perform important biological actions in animal tissues, including contributing antioxidant protection. However, the function of transmission of maternal carotenoids to bird eggs is still largely unknown. We made a yolk biopsy of yellow-legged gull (Larus michahellis) eggs and found that the concentration of lutein declined with laying date and across the laying order and increased with egg mass. The concentration of all the main carotenoids (lutein, zeaxanthin, and dehydro- lutein) pooled also declined with date and increased with egg mass. We also performed a partial reciprocal cross-fostering of eggs between clutches and investigated the covariation between morphology, T cell-mediated immunity, and plasma carotenoid concentrations of the chicks and carotenoid concentrations in their original eggs. Absolute plasma carotenoid concentrations did not covary with those in the yolk, whereas a positive covariation was found for relative concentrations. Yolk and absolute plasma carotenoid concentrations positively predicted chick body mass and size but not the intensity of the cell- mediated immune response. Thus, yolk carotenoid concentrations may affect chick carotenoid profile and growth, possibly mediating early maternal effects. However, rearing conditions also contributed to determining relative concentrations of circulating carotenoids. Since yolk or plasma antioxidant capacity did not correlate with carotenoid concentrations, future of maternal effects mediated by antioxidants should integrate information on carotenoids with information on other components of the antioxidant systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Early maternal, genetic and environmental components of antioxidant protection, morphology and immunity of yellow-legged gull ( Larus michahellis) chicks.
- Author
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Rubolini, D., Romano, M., Bonisoli Alquati, A., and Saino, N.
- Subjects
ANTIOXIDANTS ,MORPHOLOGY ,IMMUNITY ,GULLS ,EGG incubation ,BEHAVIORAL embryology - Abstract
Maternal effects mediated by egg quality are important sources of offspring phenotypic variation and can influence the course of evolutionary processes. Mothers allocate to the eggs diverse antioxidants that protect the embryo from oxidative stress. In the yellow-legged gull ( Larus michahellis), yolk antioxidant capacity varied markedly among clutches and declined considerably with egg laying date. Analysis of bioptic yolk samples from clutches that were subsequently partially cross-fostered revealed a positive effect of yolk antioxidant capacity on embryonic development and chick growth, but not on immunity and begging behaviour, while controlling for parentage and common environment effects. Chick plasma antioxidant capacity varied according to rearing environment, after statistically partitioning out maternal influences mediated by egg quality. Thus, the results of this study indicate that egg antioxidants are important mediators of maternal effects also in wild bird populations, especially during the critical early post-hatching phase. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Obituary - Necrologio.
- Author
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Rubolini, Diego, Ambrosini, Roberto, Bonisoli-Alquati, Andrea, Møller, Anders P., Galeotti, Paolo, Bogliani, Giuseppe, and Fasola, Mauro
- Subjects
ORNITHOLOGISTS - Published
- 2019
29. Climate change effects on migration phenology may mismatch brood parasitic cuckoos and their hosts.
- Author
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Saino, Nicola, Rubolini, Diego, Lehikoinen, Esa, Sokolov, Leonid V., Bonisoli-Alquati, Andrea, Ambrosini, Roberto, Boncoraglio, Giuseppe, and Møllers, Anders P.
- Subjects
CUCKOOS ,HOSTS (Biology) ,CLIMATE change ,PARASITIC birds ,ANIMAL life cycles ,PHENOLOGY ,BIRD breeding - Abstract
The article offers an analysis of the changes in timing of spring arrival of the common cuckoo and its migratory hosts in Europe from 1947-2007. The researchers consider the study as the first evidence which suggest that climate change may influence the link between the life cycles of the common cuckoo and its hosts. They conclude that cuckoos may monitor phenological changes of long-distance but not short-distance migrant hosts, with possible implications for breeding of both cuckoo and hosts.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. SMRT long reads and Direct Label and Stain optical maps allow the generation of a high-quality genome assembly for the European barn swallow (Hirundo rustica rustica).
- Author
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Formenti, Giulio, Chiara, Matteo, Poveda, Lucy, Francoijs, Kees-Jan, Bonisoli-Alquati, Andrea, Canova, Luca, Gianfranceschi, Luca, Horner, David Stephen, and Saino, Nicola
- Subjects
BARN swallow ,GENOMICS ,GENETICS - Abstract
Background The barn swallow (Hirundo rustica) is a migratory bird that has been the focus of a large number of ecological, behavioral, and genetic studies. To facilitate further population genetics and genomic studies, we present a reference genome assembly for the European subspecies (H. r. rustica). Findings As part of the Genome10K effort on generating high-quality vertebrate genomes (Vertebrate Genomes Project), we have assembled a highly contiguous genome assembly using single molecule real-time (SMRT) DNA sequencing and several Bionano optical map technologies. We compared and integrated optical maps derived from both the Nick, Label, Repair, and Stain technology and from the Direct Label and Stain (DLS) technology. As proposed by Bionano, DLS more than doubled the scaffold N50 with respect to the nickase. The dual enzyme hybrid scaffold led to a further marginal increase in scaffold N50 and an overall increase of confidence in the scaffolds. After removal of haplotigs, the final assembly is approximately 1.21 Gbp in size, with a scaffold N50 value of more than 25.95 Mbp. Conclusions This high-quality genome assembly represents a valuable resource for future studies of population genetics and genomics in the barn swallow and for studies concerning the evolution of avian genomes. It also represents one of the very first genomes assembled by combining SMRT long-read sequencing with the new Bionano DLS technology for scaffolding. The quality of this assembly demonstrates the potential of this methodology to substantially increase the contiguity of genome assemblies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Incorporation of Deepwater Horizon oil in a terrestrial bird.
- Author
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A Bonisoli-Alquati, P C Stouffer, R E Turner, S Woltmann, and S S Taylor
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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