9 results on '"Dijkstra, Peter"'
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2. Politiseren in het sociaal werk is niet alledaags, sociaal werk wel
- Author
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Dijkstra, Peter and Knevel, Jeroen
- Subjects
Sociaal werk - Abstract
Er is een polemiek aan het ontstaan over het politiserende karakter van het sociaal werk over de hoofden van de sociaal werkers heen. Waar blijft hun stem, en die van hun opleiders? Artikel in Dossier Politisering Sociaal Werk.
- Published
- 2019
3. Supplemental Results from The melanocortin system regulates body pigmentation and social behaviour in a colour polymorphic cichlid fish†
- Author
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Dijkstra, Peter D., Maguire, Sean M., Harris, Rayna M., Agosto A. Rodriguez, DeAngelis, Ross S., Flores, Stephanie A., and Hofmann, Hans A.
- Subjects
endocrine system ,genetic structures ,integumentary system ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists - Abstract
The melanocortin system is a neuroendocrine system that regulates a range of physiological and behavioural processes. We examined the extent to which the melanocortin system simultaneously regulates colour and behaviour in the cichlid fish Astatotilapia burtoni. We found that yellow males are more aggressive than blue males, in line with previous studies. We then found that exogenous α-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (α-MSH) increases yellowness of the body and dispersal of xanthophore pigments in both morphs. However, α-MSH had a morph-specific effect on aggression, with only blue males showing an increase in the rate of aggression. Exogenous agouti signalling peptide (ASIP), a melanocortin antagonist, did not affect coloration but reduced the rate of aggression in both colour morphs. Blue males had higher cortisol levels than yellow males. Neural gene expression of melanocortin receptors (mcr) and ligands was not differentially regulated between colour morphs. In the skin, however, mc1r and pro-opiomelanocortin (pomc) β were upregulated in blue males, while asip 1 was upregulated in yellow males. The effects of α-MSH on behaviour and body coloration, combined with morph-specific regulation of the stress response and the melanocortin system, suggest that the melanocortin system contributes to the polymorphism in behaviour and coloration in A. burtoni.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Supplemental Material and Method from The melanocortin system regulates body pigmentation and social behaviour in a colour polymorphic cichlid fish†
- Author
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Dijkstra, Peter D., Maguire, Sean M., Harris, Rayna M., Agosto A. Rodriguez, DeAngelis, Ross S., Flores, Stephanie A., and Hofmann, Hans A.
- Subjects
endocrine system ,genetic structures ,integumentary system ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists - Abstract
The melanocortin system is a neuroendocrine system that regulates a range of physiological and behavioural processes. We examined the extent to which the melanocortin system simultaneously regulates colour and behaviour in the cichlid fish Astatotilapia burtoni. We found that yellow males are more aggressive than blue males, in line with previous studies. We then found that exogenous α-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (α-MSH) increases yellowness of the body and dispersal of xanthophore pigments in both morphs. However, α-MSH had a morph-specific effect on aggression, with only blue males showing an increase in the rate of aggression. Exogenous agouti signalling peptide (ASIP), a melanocortin antagonist, did not affect coloration but reduced the rate of aggression in both colour morphs. Blue males had higher cortisol levels than yellow males. Neural gene expression of melanocortin receptors (mcr) and ligands was not differentially regulated between colour morphs. In the skin, however, mc1r and pro-opiomelanocortin (pomc) β were upregulated in blue males, while asip 1 was upregulated in yellow males. The effects of α-MSH on behaviour and body coloration, combined with morph-specific regulation of the stress response and the melanocortin system, suggest that the melanocortin system contributes to the polymorphism in behaviour and coloration in A. burtoni.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Price Leadership and Unequal Market Sharing
- Author
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Dijkstra, Peter T.
- Subjects
Data_MISCELLANEOUS ,TheoryofComputation_GENERAL - Abstract
We consider experimental markets of repeated homogeneous price-setting duopolies. We investigate the effect on collusion of sequential versus simultaneous price setting. We also examine the effect on collusion of changes in the size of each subject's market share in case both subjects set the same price. Our results show that sequential price setting compared with simultaneous price setting facilitates collusion, if subjects have equal market shares or if the follower has the larger market share. With sequential price setting, we find more collusion if subjects have equal market shares rather than unequal market shares. We observe more collusion if the follower has the larger market share than if the follower has the smaller market share.
- Published
- 2014
6. Industry structure and collusion with uniform yardstick competition
- Author
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Dijkstra, Peter, Haan, Marco A., and Mulder, Machiel
- Subjects
Data_MISCELLANEOUS ,TheoryofComputation_GENERAL - Abstract
We study cartel stability in an industry that is subject to uniform yardstick regulation. In a theoretical model, we show that the number of symmetric firms does not affect collusion. In a laboratory experiment, however, we do find an effect. If anything, increasing the number of firms facilitates collusion. Our theory suggests that an increase in heterogeneity increases the regulated price if firms do not collude, but also makes collusion harder, rendering the net effect ambiguous. Our experiment suggests that the effect of collusion is stronger.
- Published
- 2014
7. Metabolism, oxidative stress and territorial behaviour in a female colour polymorphic cichlid fish
- Author
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Ole Seehausen, Peter D. Dijkstra, Neil B. Metcalfe, and Michele E. R. Pierotti
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Sympatry ,genetic structures ,biology ,Ecology ,Zoology ,Orange (colour) ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Neochromis omnicaeruleus ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Sympatric speciation ,Cichlid ,Animal ecology ,Sexual selection ,Agonistic behaviour ,570 Life sciences ,Animal Science and Zoology ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Intrasexual selection on body coloration is thought to play an important role in the evolution of colour polymorphism, but its physiological underpinnings have received limited attention. In the colour polymorphic cichlid Neochromis omnicaeruleus, three fully sympatric female colour morphs— a plain morph (P) and two conspicuously coloured blotched morphs, black-and-white blotched (WB) and orange blotched (OB)—differ in agonistic behaviour. We compared routine metabolic rate (when females were housed in social isolation), short-term energetic costs of interacting with a same-colour rival housed in an adjacent transparent chamber and oxidative stress between the three female colour morphs. WB females had a lower routine metabolic rate compared with the other colour morphs. WB females also had a lower active metabolic rate during inter-female interactions than OB females, while OB females used more oxygen per unit aggressive act than the other two colour morphs. However, there were no consistent differences in oxidative stress between the three morphs. Concerted divergence in colour, behaviour and metabolism might contribute to the evolution of these polymorphisms in sympatry.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Can male-male competition stabilize speciation? a test in Lake Victoria haplochromine cichlid fish
- Author
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Peter D. Dijkstra, Ole Seehausen, Martine E. Maan, Boye L. A. Gricar, Ton G. G. Groothuis, and Groothuis lab
- Subjects
PSEUDOTROPHEUS ,DIVERSITY ,Zoology ,sympatric speciation ,Lake Victoria ,male-male competition ,SEXUAL SELECTION ,COEXISTENCE ,Cichlid ,Pundamilia ,MALAWI ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,haplochromine cichlids ,biology ,Ecology ,aggression ,ANIMALS ,Incipient speciation ,biology.organism_classification ,MATE CHOICE ,Mate choice ,Animal ecology ,Sympatric speciation ,Sexual selection ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Pseudotropheus ,MALE COLORATION - Abstract
It has been suggested that sympatric speciation can be driven by sexual selection on male mating traits alone. However, a fundamental problem for this process is the lack of ecological differentiation that would stabilize the coexistence of incipient species through frequency-dependent selection. Such selection can also occur if male aggression is primarily directed towards similar rather than towards dissimilar phenotypes, so that rare male phenotypes would enjoy a negatively frequency-dependent fitness advantage. We experimentally tested such an aggression bias in two recently diverged, ecologically and anatomically similar sympatric cichlid species pairs of the genus Pundamilia from Lake Victoria. Territorial males of a pair of partially reproductively isolated species with red and blue nuptial coloration, respectively, studied in the laboratory were confronted simultaneously with both colour types enclosed in transparent tubes. Red males were more aggressive to red stimuli under white light but not when colour differences were masked under green light. Blue males were equally aggressive to both stimuli in both light conditions. Males of two apparently fully reproductively isolated species, again one with red and one with blue nuptial coloration, studied in the field, both directed more aggressive behaviour towards conspecific than towards heterospecific stimulus males. The differential allocation of aggression would create an advantage for males of the less abundant phenotype or species, thereby potentially supporting stable coexistence of the phenotypes. The finding that this effect was less clear in the partially reproductively isolated species pair than in the fully isolated species pair is discussed.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Eels Biology, Monitoring, Management, Culture and Exploitation : Proceedings of the First International Eel Science Symposium
- Author
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Andy Don, Paul Coulson, Andy Don, and Paul Coulson
- Subjects
- Eel fisheries--Management--Congresses, Eels--Conservation--Congresses, Eels--Congresses
- Abstract
The freshwater eels, the Anguillids, have increasingly become the focus of attention for fisheries managers, scientists, researchers, policy makers, conservation bodies and other stakeholders. These species can be seen as a bellwether for issues affecting aquatic ecosystems - their steep decline and the management initiatives to try and reverse this trend, touch on subjects as diverse as disconnected waterways, loss of habitat, novel parasites, pollution, over-fishing and climate change. There are some 16 species of the Anguilla genus and all exhibit similar lifestyles, growing in waters often far-removed from their marine spawning grounds. These enigmatic, contradictory and confounding species share similar challenges and pressures wherever they are found. This book was generated from the 1st UK International Eel Science Symposium, which was held at the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) in June 2017. Hosted by the Institute of Fisheries Management (IFM), the ZSL and the Environment Agency (EA), the Symposium was heralded as a success, with over 180 delegates in attendance. Many of the world's top eel specialists attended or gave presentations across a diverse range of subjects. This was one of the Symposium's, and now the book's great strengths - its diversity of subjects and authors. Many countries are represented within the book, from across Europe and as far afield as New Zealand, South Africa, Vanuatu, French Polynesia, Japan, Canada and the USA. The EA and IFM have collaborated to produce this landmark book, which includes a mix of cultural, scientific and management information that will be invaluable to anyone with a professional or personal interest in these mysterious fish, including ichthyologists, fisheries scientists and managers, aquaculture personnel, environmental biologists and ecologists, marine and freshwater biologists, vertebrate zoologists, animal behaviourists and students studying in all these areas. Libraries in all universities and research establishments where these subjects are studied and taught should have copies on their shelves.
- Published
- 2019
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