74 results on '"Jose A. Andrés"'
Search Results
2. What Is the Role of Frequency on Neural Activation in Tonic Stimulation in SCS Therapy? A Computational Study on Sensory Aβ Nerve Fibers.
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Carmen Solanes, José L. Durá, Jose De Andrés, and Javier Saiz
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- 2021
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3. Hardware Architecture and Configuration Parameters of a Low Weight Electronic Differential for Light Electric Vehicles with Two Independent Wheel Drive to Minimize Slippage
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Alfonso Gago-Calderón, Lucia Clavero-Ordóñez, Jose Ramón Andrés-Díaz, and Jose Fernández-Ramos
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electronic differential ,light electric vehicles ,micro-controlled CPU ,torque control ,sensor feedback ,Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,TK1-9971 ,Transportation engineering ,TA1001-1280 - Abstract
This article presents a design and performance analysis of an Electronic Differential (ED) system designed for Light Electric Vehicles (LEVs). We have developed a test tricycle vehicle with one front steering wheel and two rear fixed units in the same axis with a brushless DC (BLDC) motor integrated in each of them. Each motor has an independent controller unit and a common electronic Arduino CPU that can plan specific speeds for each wheel as curves are being traced. Different implementations of sensors (input current/torque, steering angle and speed of the wheels) are discussed related to their hardware complexity and performance based on speed level requirements and slipping on the traction wheels. Two driving circuits were generated (slalom and circular routes) and driven at different speeds, monitoring and recording all the related parameters of the vehicle. The most representative graphs obtained are presented. The analysis of these data presents a significant change of the behaviour of the control capability of the ED when the lineal speed of the vehicle makes a change of direction that passes 10 Km/h. In this situation, to obtain good performance of the ED, it is necessary to include sensors related to the wheels.
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- 2019
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4. Nuclear eDNA estimates population allele frequencies and abundance in experimental mesocosms and field samples
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Suresh A. Sethi, David M. Lodge, Kara J. Andres, and Jose A. Andrés
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Mitochondrial DNA ,Neogobius ,Population ,Population and Conservation Genetics ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,microsatellites ,invasive species ,round goby ,03 medical and health sciences ,Gene Frequency ,Genetics ,Animals ,Humans ,Environmental DNA ,Allele ,education ,Allele frequency ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Likelihood Functions ,education.field_of_study ,Genetic diversity ,biology ,Fishes ,DNA mixtures ,Biodiversity ,environmental DNA ,biology.organism_classification ,DNA, Environmental ,030104 developmental biology ,Evolutionary biology ,intraspecific diversity ,Microsatellite ,Original Article ,ORIGINAL ARTICLES - Abstract
Advances in environmental DNA (eDNA) methodologies have led to improvements in the ability to detect species and communities in aquatic environments, yet the majority of studies emphasize biological diversity at the species level by targeting variable sites within the mitochondrial genome. Here, we demonstrate that eDNA approaches also have the capacity to detect intraspecific diversity in the nuclear genome, allowing for assessments of population‐level allele frequencies and estimates of the number of genetic contributors in an eDNA sample. Using a panel of microsatellite loci developed for the round goby (Neogobius melanostomus), we tested the similarity between eDNA‐based and individual tissue‐based estimates of allele frequencies from experimental mesocosms and in a field‐based trial. Subsequently, we used a likelihood‐based DNA mixture framework to estimate the number of unique genetic contributors in eDNA samples and in simulated mixtures of alleles. In both mesocosm and field samples, allele frequencies from eDNA were highly correlated with allele frequencies from genotyped round goby tissue samples, indicating nuclear markers can be reliably amplified from water samples. DNA mixture analyses were able to estimate the number of genetic contributors from mesocosm eDNA samples and simulated mixtures of DNA from up to 58 individuals, with the degree of positive or negative bias dependent on the filtering scheme of low‐frequency alleles. With this study we document the application of eDNA and multiple amplicon‐based methods to obtain intraspecific nuclear genetic information and estimate the absolute abundance of a species in eDNA samples. With proper validation, this approach has the potential to advance noninvasive survey methods to characterize populations and detect population‐level genetic diversity.
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- 2021
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5. Tracking invasions of a destructive defoliator, the gypsy moth (Erebidae: Lymantria dispar): Population structure, origin of intercepted specimens, and Asian introgression into North America
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Baode Wang, Steven M. Bogdanowicz, Scott E. Pfister, Jose A. Andrés, Kendra A. Vieira, Allard A. Cossé, and Yunke Wu
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Range (biology) ,admixture zone ,lcsh:Evolution ,Introgression ,Asian gypsy moths ,natural hybrids ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Invasive species ,assignment test ,03 medical and health sciences ,Lymantria dispar ,Genetics ,lcsh:QH359-425 ,East Asia ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,biology ,amplicon sequencing ,Ecology ,biology.organism_classification ,Gypsy moth ,Lymantria dispar dispar ,030104 developmental biology ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Temperate rainforest - Abstract
Genetic data can help elucidate the dynamics of biological invasions, which are fueled by the constant expansion of international trade. The introduction of European gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar dispar) into North America is a classic example of human‐aided invasion that has caused tremendous damage to North American temperate forests. Recently, the even more destructive Asian gypsy moth (mainly L. d. asiatica and L. d. japonica) has been intercepted in North America, mostly transported by cargo ships. To track invasion pathways, we developed a diagnostic panel of 60 DNA loci (55 nuclear and 5 mitochondrial) to characterize worldwide genetic differentiation within L. dispar and its sister species L. umbrosa. Hierarchical analyses supported strong differentiation and recovered five geographic groups that correspond to (1) North America, (2) Europe plus North Africa and Middle East, (3) the Urals, Central Asia, and Russian Siberia, (4) continental East Asia, and (5) the Japanese islands. Interestingly, L. umbrosa was grouped with L. d. japonica, and the introduced North American population exhibits remarkable distinctiveness from contemporary European counterparts. Each geographic group, except for North America, shows additional lower‐level structures when analyzed individually, which provided the basis for inference of the origin of invasive specimens. Two assignment approaches consistently identified a coastal area of continental East Asia as the major source for Asian invasion during 2014–2015, with Japan being another source. By analyzing simulation and laboratory crosses, we further provided evidence for the occurrence of natural Asian–North American hybrids in the Pacific Northwest, raising concerns for introgression of Asian alleles that may accelerate range expansion of gypsy moth in North America. Our study demonstrates how genetic data contribute to bio‐surveillance of invasive species with results that can inform regulatory management and reduce the frequency of trade‐associated invasions.
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- 2020
6. Unraveling hierarchical genetic structure in a marine metapopulation: A comparison of three high‐throughput genotyping approaches
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Jose A. Andrés, Richard J. Harrison, Steven M. Bogdanowicz, Cassidy C. D’Aloia, Amy R. McCune, and Peter M. Buston
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Genotype ,Genotyping Techniques ,Atoll ,Metapopulation ,Biology ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Population genomics ,03 medical and health sciences ,Genetics ,Animals ,Reef ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Isolation by distance ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Coral Reefs ,High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing ,Coral reef ,Belize ,Perciformes ,Genetics, Population ,030104 developmental biology ,Genetic marker ,Evolutionary biology ,Genetic structure ,Microsatellite Repeats - Abstract
Marine metapopulations often exhibit subtle population structure that can be difficult to detect. Given recent advances in high-throughput sequencing, an emerging question is whether various genotyping approaches, in concert with improved sampling designs, will substantially improve our understanding of genetic structure in the sea. To address this question, we explored hierarchical patterns of structure in the coral reef fish Elacatinus lori using a high-resolution approach with respect to both genetic and geographic sampling. Previously, we identified three putative E. lori populations within Belize using traditional genetic markers and sparse geographic sampling: barrier reef and Turneffe Atoll; Glover's Atoll; and Lighthouse Atoll. Here, we systematically sampled individuals at ~10 km intervals throughout these reefs (1,129 individuals from 35 sites) and sequenced all individuals at three sets of markers: 2,418 SNPs; 89 microsatellites; and 57 nonrepetitive nuclear loci. At broad spatial scales, the markers were consistent with each other and with previous findings. At finer spatial scales, there was new evidence of genetic substructure, but our three marker sets differed slightly in their ability to detect these patterns. Specifically, we found subtle structure between the barrier reef and Turneffe Atoll, with SNPs resolving this pattern most effectively. We also documented isolation by distance within the barrier reef. Sensitivity analyses revealed that the number of loci (and alleles) had a strong effect on the detection of structure for all three marker sets, particularly at small spatial scales. Taken together, these results illustrate empirically that high-throughput genotyping data can elucidate subtle genetic structure at previously-undetected scales in a dispersive marine fish.
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- 2020
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7. Effect of autonomy support and dialogic learning on school children’s physical activity and sport
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Elisa Huéscar Hernández, Jose Antonio Andrés Fabra, and Juan Antonio Moreno-Murcia
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Male ,Adolescent ,Dialogic learning ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,Control (management) ,050109 social psychology ,Physical exercise ,Intention ,Personal Satisfaction ,050105 experimental psychology ,Developmental psychology ,Physical education ,Social support ,Promotion (rank) ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Intervention (counseling) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Peer Influence ,Child ,Students ,Exercise ,General Psychology ,media_common ,Motivation ,Physical Education and Training ,05 social sciences ,Theory of planned behavior ,Social Support ,General Medicine ,Personal Autonomy ,Female ,Psychology ,Sports - Abstract
This study applies an intervention based on autonomy support through dialogic learning to examine effects on motivation and the promotion of physical activity and sport involvement during schoolchildren's leisure time. One hundred and two primary school students, aged 11-13 years, participated (M = 10.93, SD = 0.75). The sample was divided into two groups: an experimental group (49 students) and a control group (53 students). A quasi-experimental study was conducted in physical education classes over the course of 9 months. Assessments of autonomy support from teachers, family, and peers; basic psychological needs; self-determined motivation in physical education and during leisure time; planned behavior variables; physical activity intention; and estimated and actual physical exercise behavior time were included in the model. Following the intervention, the results revealed that greater autonomy support by the teacher, the family and peers, satisfaction of the basic psychological needs, self-determined motivation during physical education class and during free time, greater perceived control, favorable attitude and intention to engage in physical activity contributed to the explanation of student physical activity involvement. These results suggest that when students receive extensive social support from diverse social agents that essential precursors to physical activity are strengthened and contribute to increased motivation and actual physical activity involvement. Efforts to promote effective communications with students and other pedagogical efforts, such as providing dialogic learning opportunities, should be considered in order to strengthen physical activity motivation and involvement in students.
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- 2020
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8. Population assignment tests uncover rare long‐distance marine larval dispersal events
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Steven M. Bogdanowicz, Peter M. Buston, Jose A. Andrés, and Cassidy C. D’Aloia
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geography ,education.field_of_study ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Coral Reefs ,Ecology ,Range (biology) ,Population ,Fishes ,Metapopulation ,Coral reef ,Biology ,Perciformes ,Gene flow ,Genetics, Population ,Propagule ,Larva ,Animals ,Humans ,Biological dispersal ,Evolutionary ecology ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Long-distance dispersal (LDD) is consequential to metapopulation ecology and evolution. In systems where dispersal is undertaken by small propagules, such as larvae in the ocean, documenting LDD is especially challenging. Genetic parentage analysis has gained traction as a method for measuring larval dispersal, but such studies are generally spatially limited, leaving LDD understudied in marine species. We addressed this knowledge gap by uncovering LDD with population assignment tests in the coral reef fish Elacatinus lori, a species whose short-distance dispersal has been well-characterized by parentage analysis. When adults (n = 931) collected throughout the species' range were categorized into three source populations, assignment accuracy exceeded 99%, demonstrating low rates of gene flow between populations in the adult generation. After establishing high assignment confidence, we assigned settlers (n = 3,828) to source populations. Within the settler cohort
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- 2021
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9. Global port survey quantifies commercial shipping’s effect on biodiversity
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Steven S. Rumrill, Darren C. J. Yeo, Esteban Marcelo Paolucci, David M. Lodge, Scott P. Egan, Paul Czechowski, Christopher W. Brown, Chris Scianni, Rein Brys, Phillip Cassey, Charles R. Knapp, Mario N. Tamburri, Joshua P. Fisher, Marty R. Deveney, Nitesh V. Chawla, Sandric Chee Yew Leong, Mandana Saebi, Francisco Sylvester, James J. Corbett, Thomas W. Therriault, Rian vanden Hooff, Brian J. Neilson, Meredith Pochardt, Jose A. Andrés, Erin Grey, Thomas A. A. Prowse, Michael E. Pfrender, Nancy Correa, and Kara J. Andres
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Geography ,Taxon ,business.industry ,Environmental resource management ,Biodiversity ,Environmental DNA ,Ecosystem ,business ,Port (computer networking) ,Global biodiversity ,Southeast asia - Abstract
Spread of nonindigenous organisms by shipping is one of the largest threats to coastal ecosystems. Limited monitoring and understanding of this phenomenon currently hinder development of effective prevention policies. Surveying ports in North America, South America, Europe, Southeast Asia, and Australia we explored environmental DNA community profiles evident of ship-born species spread. We found that community similarities between ports increased with the number of ship voyages, particularly if the ports had similar environments, and when indirect stepping-stone connections were considered. We also found 57 known non-indigenous taxa, some in hitherto unreported locations. We demonstrate the usefulness of eDNA-based tools for global biodiversity surveys, and highlight that shipping homogenizes biodiversity in predictable that could inform policy and management.
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- 2021
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10. Russian-olive (Elaeagnus angustifolia) genetic diversity in the western United States and implications for biological control
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Urs Schaffner, Steven M. Bogdanowicz, Ruth A. Hufbauer, Kimberly R. Guilbault, Livy Williams, Philip Weyl, John F. Gaskin, and Jose A. Andrés
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0106 biological sciences ,Genetic diversity ,Haplotype ,Population genetics ,Locus (genetics) ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Plant Science ,Biology ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Invasive species ,Evolutionary biology ,040103 agronomy & agriculture ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Microsatellite ,Allele ,Isolation by distance - Abstract
Invasions can be genetically diverse, and that diversity may have implications for invasion management in terms of resistance or tolerance to control methods. We analyzed the population genetics of Russian-olive (Elaeagnus angustifoliaL.), an ecologically important and common invasive tree found in many western U.S. riparian areas. We found three cpDNA haplotypes and, using 11 microsatellite loci, identified three genetic clusters in the 460 plants from 46 populations in the western United States. We found high levels of polymorphism in the microsatellites (5 to 15 alleles per locus; 106 alleles total). Our native-range sampling was limited, and we did not find a genetic match for the most common cpDNA invasive haplotype or a strong confirmation of origin for the most common microsatellite genetic cluster. We did not find geographic population structure (isolation by distance) across the U.S. invasion, but we did identify invasive populations that had the most diversity, and we suggest these as choices for initial biological control–release monitoring. Accessions from each genetic cluster, which coarsely represent the range of genetic diversity found in the invasion, are now included in potential classical biological control agent efficacy testing.
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- 2019
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11. Epigenetic effects of parasites and pesticides on captive and wild nestling birds
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Sebastian Espinoza-Ulloa, Sabrina M. McNew, Jose A. Andrés, Niels C. A. M. Wagemaker, Sarah A. Knutie, Christina L. Richards, Dale H. Clayton, and M. Teresa Boquete
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0106 biological sciences ,permethrin ,Bisulfite sequencing ,Zoology ,Parasitism ,epiGBS ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Philornis downsi ,medicine ,Epigenetics ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,QH540-549.5 ,Permethrin ,030304 developmental biology ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,Original Research ,0303 health sciences ,DNA methylation ,biology ,pyrethroid ,Ecology ,Plant Ecology ,biology.organism_classification ,Pyrethroid ,Adaptation ,Taeniopygia ,Galápagos mockingbirds ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Anthropogenic changes to the environment challenge animal populations to adapt to new conditions and unique threats. While the study of adaptation has focused on genetic variation, epigenetic mechanisms may also be important. DNA methylation is sensitive to environmental stressors, such as parasites and pesticides, which may affect gene expression and phenotype. We studied the effects of an invasive ec toparasite, Philornis downsi, on DNA methylation of Galápagos mockingbirds (Mimus parvulus). We used the insecticide permethrin to manipulate P. downsi presence in nests of free-living mockingbirds and tested for effects of parasitism on nestling mockingbirds using epiGBS, a reduced-representation bisulfite sequencing (RRBS) approach. To distinguish the confounding effects of insecticide exposure, we con ducted a matching experiment exposing captive nestling zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata) to permethrin. We used zebra finches because they were the closest model organism to mockingbirds that we could breed in controlled conditions. We identi fied a limited number of differentially methylated cytosines (DMCs) in parasitized versus nonparasitized mockingbirds, but the number was not more than expected by chance. In contrast, we saw clear effects of permethrin on methylation in captive zebra finches. DMCs in zebra finches paralleled documented effects of permethrin exposure on vertebrate cellular signaling and endocrine function. Our results from captive birds indicate a role for epigenetic processes in mediating sublethal nontar get effects of pyrethroid exposure in vertebrates. Environmental conditions in the field were more variable than the laboratory, which may have made effects of both parasitism and permethrin harder to detect in mockingbirds. RRBS approaches such as epiGBS may be a cost-effective way to characterize genome-wide methylation profiles. However, our results indicate that ecological epigenetic studies in natural populations should consider the number of cytosines interrogated and the depth of sequencing in order to have adequate power to detect small and variable effects
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- 2021
12. Cycling mobility accidentability in Spain
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Roldán, Oscar M. Gutiérrez, Díaz, Jose Ramón Andrés, and Mellado, Jose Juan Nebro
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- 2012
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13. Skin transcriptional profiles in Oophaga poison frogs
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Jose A. Andrés and Andrés Posso-Terranova
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Dendrobatids ,Aposematism ,QH426-470 ,Biology ,Oophaga ,01 natural sciences ,Genome ,Predation ,03 medical and health sciences ,Genomics and Bioinformatics ,transcriptomes ,Genetics ,Molecular Biology ,Gene ontology ,RNA sequencing ,biology.organism_classification ,030104 developmental biology ,Functional annotation ,Evolutionary biology ,South american ,Crypsis ,gene ontology ,candidate genes ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Aposematic organisms advertise their defensive toxins to predators using a variety of warning signals, including bright coloration. While most Neotropical poison frogs (Dendrobatidae) rely on crypsis to avoid predators, Oophaga poison frogs from South America advertise their chemical defenses, a complex mix of diet-derived alkaloids, by using conspicuous hues. The present study aimed to characterize the skin transcriptomic profiles of South American Oophaga poison frogs. Our analyses showed very similar transcriptomic profiles for these closely related species in terms of functional annotation and relative abundance of gene ontology terms expressed. Analyses of expression profiles of Oophaga and available skin transcriptomes of cryptic anurans allowed us to propose initial hypotheses for the active sequestration of alkaloid-based chemical defenses and to highlight some genes that may be potentially involved in resistance mechanisms to avoid self-intoxication and skin coloration. In doing so, we provide an important molecular resource for the study of warning signals that will facilitate the assembly and annotation of future poison frog genomes.
- Published
- 2020
14. A new strategy in lung/lobe isolation in patients with a lung abscess or a previous lung resection using double lumen tubes combined with bronchial blockers
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ManuelGranell Gil, Ruben Rubio-Haro, Javier Morales-Sarabia, ElenaBiosca Perez, Giulia Petrini, Ricardo Guijarro, and Jose De Andrés
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Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,General Medicine ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2022
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15. Multivariate species boundaries and conservation of harlequin poison frogs
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Andrés Posso-Terranova and Jose A. Andrés
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Conservation of Natural Resources ,Multivariate statistics ,Genetic Speciation ,Lineage (evolution) ,Endangered species ,Genomics ,Metapopulation ,Colombia ,Biology ,Oophaga ,DNA, Mitochondrial ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Multivariate clustering ,03 medical and health sciences ,Genetics ,Animals ,Phylogeny ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Likelihood Functions ,Endangered Species ,Bayes Theorem ,biology.organism_classification ,030104 developmental biology ,Haplotypes ,Evolutionary biology ,Amplicon sequencing ,Anura ,Microsatellite Repeats - Abstract
In this study, we present an iterative method for delimiting species under the general lineage concept (GLC) based on the multivariate clustering of morphological, ecological and genetic data. Our rationale is that distinct multivariate groups correspond to evolutionarily independent metapopulation lineages because they reflect the common signal of different secondary defining properties (environmental and genetic distinctiveness, phenotypic diagnosability, etc.) that imply the existence of barriers preventing or limiting gene exchange. We applied this method to study a group of endangered poison frogs, the Oophaga histrionica complex. In our study case, we used next-generation targeted amplicon sequencing to obtain a robust genetic data set that we combined with patterns of morphological and ecological features. Our analyses revealed the existence of at least five different species in the histrionica complex (three, new to science), some of them, occurring in small isolated populations outside any protected areas. The lineage delimitation proposed here has important conservation implications as it revealed that some of the Oophaga species should be considered among the most vulnerable of the Neotropical frogs. More broadly, our study exemplifies how multiple-amplicon and multivariate statistical techniques can be integrated to successfully identify species and their boundaries.
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- 2018
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16. Diversification and convergence of aposematic phenotypes: truncated receptors and cellular arrangements mediate rapid evolution of coloration in harlequin poison frogs
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Jose A. Andrés and Andrés Posso-Terranova
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Ecology ,Aposematism ,Diversification (marketing strategy) ,Biology ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Phenotype ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Background color ,Evolutionary biology ,Genetics ,Convergence (relationship) ,Oophaga histrionica ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Receptor ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Melanosome - Abstract
Aposematic signals represent one of the classical systems to study evolution and, as such, they have received considerable empirical and theoretical investigation. Despite the extensive literature on aposematic coloration, much uncertainty remains about genetic changes responsible for the repeated evolution of similar signals in multiple lineages. Here, we study the diversification and convergence of coloration among lineages of aposematic harlequin poison frogs (Oophaga histrionica complex). Our results suggest that different background phenotypes, showing different color and/or luminance contrast, have evolved independently at least twice in this group. We suggest that cellular arrangements are behind the striking diversity of color and patterns in this group and propose that differences in dorsal background color may be related to either or both, the presence/absence of xanthophores and the dispersion of melanosomes. Our genetic analyses support a role for the melanocortin receptor MC1R in melanosome aggregation, and we show evidence that two different mutations (∆433 and C432A) are responsible for the darker phenotypes that may display a more detectable, easier to learn, aposematic signal.
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- 2017
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17. Complex patterns of differentiation and gene flow underly the divergence of aposematic phenotypes in Oophaga poison frogs
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Ma Ximena García-González, Wilmar Bolívar-García, Jana Ebersbach, Mónica Gómez-Díaz, Andrés Posso-Terranova, Steven M. Bogdanowicz, and Jose A. Andrés
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Gene Flow ,Poison dart frog ,Lineage (evolution) ,Introgression ,Oophaga ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Gene flow ,03 medical and health sciences ,Hybrid zone ,Genetics ,Animals ,Stabilizing selection ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Hybrid ,biology ,Endangered Species ,15. Life on land ,South America ,biology.organism_classification ,030104 developmental biology ,Phenotype ,Evolutionary biology ,Hybridization, Genetic ,Female ,Anura - Abstract
Hybridization and introgression can have complex consequences for both species evolution and conservation. Here, we investigated the origin and characteristics of a putative hybrid zone between two South American poison dart frog species, Oophaga anchicayensis and the critically endangered Oophaga lehmanni, which are heavily sought after on the illegal pet market. Using a combination of phenotypic (49 traits) and genomic (ddRADseq) data, we found that the putative hybrids are morphologically distinct from their parental species and confirmed genomic signatures of admixture in these populations. Several lines of evidence (hybrid indices, interspecific hybrid heterozygosity, genomic clines, comparisons with simulated hybrids and demographic modelling) support the conclusion that these populations are not comprised of early-generation hybrids and thus, they probably did not arise as a result of illegal translocations associated with wildlife trafficking. Instead, they probably represent an independent lineage which has persisted through isolation and has only relatively recently re-established gene flow with both parental species. Furthermore, we detected signals of differential introgression from parental species into these hybrid populations which suggest relaxed stabilizing selection on these aposematic colour morphs, potentially via context-dependent female choice. These populations thus provide a fascinating window into the role of hybridization, isolation and female choice in the diversification of South American poison dart frogs. In addition, our results underline the importance of landscape conservation measures to protect, not only known localities of nominal species, but also the phenotypic and genomic variation harbored by admixed lineages which represent crucial repositories for the impressive diversity in this system.
- Published
- 2019
18. Genetic Bases Of Aposematic Traits: Insights from the Skin Transcriptional Profiles of Oophaga Poison Frogs
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Jose A. Andrés and Andrés Posso-Terranova
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0106 biological sciences ,0303 health sciences ,Aposematism ,Biology ,Oophaga ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Genome ,Predation ,03 medical and health sciences ,Evolutionary biology ,South american ,Crypsis ,Clade ,Gene ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
Aposematic organisms advertise their defensive toxins to predators using a variety of warning signals, including bright coloration. While most Neotropical poison frogs (Dendrobatidae) rely on crypsis to avoid predators, Oophaga poison frogs from South America advertise their chemical defenses, a complex mix of diet-derived alkaloids, by using conspicuous hues. The present study aimed to characterize the skin transcriptomic profiles of the South American clade of Oophaga poison frogs (O. anchicayensis, O. solanensis, O. lehmanni and O. sylvatica). Our analyses showed very similar transcriptomic profiles for these closely related species in terms of functional annotation and relative abundance of gene ontology terms expressed. Analyses of expression profiles of Oophaga and available skin transcriptomes of cryptic anurans allowed us to propose possible mechanisms for the active sequestration of alkaloid-based chemical defenses and to highlight some genes that may be potentially involved in resistance mechanisms to avoid self-intoxication and skin coloration. In doing so, we provide an important molecular resource for the study of warning signals that will facilitate the assembly and annotation of future poison frog genomes.
- Published
- 2019
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19. Investigation of round goby viral haemorrhagic septicaemia outbreak in New York
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Steven M. Bogdanowicz, Jordan Kramer, Hélène Marquis, Adam T. Schulman, John M. Farrell, Rodman G. Getchell, Erika J. First, Geofrey E. Eckerlin, and Jose A. Andrés
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Neogobius ,Genotype ,Veterinary (miscellaneous) ,New York ,Zoology ,Genome, Viral ,Aquatic Science ,Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Disease Outbreaks ,Novirhabdovirus ,03 medical and health sciences ,Fish Diseases ,Ambloplites rupestris ,Hemorrhagic Septicemia, Viral ,Animals ,Phylogeny ,Viral haemorrhagic septicaemia virus ,biology ,Fishes ,Outbreak ,Brain ,Genetic Variation ,Aquatic animal ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,biology.organism_classification ,Lakes ,030104 developmental biology ,Round goby ,040102 fisheries ,Viral Haemorrhagic Septicaemia ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Fish kill ,Female - Abstract
Eleven viral haemorrhagic septicaemia virus (VHSV) genotype IVb isolates were sequenced, and their genetic variation explored to determine the source of a VHS outbreak on the eastern shore of Cayuga Lake. An active fish kill of round gobies (Neogobius melanostomus, Pallas) was intensively sampled at King Ferry, NY and nearby Long Point State Park in May 2017. Gross lesions observed on 67 moribund round gobies and two rock bass (Ambloplites rupestris, Rafinesque) included moderately haemorrhagic internal organs and erythematous areas on the head, flank, and fins. RT-qPCR tests for VHSV were positive for all 69 fish. Viral isolation on epithelioma papulosum cyprinid cells showed cytopathic effect characteristic of VHSV for six round goby samples from King Ferry. The complete nucleotide sequence of the VHSV IVb genomes of five Cayuga Lake round goby isolates were derived on an Illumina platform along with 2017 VHSV IVb isolates from round gobies collected from the following: Lake Erie near Dunkirk, NY; the St. Lawrence River near Clayton and Cape Vincent, NY; and Lake St. Lawrence near Massena, NY. The phylogenetic tree created from these aligned sequences and four other complete VHSV IVb genomes shows Cayuga Lake isolates are closely related to the Lake Erie isolates.
- Published
- 2019
20. Complex niche divergence underlies lineage diversification inOophagapoison frogs
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Andrés Posso-Terranova and Jose A. Andrés
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Ecological niche ,Ecology ,Lineage (evolution) ,Niche ,Parapatric speciation ,Biology ,Oophaga ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Environmental niche modelling ,Ecological speciation ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Sister group ,Evolutionary biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Aim Despite the incredible diversity of lowland tropical rain forests, we still have limited understanding of the drivers of speciation in these ecoregions. Here, we investigated the relative contribution of geographical and environmental factors to the diversification of a Neotropical genus of poison frogs (Oophaga). Location Central and South America, including regions from southern Nicaragua to northern Ecuador. Methods We generated gene genealogies (12S, 16S, COI, CytB and tRNA-val, SIAH1, H3 and Rag1) and used species phylogenetic methods (MDC and *beast) to generate a robust phylogeny of Oophaga frogs. Then, we combined the resulting phylogenetic hypothesis with detailed geographical data and environmental niche modelling (ENM) to test the role of geographical isolation, climatic niche divergence and altitudinal gradients. Results Gene genealogies were discordant and did not show exclusive genealogical patterns; however, species tree resolved the phylogenetic relationship among Oophaga species with strong node support (> 0.9 ML/BPP). Geographical ranges showed little overlap between distantly related species. However, within the South American and Central American clades, sister taxa showed substantially overlapping ranges. Analyses of ecological disparity (DTT) indicated a departure from a neutral (Brownian) model of evolution, and age-range correlations, predicted niche occupancy profiles, and Seeva analyses showed that different species tend to evolve under different potential climatic niches. Main conclusions Oophaga frogs originated in Central America and reached South America after the closure of the Panama Isthmus. The South- and Central-American clades of this genus have convergently evolved to similar patterns of geographical distribution and niche occupancy. Within clades, sister taxa showed parapatric distributions replacing each other along elevational gradients as predicted by the models of divergence along continuous ecological gradients. Accordingly, we found strong shifts in climatic niches throughout the history of these two clades. However, the largest niche shifts seem to post-date the final elevation of the Talamanca and northern Andes. Overall, our data suggest that speciation along climatic gradients on a structured landscape has been a major evolutionary force behind the diversification of Oophaga poison frogs.
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- 2016
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21. Complete sequences of 4 viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus IVb isolates and their virulence in northern pike fry
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Joanna G. Choi, Gael Kurath, Jose A. Andrés, Rachel Breyta, Rodman G. Getchell, William N. Batts, Paul R. Bowser, John M. Farrell, Emily R. Cornwell, and Steven M. Bogdanowicz
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0301 basic medicine ,Neogobius ,Aquatic Science ,Virus ,Microbiology ,Gizzard shad ,Novirhabdovirus ,03 medical and health sciences ,Fish Diseases ,Esox masquinongy ,Genotype ,Hemorrhagic Septicemia, Viral ,Animals ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Esox ,Phylogeny ,Pike ,computer.programming_language ,geography ,biology ,geography.lake ,Virulence ,Fishes ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,030104 developmental biology ,RNA, Viral ,Viral hemorrhagic septicemia ,computer ,Nucleic Acid Amplification Techniques - Abstract
Four viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus (VHSV) genotype IVb isolates were sequenced, their genetic variation explored, and comparative virulence assayed with experimental infections of northern pike Esox lucius fry. In addition to the type strain MI03, the complete 11183 bp genome of the first round goby Neogobius melanostomus isolate from the St. Lawrence River, and the 2013 and 2014 isolates from gizzard shad Dorosoma cepedianum die-offs in Irondequoit Bay, Lake Ontario and Dunkirk Harbor, Lake Erie were all deep sequenced on an Illumina platform. Mutations documented in the 11 yr since the MI03 index case from Lake St. Clair muskellunge Esox masquinongy showed 87 polymorphisms among the 4 isolates. Twenty-six mutations were non-synonymous and located at 18 different positions within the matrix protein, glycoprotein, non-virion protein, and RNA polymerase genes. The same 4 isolates were used to infect northern pike fry by a single 1 h bath exposure. Cumulative percent mortality varied from 42.5 to 62.5%. VHSV was detected in 57% (41/72) of the survivors at the end of the 21-d trial, suggesting that the virus was not rapidly cleared. Lesions were observed in many of the moribund and dead northern pike, such as hemorrhaging in the skin and fins, as well as hydrocephalus. Mean viral load measured from the trunk and visceral tissues of MI03-infected pike was significantly higher than the quantities detected in fish infected with the most recent isolates of genotype IVb, but there were no differences in cumulative mortality observed.
- Published
- 2017
22. Genetic Architecture of Contemporary Adaptation to Biotic Invasions: Quantitative Trait Locus Mapping of Beak Reduction in Soapberry Bugs
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Jose A. Andrés and Yue Yu
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0106 biological sciences ,Linkage disequilibrium ,quantitative genetics ,diversification ,animal structures ,Genetic Linkage ,hemiptera ,Quantitative Trait Loci ,Investigations ,Quantitative trait locus ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Family-based QTL mapping ,Genetic linkage ,Genetics ,Animals ,Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism Analysis ,Selection, Genetic ,rapid evolution ,Molecular Biology ,Genetics (clinical) ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,biology ,Beak ,Chromosome Mapping ,Quantitative genetics ,Jadera haematoloma ,host association ,15. Life on land ,biology.organism_classification ,Adaptation, Physiological ,Biota ,Genetic architecture ,Adaptation ,Animal Distribution - Abstract
Biological invasions can result in new selection pressures driven by the establishment of new biotic interactions. The response of exotic and native species to selection depends critically on the genetic architecture of ecologically relevant traits. In the Florida peninsula, the soapberry bug (Jadera haematoloma) has colonized the recently introduced Chinese flametree, Koelreuteria elegans, as a host plant. Driven by feeding efficiency, the populations associated with this new host have differentiated into a new bug ecomorph characterized by short beaks more appropriate for feeding on the flattened pods of the Chinese flametree. In this study, we have generated a three-generation pedigree from crossing the long-beaked and short-beaked ecomorphs to construct a de novo linkage map and to locate putative quantitative trait locus (QTL) controlling beak length and body size in J. haematoloma. Using amplified fragment-length polymorphism markers and a two-way pseudo-testcross design, we have produced two parental maps in six linkage groups, covering the known number of chromosomes. QTL analysis revealed one significant QTL for beak length on a maternal linkage group and the corresponding paternal linkage group. Three QTL were found for body size. Through single marker regression analysis, nine single markers that could not be placed on the map were also found to be significantly associated with one or both of the two traits. Interestingly, the most significant body size QTL co-localized with the beak length QTL, suggesting linkage disequilibrium or pleiotropic effects of related traits. Our results suggest an oligogenic control of beak length.
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- 2014
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23. DIFFERENTIAL INTROGRESSION IN A MOSAIC HYBRID ZONE REVEALS CANDIDATE BARRIER GENES
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Richard J. Harrison, Jose A. Andrés, Steven M. Bogdanowicz, and Erica L. Larson
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Genetics ,Gryllus pennsylvanicus ,biology ,Gryllus firmus ,Introgression ,Reproductive isolation ,biology.organism_classification ,Gryllus ,Hybrid zone ,Allele ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Gene ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Hybrid zones act as genomic sieves. Although globally advantageous alleles will spread throughout the zone and neutral alleles can be freely exchanged between species, introgression will be restricted for genes that contribute to reproductive barriers or local adaptation. Seminal fluid proteins (SFPs) are known to contribute to reproductive barriers in insects and have been proposed as candidate barrier genes in the hybridizing field crickets Gryllus pennsylvanicus and Gryllus firmus. Here, we have used 125 single nucleotide polymorphisms to characterize patterns of differential introgression and to identify genes that may contribute to prezygotic barriers between these species. Using a transcriptome scan of the male cricket accessory gland (the site of SFP synthesis), we identified genes with major allele frequency differences between the species. We then compared patterns of introgression for genes encoding SFPs with patterns for genes expressed in the same tissue that do not encode SFPs. We find no evidence that SFPs have reduced gene exchange across the cricket hybrid zone. However, a number of genes exhibit dramatically reduced introgression, and many of these genes encode proteins with functional roles consistent with known barriers.
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- 2013
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24. Patterns of Transcriptome Divergence in the Male Accessory Gland of Two Closely Related Species of Field Crickets
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Richard J. Harrison, Jose A. Andrés, Steven M. Bogdanowicz, and Erica L. Larson
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Male ,Reproductive Isolation ,Genetic Speciation ,Gryllus firmus ,Population ,Introgression ,Genes, Insect ,Genitalia, Male ,Biology ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Linkage Disequilibrium ,Evolution, Molecular ,Gryllidae ,Transcriptome ,Hybrid zone ,Gene Frequency ,Semen ,Genetics ,Animals ,education ,Allele frequency ,education.field_of_study ,Human evolutionary genetics ,Reproductive isolation ,Primer ,Evolutionary biology ,Insect Proteins - Abstract
One of the central questions in evolutionary genetics is how much of the genome is involved in the early stages of divergence between populations, causing them to be reproductively isolated. In this article, we investigate genomic differentiation in a pair of closely related field crickets (Gryllus firmus and G. pennsylvanicus). These two species are the result of allopatric divergence and now interact along an extensive hybrid zone in eastern North America. Genes encoding seminal fluid proteins (SFPs) are often divergent between species, and it has been hypothesized that these proteins may play a key role in the origin and maintenance of reproductive isolation between diverging lineages. Hence, we chose to scan the accessory gland transcriptome to enable direct comparisons of differentiation for genes known to encode SFPs with differentiation in a much larger set of genes expressed in the same tissue. We have characterized differences in allele frequency between two populations for >6000 SNPs and >26,000 contigs. About 10% of all SNPs showed nearly fixed differences between the two species. Genes encoding SFPs did not have significantly elevated numbers of fixed SNPs per contig, nor did they seem to show larger differences than expected in their average allele frequencies. The distribution of allele frequency differences across the transcriptome is distinctly bimodal, but the relatively high proportion of fixed SNPs does not necessarily imply “ancient” divergence between these two lineages. Further studies of linkage disequilibrium and introgression across the hybrid zone are needed to direct our attention to those genome regions that are important for reproductive isolation.
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- 2013
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25. Factors associated with extirpation of the last Northern Sunfish (Lepomis peltastes Cope, 1870) population in western New York State, USA
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James M. Haynes, David Sanderson-Kilchenstein, Jose A. Andres, Douglas M. Carlson, Jeremy J. Wright, Bryan R. Weatherwax, and Jacques Rinchard
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Rare species ,invasive species ,minimum viable population size ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
AbstractThe Northern Sunfish (Lepomis peltastes Cope, 1870) is threatened in New York state, USA, but this was not the case before 1940 when the NY Biological Survey documented the species at scattered, specialized habitats in six watersheds in the central and western parts of the state. After 1940 the historic populations could not be detected, but a new population was discovered in 1974 in lower Tonawanda Creek and the nearby Erie Canal. Northern Sunfish, and a few of their hybrids with other Lepomis species, were caught at these locations during irregular sampling through 2009, but no Northern Sunfish were caught after 2009. The objectives of our study were to: (1) Determine the extent of Northern Sunfish hybridization with other Lepomis species, and (2) Evaluate how well identifications of Lepomis species and their hybrids agreed among field keys, morphometric measurements and meristic counts, and genetic methods. In 2013, we collected Northern Sunfish (descended from fish captured in lower Tonawanda Creek from 2006-2009) from NY State Department of Environmental Conservation rearing ponds, plus wild Green Sunfish (L. cyanellus Rafinesque, 1819), Pumpkinseed (L. gibbosus Linnaeus, 1758), Bluegill (L. macrochirus Rafinesque, 1819), and suspected Lepomis hybrids from lower Tonawanda Creek. Ultimately, 91 fish were identified using field keys, morphometric-meristic analysis, and mtDNA and nuclear DNA analysis. Assuming genetic analysis provided accurate identification, we found 7 Bluegill × Northern Sunfish, 8 Bluegill × Pumpkinseed, 13 Bluegill × Green Sunfish, and 3 Green Sunfish × Pumpkinseed hybrids in our sample (female parent listed second in these crosses). Keyed and morphometric-meristic identifications did not differ in accuracy and averaged 81% of genetic identification accuracy. After Northern Sunfish stocking (not in our study area) and sampling from 2008 to 2018 in several watersheds with appropriate habitat and no recaptures after 2014, we conclude that the Northern Sunfish is extirpated in western New York state.
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- 2023
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26. Ecology, molecules and colour: Multivariate species delimitation and conservation of Harlequin poison frogs
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Andrés Posso-Terranova and Jose A. Andrés
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Multivariate clustering ,Multivariate statistics ,Ecology ,Lineage (evolution) ,Ecology (disciplines) ,Amplicon sequencing ,Endangered species ,Metapopulation ,Biology ,Divergence - Abstract
We propose a iterative protocol for delimiting species under the generalized lineage concept (GLC) based on the multivariate clustering of morphological, ecological, and genetic data. Our rationale is that the resulting groups should correspond to evolutionarily independent metapopulation lineages because they reflect the common signal of different secondary defining properties (ecological and genetic distinctiveness, morphological diagnosability, etc.), implying the existence of barriers preventing or limiting gene exchange. We applied this method to study a group of highly endangered poison frogs, theOophaga histrionicacomplex. In our study case, we use next generation targeted amplicon sequencing to obtain a robust genetic dataset that we then combined with patterns of morphological and ecological divergence. Our analyses revealed the existence of at least five different species in the histrionica complex (three of them new to science) occurring in very small isolated populations outside any protected areas. More broadly, our study exemplifies how transcriptome-based reduction of genomic complexity and multivariate statistical techniques can be integrated to successfully identify species and their boundaries.In memoriam“I propose that each species has a distinctive life history, which include a series of stages that correspond to some of the named species concepts”Richard G. Harrison1945-2016
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- 2016
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27. Cervical Spondylodiscitis After Oxygen–Ozone Therapy for Treatment of a Cervical Disc Herniation: a Case Report and Review of the Literature
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Pablo Andrés-Cano, Claudio Cano, Gaspar García, Jose Antonio Andrés-García, Tomás Vela, and Juan Carlos Vera
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Spondylodiscitis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Sports medicine ,business.industry ,MEDLINE ,Case Report ,medicine.disease ,Ozone therapy ,Rheumatology ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Surgery ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Anesthesiology ,Internal medicine ,Spinal decompression ,Orthopedic surgery ,medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Published
- 2016
28. Influence of landscape and social interactions on transmission of disease in a social cervid
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Eric Vander Wal, Jose A. Andrés, and Paul C. Paquet
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education.field_of_study ,Ungulate ,Ecology ,animal diseases ,Population ,Disease ,Cline (biology) ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Genetics ,Biological dispersal ,Spatial variability ,education ,Pathogen ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Sociality - Abstract
The mechanisms of pathogen transmission are often social behaviours. These occur at local scales and are affected by landscape-scale population structure. Host populations frequently exist in patchy and isolated environments that create a continuum of genetic and social familiarity. Such variability has an important multispatial effect on pathogen spread. We assessed elk dispersal (i.e. likelihood of interdeme pathogen transmission) through spatially explicit genetic analyses. At a landscape scale, the elk population was composed of one cluster within a southeast-to-northwest cline spanning three spatially discrete subpopulations of elk across two protected areas in Manitoba (Canada). Genetic data are consistent with spatial variability in apparent prevalence of bovine tuberculosis (TB) in elk. Given the existing population structure, between-subpopulation spread of disease because of elk dispersal is unlikely. Furthermore, to better understand the risk of spread and distribution of the TB, we used a combination of close-contact logging biotelemetry and genetic data, which highlights how social intercourse may affect pathogen transmission. Our results indicate that close-contact interaction rate and duration did not covary with genetic relatedness. Thus, direct elk-to-elk transmission of disease is unlikely to be constrained to related individuals. That social intercourse in elk is not limited to familial groups provides some evidence pathogen transmission may be density-dependent. We show that the combination of landscape-scale genetics, relatedness and local-scale social behaviours is a promising approach to understand and predict landscape-level pathogen transmission within our system and within all social ungulate systems affected by transmissible diseases.
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- 2012
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29. Population genetic structure of sexual and parthenogenetic damselflies inferred from mitochondrial and nuclear markers
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Adolfo Cordero-Rivera, M O Lorenzo-Carballa, H Hadrys, and Jose A. Andrés
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Genetic Markers ,Insecta ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Parthenogenesis ,Population ,Odonata ,DNA, Mitochondrial ,Genetics ,Animals ,education ,Azores ,Phylogeny ,Genetics (clinical) ,Demography ,Likelihood Functions ,education.field_of_study ,Base Sequence ,Models, Genetic ,biology ,Obligate ,Reproduction ,Bayes Theorem ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,biology.organism_classification ,Phylogeography ,Ischnura ,Genetics, Population ,Haplotypes ,Evolutionary biology ,North America ,Genetic structure ,Biological dispersal ,Original Article ,Microsatellite Repeats - Abstract
It has been postulated that obligate asexual lineages may persist in the long term if they escape from negative interactions with either sexual lineages or biological enemies; and thus, parthenogenetic populations will be more likely to occur in places that are difficult for sexuals to colonize, or those in which biological interactions are rare, such as islands or island-like habitats. Ischnura hastata is the only known example of natural parthenogenesis within the insect order Odonata, and it represents also a typical example of geographic parthenogenesis, as sexual populations are widely distributed in North America, whereas parthenogenetic populations of this species have only been found at the Azores archipelago. In order to gain insight in the origin and distribution of parthenogenetic I. hastata lineages, we have used microsatellites, mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequence data, to examine the population genetic structure of this species over a wide geographic area. Our results suggest that sexual populations of I. hastata in North America conform to a large subdivided population that has gone through a recent spatial expansion. A recent single long distance dispersal event, followed by a demographic expansion, is the most parsimonious hypothesis explaining the origin of the parthenogenetic population of this species in the Azores islands.
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- 2011
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30. MC1R-dependent, melanin-based colour polymorphism is associated with cell-mediated response in the Eleonora’s falcon
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Jordi Figuerola, Gary R. Bortolotti, Laura Gangoso, Alexandre Roulin, Juan Manuel Grande, Jose A. Andrés, and A-L Ducrest
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0106 biological sciences ,Genetics ,0303 health sciences ,genetic structures ,biology ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Phenotype ,Melanin ,03 medical and health sciences ,Immune system ,Immunity ,Plumage ,Genotype ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,030304 developmental biology ,Falco eleonorae ,Melanocortin 1 receptor - Abstract
Colour polymorphism in vertebrates is usually under genetic control and may be associated with variation in physiological traits. The melanocortin 1 receptor (Mc1r) has been involved repeatedly in melanin-based pigmentation but it was thought to have few other physiological effects. However, recent pharmacological studies suggest that MC1R could regulate the aspects of immunity. We investigated whether variation at Mc1r underpins plumage colouration in the Eleonora’s falcon. We also examined whether nestlings of the different morphs differed in their inflammatory response induced by phytohemagglutinin (PHA). Variation in colouration was due to a deletion of four amino acids at the Mc1r gene. Cellular immune response was morph specific. In males, but not in females, dark nestling mounted a lower PHA response than pale ones. Although correlative, our results raise the neglected possibility that MC1R has pleiotropic effects, suggesting a potential role of immune capacity and pathogen pressure on the maintenance of colour polymorphism in this species.
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- 2011
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31. GENEALOGICAL DISCORDANCE AND PATTERNS OF INTROGRESSION AND SELECTION ACROSS A CRICKET HYBRID ZONE
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Jose A. Andrés, Luana S. Maroja, and Richard J. Harrison
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Male ,Genetics ,Gryllus pennsylvanicus ,Mitochondrial DNA ,Base Sequence ,biology ,Gryllus firmus ,Introgression ,biology.organism_classification ,DNA, Mitochondrial ,Genome ,Gryllidae ,Monophyly ,Hybrid zone ,Fertilization ,Animals ,Hybridization, Genetic ,Selection, Genetic ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Gene ,Alleles ,Phylogeny ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,DNA Primers - Abstract
In recently diverged species, ancestral polymorphism and introgression can cause incongruence between gene and species trees. In the face of hybridization, few genomic regions may exhibit reciprocal monophyly, and these regions, usually evolving rapidly under selection, may be important for the maintenance of species boundaries. In animals with internal fertilization, genes encoding seminal protein are candidate barrier genes. Recently diverged hybridizing species such as the field crickets Gryllus firmus and G. pennsylvanicus, offer excellent opportunities to investigate the origins of barriers to gene exchange. These recently diverged species form a well-characterized hybrid zone, and share ancestral polymorphisms across the genome. We analyzed DNA sequence divergence for seminal protein loci, housekeeping loci, and mtDNA, using a combination of analytical approaches and extensive sampling across both species and the hybrid zone. We report discordant genealogical patterns and differential introgression rates across the genome. The most dramatic outliers, showing near-zero introgression and more structured species trees, are also the only two seminal protein loci under selection. These are candidate barrier genes with possible reproductive functions. We also use genealogical data to examine the demographic history of the field crickets and the current structure of the hybrid zone.
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- 2009
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32. Multiple barriers to gene exchange in a field cricket hybrid zone
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Luana S. Maroja, Jose A. Andrés, James R. Walters, and Richard J. Harrison
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Field cricket ,Gryllus ,Gryllus pennsylvanicus ,Hybrid zone ,biology ,Mate choice ,Ecology ,Gryllus firmus ,Zoology ,Introgression ,Reproductive isolation ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Data on patterns of variation within hybrid zones, combined with studies of life history, mate choice, and hybrid performance, allow estimates of the contribution of different pre-zygotic and post-zygotic barriers to reproductive isolation. We examine the role of behavioural barriers to gene exchange in the maintenance of a hybrid zone between North American field crickets Gryllus firmus and Gryllus pennsylvanicus. We consider these barriers in the context of previous studies that documented temporal and ecological isolation and a one-way post-mating incompatibility (i.e. G. firmus females do not produce offspring when they mate only with heterospecific males). Based on no-choice mating experiments in the laboratory, we demonstrate strong behavioural pre-mating barriers between the two species, but no apparent fecundity or fertility costs for G. firmus females when they mate with both conspecific and heterospecific males. Furthermore, we show that G. firmus females do not discriminate between hybrids and conspecifics, whereas G. pennsylvanicus females do. This observation could explain the asymmetric allele introgression observed in the hybrid zone. We also document a failure of heterospecific males to induce normal oviposition in G. firmus females, which may be due to rapid evolution of accessory gland proteins and may serve as an additional barrier to gene exchange. © 2009 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2009, 97, 390–402.
- Published
- 2009
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33. Searching for candidate speciation genes using a proteomic approach: seminal proteins in field crickets
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Jose A. Andrés, Richard J. Harrison, and Luana S. Maroja
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Male ,Proteomics ,Gryllus pennsylvanicus ,Genetic Speciation ,Seminal Plasma Proteins ,Gryllus firmus ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Mass Spectrometry ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Gryllidae ,Animals ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Gene ,General Environmental Science ,Genetics ,Base Sequence ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,biology ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,General Medicine ,Reproductive isolation ,Chromatography, Ion Exchange ,biology.organism_classification ,Field cricket ,Gryllus ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Research Article - Abstract
In many animals, male seminal proteins influence gamete interactions and fertilization ability and are probably involved in barriers to gene flow between diverging lineages. Here we use a proteomic approach to identify seminal proteins that are transferred to females during copulation and that may be involved in fertilization barriers between two hybridizing field crickets (Gryllus firmusandGryllus pennsylvanicus). Analyses of patterns of divergence suggest that much of the field cricket genome has remained undifferentiated following the evolution of reproductive isolation. By contrast, seminal protein genes are highly differentiated. Tests of selection reveal that positive selection is likely to be responsible for patterns of differentiation. Together, our observations suggest that some of the loci encoding seminal proteins may indeed play a role in fertilization barriers in field crickets.
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- 2008
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34. Rapid evolution of sexual signals in sympatric Calopteryx damselflies: reinforcement or ?noisy-neighbour? ecological character displacement?
- Author
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Jose A. Andrés and Sean P. Mullen
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Gene Flow ,Male ,Sympatry ,Insecta ,Genetic Speciation ,Heteropatric speciation ,Allopatric speciation ,Biology ,Parapatric speciation ,DNA, Mitochondrial ,Ecological speciation ,Character displacement ,Animals ,Wings, Animal ,Phylogeny ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Ecology ,Mating Preference, Animal ,Incipient speciation ,Biological Evolution ,Phenotype ,Haplotypes ,Sympatric speciation ,Evolutionary biology ,North America ,Female - Abstract
Enhanced prezygotic isolation in sympatry is one of the most intriguing patterns in evolutionary biology and has frequently been interpreted as evidence for reinforcement. However, the frequency with which reinforcement actually completes speciation remains unclear. The Jewelwing damselflies (Calopteryx aequabilis and C. maculata) have served as one of the few classic examples of speciation via reinforcement outside of Drosophila. Although evidence for wing pattern displacement and increased mate discrimination in this system have been demonstrated, the degree of hybridization and gene flow in nature are unknown. Here, we show that sympatric populations of these two species are the result of recent secondary contact, as predicted under a model of speciation via reinforcement. However, we found no phenotypic evidence of hybridization in natural populations and a complete association between species-specific haplotypes at two different loci (mitochondrial CO I and nuclear EF1-alpha), suggesting little or no contemporary gene flow. Moreover, genealogical and coalescent-based estimates of divergence times and migration rates indicate that, speciation occurred in the distant past. The rapid evolution of wing colour in sympatry is recent, therefore, relative to speciation and seems to be better explained by selection against wasting mating effort and/or interspecific aggression resulting from a 'noisy neighbour' signalling environment.
- Published
- 2007
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35. Combining RNA-seq and proteomic profiling to identify seminal fluid proteins in the migratory grasshopper Melanoplus sanguinipes (F)
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Martha L. Bonilla, Martin A. Erlandson, Jose A. Andrés, and Christopher D. Todd
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Proteomics ,Male ,RNA-Seq ,Grasshoppers ,Computational biology ,Biology ,Mass Spectrometry ,Male reproductive genes ,Transcriptome ,Semen ,Next generation sequencing ,Genetics ,Animals ,Phylogeny ,Gene Library ,Proteomic Profiling ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Computational Biology ,High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing ,Gene expression profiling ,Male accessory gland ,Agricultural pest ,Proteome ,Orthoptera ,Insect Proteins ,DNA microarray ,Research Article ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Background Seminal fluid proteins control many aspects of fertilization and in turn, they play a key role in post-mating sexual selection and possibly reproductive isolation. Because effective proteome profiling relies on the availability of high-quality DNA reference databases, our knowledge of these proteins is still largely limited to model organisms with ample genetic resources. New advances in sequencing technology allow for the rapid characterization of transcriptomes at low cost. By combining high throughput RNA-seq and shotgun proteomic profiling, we have characterized the seminal fluid proteins secreted by the primary male accessory gland of the migratory grasshopper (Melanoplus sanguinipes), one of the main agricultural pests in central North America. Results Using RNA sequencing, we characterized the transcripts of ~ 8,100 genes expressed in the long hyaline tubules (LHT) of the accessory glands. Proteomic profiling identified 353 proteins expressed in the long hyaline tubules (LHT). Of special interest are seminal fluid proteins (SFPs), such as EJAC-SP, ACE and prostaglandin synthetases, which are known to regulate female oviposition in insects. Conclusions Our study provides new insights into the proteomic components of male ejaculate in Orthopterans, and highlights several important patterns. First, the presence of proteins that lack predicted classical secretory tags in accessory gland proteomes is common in male accessory glands. Second, the products of a few highly expressed genes dominate the accessory gland secretions. Third, accessory gland transcriptomes are enriched for novel transcripts. Fourth, there is conservation of SFPs’ functional classes across distantly related taxonomic groups with very different life histories, mating systems and sperm transferring mechanisms. The identified SFPs may serve as targets of future efforts to develop species- specific genetic control strategies. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12864-015-2327-1) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
- Published
- 2015
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36. The Effects of Experimentally Induced Polyandry on Female Reproduction in a Monandrous Mating System
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Göran Arnqvist and Jose A. Andrés
- Subjects
Ecology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Monandrous ,Zoology ,Dual effect ,Model system ,Insect ,Biology ,Mating system ,Sexual conflict ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Mating ,Reproduction ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,media_common - Abstract
Females of most insect species maximize their fitness by mating more than once. Yet, some taxa are monandrous and there are two distinct scenarios for the maintenance of monandry. While males should always benefit from inducing permanent non-receptivity to further mating in their mate, this is not necessarily true for females. Since females benefit from remating in many species, cases of monandry may reflect successful male manipulation of female remating (i.e. sexual conflict). Alternatively, monandry may favor both mates, if females maximize their fitness by mating only once in their life. These two hypotheses for the maintenance of monandry make contrasting predictions with regards to the effects of remating on female fitness. Here, we present an experimental test of the above hypotheses, using the monandrous housefly (Musca domestica) as a model system. Our results showed that accessory seminal fluid substances that males transfer to females during copulation have a dual effect: they trigger female non-receptivity but also seem to have a nutritional effect that could potentially enhance female fitness. These results suggest that monandry is maintained in house flies despite potential benefits that females would gain by mating multiply.
- Published
- 2006
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37. Genome‐scale phylogeography resolves the native population structure of the Asian longhorned beetle, Anoplophora glabripennis (Motschulsky)
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Mingming Cui, Yunke Wu, Marion Javal, Isabelle Giguère, Géraldine Roux, Jose A. Andres, Melody Keena, Juan Shi, Baode Wang, Evan Braswell, Scott E. Pfister, Richard Hamelin, Amanda Roe, and Ilga Porth
- Subjects
gene flow ,genotyping‐by‐sequencing ,glycerol ,insect pest ,invasion history ,population assignment ,Evolution ,QH359-425 - Abstract
Abstract Human‐assisted movement has allowed the Asian longhorned beetle (ALB, Anoplophora glabripennis (Motschulsky)) to spread beyond its native range and become a globally regulated invasive pest. Within its native range of China and the Korean peninsula, human‐mediated dispersal has also caused cryptic translocation of insects, resulting in population structure complexity. Previous studies used genetic methods to detangle this complexity but were unable to clearly delimit native populations which is needed to develop downstream biosurveillance tools. We used genome‐wide markers to define historical population structure in native ALB populations and contemporary movement between regions. We used genotyping‐by‐sequencing to generate 6102 single‐nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and amplicon sequencing to genotype 53 microsatellites. In total, we genotyped 712 individuals from ALB’s native distribution. We observed six distinct population clusters among native ALB populations, with a clear delineation between northern and southern groups. Most of the individuals from South Korea were distinct from populations in China. Our results also indicate historical divergence among populations and suggest limited large‐scale admixture, but we did identify a restricted number of cases of contemporary movement between regions. We identified SNPs under selection and describe a clinal allele frequency pattern in a missense variant associated with glycerol kinase, an important enzyme in the utilization of an insect cryoprotectant. We further demonstrate that small numbers of SNPs can assign individuals to geographic regions with high probability, paving the way for novel ALB biosurveillance tools.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The origin of interlocus sexual conflict: is sex-linkage important?
- Author
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Jose A. Andrés and Edward H. Morrow
- Subjects
Genetics ,education.field_of_study ,Population ,Biology ,Sexual conflict ,Interlocus sexual conflict ,Evolutionary biology ,Allele ,education ,Allele frequency ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Sex linkage ,Sex characteristics ,Dominance (genetics) - Abstract
Sexual conflict has been proposed as a potential selective agent in the evolution of a variety of traits. Here, we present a simple model that investigates the initial conditions under which sex-linked and sex-limited harming alleles can invade a population. In this paper, we expand previous threshold models to study how sex-linkage and sex determination mechanisms affect the spreading conditions of a harming allele. Our models provide new insights into how sexual conflict could originate, showing that in diploid organisms the probability of a new harming allele spreading is independent of both the genetic sex determination system and the dominance relationships. However, the incidence of interlocus sexual conflicts in the initial steps of the invasion critically depends on the inheritance system.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. New advances in botulinum toxin therapy for pain
- Author
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Jose De Andrés
- Subjects
Motor disorder ,Weakness ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Myofascial pain syndrome ,medicine.disease ,Botulinum toxin ,Muscle tone ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,Reflex ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Neurology (clinical) ,Stretch reflex ,Spasticity ,medicine.symptom ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Myofascial pain syndrome is a chronic pain syndrome that affects a focal or regional portion of the body, accompanied by manifestations of neuropathy. The main treatment goal is to desensitize supersensitive structures and restore motion and function, releasing muscle shortening and promoting healing. Therapeutic approach include MTP injections using botulinum toxin type A and stretch, treatment of psychological or behavioral abnormalities, physical therapy, electrical stimulation and massage. Spasticity is defined as a motor disorder characterized by a velocity-dependent increase in tonic stretch reflexes (muscle tone) with exaggerated tendon jerks resulting from hyperexcitability of the stretch reflex. This physiological events resulted in uncontrolled reflex activity (spasms) and increased muscle tone (rigidity). When used as part of an integrated antispasticity program, the dose of botulinum toxin type A may be adjusted to provide the precise degree of weakness needed to overcome spasticity, while preserving some strength for normal function. The benefits botulinum toxin type A can offer any particular patient depend on the location and degree of spasticity, but improvements in daily activities are usually obtained. In conclusion, botulinum toxin is currently an alternative to consider in the treatment of pain associated with myofascial pain syndrome and/or spasticity, based on a correct diagnosis and patient schedule program.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Evolution of female colour polymorphism in damselflies: testing the hypotheses
- Author
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A. Cordero Rivera, Rosa Ana Sánchez-Guillén, and Jose A. Andrés
- Subjects
Sexual conflict ,Damselfly ,biology ,Null model ,Mimicry ,Ceriagrion tenellum ,Positive relationship ,Zoology ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Locus (genetics) ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,RAPD - Abstract
The existence of several female colour morphs is a conspicuous characteristic of many damselflies that show one male-like (androchrome) and several nonmale-like (gynochrome) morphs. We tested several adaptive hypotheses and the null model for the maintenance of female polychromatism (one androchrome and two gynochromes) in the damselfly Ceriagrion tenellum . We tested the null model by comparing the degree of genetic differentiation between the colour locus and a set of 19 neutral RAPD loci in five populations. Our results indicate that selection is acting to maintain similar frequencies between populations at the colour locus. Using mark–recapture techniques we found that mating success is not dependent on female coloration. We tested the mimicry hypothesis by presenting live and dead models to males. Dead models were highly attractive irrespective of coloration. In contrast, with live models males could not distinguish between androchromes and other males, and were more attracted to gynochrome females. Despite this, within populations morph frequencies remained constant over time and mating was at random with respect to female coloration. However, there was a positive relationship between male density and androchrome frequency in a comparative study of eight populations. We discuss our results in the framework of sexual conflict theory and suggest that andro- and gynochrome females are using different strategies to control their number of matings. The different morphs might be maintained in a balanced polymorphism by a combination of density- and frequency-dependent mechanisms. Copyright 2002 Published by Elsevier Science Ltd on behalf of The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Characterization of Melanoplus sanguinipes oviposition stimulating protein expression and re-examination of its potential role in stimulating oviposition
- Author
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E.A. Sieminska, Martin A. Erlandson, Christopher D. Todd, and Jose A. Andrés
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,Immunoprecipitation ,Oviposition ,Blotting, Western ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Grasshoppers ,Biology ,Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Ejaculatory duct ,Spermatheca ,Western blot ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Messenger RNA ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Base Sequence ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Male accessory gland ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Insect Science ,Spermatophore ,Oviduct ,Insect Proteins ,Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel ,Female ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Melanoplussanguinipes oviposition stimulating protein (MsOSP) was characterized and its role in stimulating oviposition in virgin females was examined. A 967nt MsOSP mRNA sequence with homology to previously characterized N-terminal amino acid sequence data for MsOSP was identified in a RNAseq library generated from an mRNA pool from the long hyaline tubule (LHT) of the male accessory gland complex. This transcript contained a predicted 729nt open reading frame encoding the 242aa putative MsOSP protein and had the second highest read abundance in the library. The MsOSP transcript was detected exclusively in the LHT tissue of adult males and its abundance increased with time until 7 days post-eclosion. Western blot analysis using an anti-MsOSP antibody showed high levels of MsOSP protein in the LHT luminal secretions of virgin males and to a lesser degree was associated with the aedeagus and ejaculatory duct. MsOSP was shown to be a major protein component of the spermatophore packet transferred from the male to female during copulation. However, only minor amounts of MsOSP could be detected in the female bursa, spermatheca and oviduct. Intrahemocoelic injection of LHT luminal protein into mature virgin females stimulated oviposition in ∼ 65% of females. A similar but non-significant trend was observed upon injection of purified recombinant MsOSP protein, and immunoprecipitation of LHT protein with anti-MsOSP antibody led to abrogation of oviposition stimulation upon injection of mature virgin females. Despite the demonstration of stimulation of oviposition upon intrahemocoelic injection of LHT-derived-MsOSP into mature virgin females, the potential mode of action of MsOSP in this process remains to be determined. MsOSP cannot be detected in the tissues other than the bursa, spermatheca and oviduct of female grasshoppers and relatively large quantities of MsOSP are required to stimulate oviposition upon injection.
- Published
- 2014
42. Repeated predation of Odonata by the hornetVespa crabro(Hymenoptera: Vespidae)
- Author
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Adolfo Cordero Rivera, Jose A. Andrés, and Klaas-Douwe B. Dijkstra
- Subjects
biology ,Aeshna ,Vespidae ,Calopteryx haemorrhoidalis ,Ecology ,Insect Science ,Hymenoptera ,biology.organism_classification ,Dragonfly ,Odonata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Vespula ,Predation - Abstract
Predation of aggregated, ovipositing tandems of Sympetrum sanguineum and S. vulgatum by the hornet Vespa crabro was observed in Belarus. The same species of hornet was seen killing territorial males and copulating females of Calopteryx haemorrhoidalis in Italy. Numerous remains of these odonates at the oviposition sites suggest that attacks occur frequently. A short review of vespid predation of Odonata is given. Species of the genera Vespa and Vespula have often been reported as predators of single, emerging and ovipositing odonates, taking prey as big as large Aeshna species. Odonata may form an important source of protein for V. crabro in parts of its range. Such prdation may contribute strongly to odonate mortality locally. The disturbing effect may also disrupt opportunity for reproductive behaviour.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Genetic divergence of the seminal signal—receptor system in houseflies: the footprints of sexually antagonistic coevolution?
- Author
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Göran Arnqvist and Jose A. Andrés
- Subjects
Male ,Oviposition ,Antagonistic Coevolution ,Zoology ,Semen ,Biology ,Article ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Sexual conflict ,Sexual Behavior, Animal ,Houseflies ,Animals ,Mating ,Coevolution ,General Environmental Science ,Genetics ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Reproductive success ,Genetic Variation ,General Medicine ,Biological Evolution ,Female sperm storage ,Female ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Sperm precedence - Abstract
To understand fully the significance of cryptic female choice, we need to focus on each of those postmating processes in females which create variance in fitness among males. Earlier studies have focused almost exclusively on the proportion of a female's eggs fertilized by different males (sperm precedence). Yet, variance in male postmating reproductive success may also arise from differences in ability to stimulate female oviposition and to delay female remating. Here, we present a series of reciprocal mating experiments among genetically differentiated wild-type strains of the housefly Musca domestica. We compared the effects of male and female genotype on oviposition and remating by females. The genotype of each sex affected both female oviposition and remating rates, demonstrating that the signal-receptor system involved has indeed diverged among these strains. Further, there was a significant interaction between the effects of male and female genotype on oviposition rate. We discuss ways in which the pattern of such interactions provides insights into the coevolutionary mechanism involved. Females in our experiments generally exhibited the weakest, rather than the strongest, response to males with which they are coevolved. These results support the hypothesis that coevolution of male seminal signals and female receptors is sexually antagonistic.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Copulation duration and fertilization success in a damselfly: an example of cryptic female choice?
- Author
-
Jose A. Andrés and Adolfo Cordero Rivera
- Subjects
biology ,Ecology ,Zoology ,biology.organism_classification ,Sperm ,Coenagrionidae ,Sperm displacement ,Damselfly ,Female sperm storage ,Human fertilization ,Duration (music) ,Ceriagrion tenellum ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Copulation duration is highly variable (0.5-3 h) in the damselfly, Ceriagrion tenellum (Coenagrionidae). Using laboratory experiments, we tested four adaptive hypotheses to explain this variation: the effect of time constraints, in-copula mate guarding, sperm displacement and cryptic female choice. Copulation duration was negatively correlated with time of day, as predicted by the first two hypotheses, and positively correlated with male density, as predicted by the mate-guarding hypothesis. Males prolonged copulation in response to the volume of sperm stored by females, suggesting they were able to detect and quantify the amount of sperm stored. This behaviour is not explained by mate guarding or time constraint effects. Males removed all the sperm from the bursa copulatrix in just 10 min. Our results also suggest that, because the duct is too narrow to allow male genitalia to enter, males do not remove spermathecal sperm. Therefore, direct sperm removal could not explain long copulations. Prolonged copulations could also have evolved as a result of cryptic female choice if they increase male fertilization success by female-mediated processes. Our results support this idea: male fertilization success was greater after long copulations. Apparently, male copulatory behaviour elicits female responses that increase male fertilization success. Copyright 2000 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Regional techniques for day surgery: Intraarticular anesthesia and analgesia
- Author
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Enrique Monzó and Jose De Andrés
- Subjects
musculoskeletal diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Arthroscopy ,Wrist ,Postoperative rehabilitation ,Temporomandibular joint ,Surgery ,Standard procedure ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Anesthesia ,Ambulatory ,medicine ,Ankle ,business - Abstract
Diagnostic and therapeutic (surgical) arthroscopy has become a standard procedure because of its accuracy and short period of time for postoperative rehabilitation. Its practice under local (periarticular) and/or intraarticular anesthesia simplify the procedure and decrease the costs for the hospital, allowing its practice in ambulatory patients. Arthroscopy has been applied in knee and shoulder joints, but progressively is used for arthroscopic surgery of the wrist, ankle, and in certain pathologies of metatarsophalangeal and the temporomandibular joint. The purpose of this report is twofold: To present the technique used by the authors in the approaches performed by them. Then to present a wide analysis of the experience accumulated in the application of the periarticular and intraarticular anesthesia in the practice of diagnostic and surgical arthroscopy, presenting drugs of choice and the rationale for combinations Copyright © 2000 by W.B. Saunders Company
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Life cycle and biological control of the Eucalyptus snout beetle (Coleoptera, Curculionidae) by Anaphes nitens (Hymenoptera, Mymaridae) in north-west Spain
- Author
-
Adolfo Cordero Rivera, Jose A. Andrés, and Serena Santolamazza Carbone
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,biology ,Ecology ,Weevil ,Population ,Biological pest control ,Anaphes nitens ,Parasitism ,Forestry ,biology.organism_classification ,Parasitoid ,Insect Science ,Curculionidae ,education ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Gonipterus scutellatus - Abstract
Gonipterus scutellatus is a weevil that has become a pest in most Eucalyptus plantations in Africa, America and Europe. The egg parasitoid Anaphes nitens has been introduced into many countries as a biological control agent. Even if control has been successful in most countries no detailed study of the interactions between both species has been published. 2 Gonipterus scutellatus was detected in 1991 in north-west Spain and A. nitens was introduced in early 1994. Here we report on the results of a 2-year study of parasitism in a field plot and a survey of 16 localities in North-west Spain. In 1996, parasitism was so intense (80-100% of eggs) that G. scutellatus became lo- cally extinct, and as a consequence A. nitens disappeared. In 1997, G. scutellatus recolonized the area and was followed by its parasitoid, but parasitism was low in spring, probably because the parasitoid population needed 3 weeks to achieve a similar size as in 1996. Consequently, damage to the trees was extreme in 1997. We interpret these results as population fluctuations due to parasitoid-host inter- actions and suggest that parasitoids should not to be so effective as to locally ex- tinguish their host to be useful for biological control. 3 The analysis of parasitism level in 16 localities indicates that A. nitens is highly efficient in finding G. scutellatus egg-masses. At a small spatial scale (single trees) positive density dependence was detected where parasitism was low and in- verse density dependence where parasitism was high.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. LIFETIME MATING SUCCESS, SURVIVORSHIP AND SYNCHRONIZED REPRODUCTION IN THE DAMSELFLYISCHNURA PUMILIO(ODONATA: COENAGRIONIDAE)
- Author
-
Jose Angel Andrés Abad and Adolfo Cordero Rivera
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,Ecology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population size ,Population ,Zoology ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Odonata ,Coenagrionidae ,Damselfly ,Insect Science ,Survivorship curve ,Reproduction ,Mating ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,media_common - Abstract
This paper is dedicated to Philip S. Corbet on the occasion of his 70th birthday. Abstract A small population of Ischnura pumilio in NW Spain was studied by marking and resighting in August-September 1996. A total of 142 males and 100 females were captured. Adults of I. pumilio appeared in two clear groups, starting on 31 August and 10 September. Population size was estimated about 1-2 individuals from 14 to 30 August but suddenly increased to 30-50 males and 40-120 females from 31 August to 13 September. A large fraction of males (43.6%) were never seen to mate, but only 13 females were never seen in copula. Androchrome females were rare (14 females) and did not differ from gynochrome females in fitness correlates. Copulation duration ranged from 1 to 5 h, and was dependent on time of day. The analysis of survival and recapture rates indicates that males and females have similar survivorship, but sex had a significant effect on recapture probability.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The inheritance of female colour morphs in the damselfly Ceriagrion tenellum (Odonata, Coenagrionidae)
- Author
-
Jose A. Andrés and Adolfo Cordero
- Subjects
animal structures ,genetic structures ,biology ,Zoology ,Locus (genetics) ,Odonata ,biology.organism_classification ,Coenagrionidae ,Damselfly ,Botany ,Genetics ,Ceriagrion tenellum ,Allele ,psychological phenomena and processes ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,Genetics (clinical) ,Dominance (genetics) - Abstract
Female-limited polychromatism is found in many species of Odonata. In Ceriagrion tenellum (Coenagrionidae) one of the morphs is red-coloured, like the conspecific male (androchrome, erythrogastrum morph), whereas most females are red and black (typica morph) or black (melanogastrum morph). Virgin females of this species were mated in the laboratory and their progeny reared (13 crosses). Results of these crosses indicate that colour morphs are controlled by one autosomal locus with female-limited expression. A second laboratory generation (two crosses) confirmed this inheritance system. This locus has three alleles (one per phenotype) and a hierarchy of dominance: typica > melanogastrum > erythrogastrum. The dominance relationships of andro/gynochrome alleles in polymorphic damselflies so far studied are discussed. The frequencies of female morphs in natural populations are highly variable, but in all cases typica females are the commonest.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Effects of water mites on the damselfly Ceriagrion tenellum
- Author
-
Adolfo Cordero and Jose A. Andrés
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,Ecology ,Reproductive success ,Population ,Zoology ,Parasitism ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Ceriagrion ,Damselfly ,Insect Science ,Sexual selection ,Mite ,Mating ,education - Abstract
1. Water mite parasitism is expected to have an important effect on damselfly survivorship and reproductive success, because mites drain considerable amounts of body fluids from their hosts. This study tests the effect of water mite parasitism in a marked population of the damselfly Ceriagrion tenellum during 1995 (individuals marked as mature adults) and 1996 (individuals marked as tenerals). 2. Almost all teneral individuals were parasitized (98%) and mites were aggregated strongly on some individuals. Parasite load increased during the season. 3. Parasites had no effect on the probability of recapture of hosts as mature adults. The average daily survival rate of lightly- and heavily-parasitized individuals, estimated with Jolly's stochastic method, did not differ significantly. 4. In 1995 parasites had a significant effect on host mating success. The probability of mating was about 25% lower for heavily-parasitized males than for lightly-parasitized males. Lightly-parasitized males also mated more times than heavily-parasitized males, even if heavily-parasitized males lived longer. In 1996, parasitism did not have an effect on male mating success. In both years mites had no effect on female lifetime mating success. 5. These results indicate that water mite parasitism does not reduce damselfly survivorship, but it could reduce male mating success in some circumstances. Further long-term studies are needed, especially in populations with a lower incidence of parasitism.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Hybridization and adaptation to introduced balloon vines in an Australian soapberry bug
- Author
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P. R. Thampy, Michael Mathieson, Myron P. Zalucki, Scott P. Carroll, Jenella E. Loye, Jose A. Andrés, and Hugh Dingle
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Genetic Markers ,Population ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Allopatric speciation ,Zoology ,Introduced species ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,DNA, Mitochondrial ,Atalaya hemiglauca ,Heteroptera ,03 medical and health sciences ,Sapindaceae ,parasitic diseases ,Botany ,Genetics ,Leptocoris ,Animals ,Herbivory ,Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism Analysis ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Phylogeny ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,Models, Genetic ,Host (biology) ,fungi ,Australia ,food and beverages ,Alectryon tomentosus ,15. Life on land ,biology.organism_classification ,Hemiptera ,Adaptation, Physiological ,Genetics, Population ,Phenotype ,Haplotypes ,Hybridization, Genetic ,Introduced Species - Abstract
Contemporary adaptation of plant feeding insects to introduced hosts provides clear cases of ecologically based population divergence. In most cases the mechanisms permitting rapid differentiation are not well known. Here we study morphological and genetic variation associated with recent shifts by the Australian soapberry bug Leptocoris tagalicus onto two naturalized Neotropical balloon vines, Cardiospermum halicacabum and C. grandiflorum that differ in time since introduction. Our results show that these vines have much larger fruits than the native hosts (Whitewood tree -Atalaya hemiglauca- and Woolly Rambutan -Alectryon tomentosus-) and that bugs living on them have evolved significantly longer beaks and new allometries. Genetic analyses of mitochondrial haplotypes and amplified fragment length polymorphic (AFLP) markers indicate that the lineage of bugs on the annual vine C. halicacabum, the older introduction, is intermediate between the two subspecies of L. tagalicus found on native hosts. Moreover, where the annual vine and Whitewood tree co-occur, the morphology and genomic composition of the bugs are similar to those occurring in allopatry. These results show that hybridization provided the genetic elements underlying the strongly differentiated 'Halicacabum bugs'. In contrast, the bugs feeding on the recently introduced perennial balloon vine (C. grandiflorum) showed no evidence of admixture, and are genetically indistinguishable from the nearby populations on a native host.
- Published
- 2013
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