26,502 results on '"reproductive success"'
Search Results
2. A Comprehensive Exploration of Oedipodinae Grasshoppers in the Nara Desert Ecosystem.
- Author
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Pitafi, Muhammad Rafique
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MIGRATORY locust ,BIOLOGICAL fitness ,POPULATION dynamics ,ORTHOPTERA ,GRASSHOPPERS - Abstract
This study explores the Orthoptera community in the Nara Desert, Sindh, focusing on Oedipodinae species: Hilethera aeolopoides, Aiolopus thalassinus thalassinus, Acrotylus humbertianus, Acrotylus longipes longipes, Sphingonotus rubescens rubescens, Sphingonotus savignyi, Locusta migratoria, and Oedaleus senegalensis. We assessed their population dynamics, including diversity, density, and reproductive success, using field and laboratory methods. Our results show considerable species variation S. savignyi had the highest reproductive success (Net Reproduction Rate Ro = 9.0) and largest population (27 individuals), while A. longipes longipes had the lowest reproductive rate (0.5 births per pair) and highest mortality (0.3 deaths per pair), resulting in the smallest population (5 individuals). Density varied, with L. migratoria being the least dense, and A. longipes longipes and O. senegalensis being the densest. Dominance and evenness analyses showed S.rubescens rubescens and H. aeolopoides as more ecologically influential, while A.longipes longipes and L.migratoria had higher evenness. These findings highlight the impact of reproductive efficiency and density on species abundance and ecological roles, offering key insights for conservation and management in the Nara Desert to preserve biodiversity and ecological balance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
3. Asymmetric mate preference and reproductive interference mediate climate-induced changes in mate availability in a small mammal hybrid zone.
- Author
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Matocq, Marjorie D, Hunter, Elizabeth A, Murphy, Peter J, Adkins, Casey L, and Shoemaker, Kevin T
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BIOLOGICAL fitness , *HYBRID zones , *POPULATION dynamics , *REPRODUCTIVE health , *CLIMATE change ,REPRODUCTIVE isolation - Abstract
Range expansion and contraction are among the most common biotic responses to changing environmental conditions, yet much is to be learned about the mechanisms that underlie range-edge population dynamics, especially when those areas are points of secondary contact between closely related species. Here, we present field-measured parentage data that document the reproductive outcomes of changes in mate availability at a secondary contact zone between two species of woodrat in the genus Neotoma. Changes in mate availability resulted from drought-driven differential survival between the species and their hybrids. As the availability of conspecific mates declined, rates of hybridization increased, leading to the accumulation of admixed individuals in the zone of contact. Patterns of reproductive success in the wild appear to be the result of a combination of both pre-mating isolation and post-zygotic selection resulting from genomic incompatibilities between the parental lineages. Evidence of asymmetric mate preference between the parental lineages came from both skewed reproductive output in the field and laboratory preference trials. Moreover, partial genomic incompatibility was evident from the near-zero reproductive success of F1 males and because nearly all surviving hybrids had one pure parent. Nonetheless, the high reproductive success of F1 females and backcrossing in both parental directions allow for introgression between the parental species. These findings reveal how climate change may alter evolutionary outcomes for species at the edge of their ranges through an interplay of behavioral, demographic, and genetic mechanisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Heatwaves during early development have long-term consequences for parental care in adulthood.
- Author
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Sidhu, Karendeep K., Zafeiri, Stamatia, Malcolm, Charlotte, Caplat, Paul, Lancaster, Lesley T., Bocedi, Greta, and Pilakouta, Natalie
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PARENTING , *HEAT waves (Meteorology) , *ANIMAL sexual behavior , *BIOLOGICAL fitness , *THERMAL stresses - Abstract
Heatwaves are becoming more common due to climate change. Species can respond to this thermal stress through rapid behavioural changes. For example, parental care can increase reproductive success by buffering against thermal stress, but the ability to provide parental care may also be influenced by prior exposure to high temperatures. However, the effects of heatwaves in parents' early development on parental care they provide in adulthood have not yet been tested. Here, we addressed this knowledge gap using the burying beetle Nicrophorus vespilloides , an ectotherm model system with facultative biparental care. We compared the parental behaviour, reproductive success and offspring fitness of parents that had been exposed to a heatwave (3 days at 25 °C) early in the pupae stage in their development and parents that had been reared at a constant temperature. Females from the heatwave treatment were more likely to provide care than those in the control treatment, with no difference in reproductive success or offspring fitness between thermal treatments. Our findings suggest that heatwaves during the pupae development stage can potentially have long-term impacts on the likelihood of providing parental care later in life. • Females experiencing heatwaves as pupae were more likely to provide parental care. • Direct but not indirect parental care was impacted by heatwaves. • There was no impact of heatwaves on reproductive success or offspring fitness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. What do frog calls tell us about males? The advertisement call of Physalaemus albifrons (Amphibia: Leptodactylidae) in the Brazilian semiarid region does not reflect either gonadal investment or energy storage.
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Adelino Almeida Filho, Marcos, Wachlevski, Milena, Bárbara Coutinho Soares, Pamella, and Cunha Passos, Daniel
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ADIPOSE tissues , *ARID regions , *SEXUAL selection , *MATE selection , *BIOLOGICAL fitness - Abstract
Anuran advertisement calls can provide accurate information on the reproductive quality of the male callers, thus providing females with indicators for the selection of mates. Body size is generally correlated with the dominant frequency of male advertisement calls. However, it is unclear whether and to what extent call parameters are associated with gonadal investment and the energy reserves of the males. Given that in tropical seasonally dry environments the wet season is very short, gathering information about gonadal investment and energy reserves of mates should be particularly important. In the present study, we evaluated the relationship between acoustic performance, gonadal condition, and fat storage in the Neotropical frog Physalaemus albifrons from the Brazilian semiarid region, testing the hypothesis that the advertisement call (repetition rate, call duration, and fundamental and dominant frequencies) would be a good predictor of male quality in terms of gonadal investment (testicle length) and energy reserves (mass of fat bodies). Contrary to our predictions, neither testicle length nor the mass of fat bodies was related to any of the acoustic parameters of the advertisement calls of P. albifrons. These results indicate that the advertisement call of P. albifrons does not provide reliable information on gonadal investment or energy storage of males. Possibly, in habitats with little and unpredictable rainfall, males of P. albifrons should present small variation in gonadal and fat storage conditions during its short reproductive window. Our findings contribute to the understanding of anuran reproductive strategies in seasonally dry environments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Impacts of assisted migration: An introduced herbivore has short‐term and long‐term effects on its native host plant population.
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Ravikanthachari, Nitin, Burch, Libby L., Powell, Rachel E., Scott, Danielle M., Wayne, Charlotte R., Niitepõld, Kristjan, Rosenberg, Risa H., and Boggs, Carol L.
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WILDLIFE conservation , *PLANT size , *PLANT populations , *INTRODUCED species , *PLANT anatomy - Abstract
Assisted migration consists of the introduction of a species to previously inhabited areas or to new suitable regions. Such introductions have been touted as a viable tool for conserving the earth's biodiversity. However, both the likely success of assisted migrations and the impacts on local communities are hotly debated. Empirical data on the local impacts of assisted migration are particularly lacking. We examined the short and long time‐scale effects of herbivory on Lonicera involucrata (Richards) Banks ex. Spreng (Caprifoliaceae) after an introduction of Euphydryas gillettii Barnes (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae, Melitaeini) to Gunnison County, Colorado, USA, via an assisted migration in 1977. The plant is the primary larval host plant for the butterfly. We quantified plant seed production, plant survival, and population stage structure in two sets of observational experiments. We found that herbivory by E. gillettii increased L. involucrata reproduction on an annual time scale, independent of plant size and local microhabitat characteristics. Over the time since the butterfly's introduction, herbivory by E. gillettii resulted in a plant population structure biased toward smaller plants in the butterfly introduction and satellite sites compared with sites without the butterfly. Our results highlight the importance of studying the effects of assisted migrations on native populations at different temporal scales. As assisted migration becomes an indispensable tool for species conservation, our work adds to the understanding of the multi‐trophic impacts of assisted introductions on local populations and communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Arctic raptor occupancy and reproductive success near a remote open-cut mine: North Baffin Island, Nunavut.
- Author
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Franke, Alastair, Bajina, Kerman, and Setterington, Michael
- Abstract
Natural resource development in the Canadian Arctic—a mostly remote and 'untouched' landscape—is expanding. Raptorial species are key indicators of ecosystem diversity and environmental change; disturbance-mediated changes to Arctic-breeding raptor populations can be assessed to determine impacts from development. From 2012 through 2020, we monitored peregrine falcon (Falco peregrinus) and rough-legged hawk (Buteo lagopus) breeding territories near an iron ore mine on North Baffin Island, Nunavut, Canada. The mine was constructed from 2010 through 2014 and became operational in 2015. Our objective was to evaluate whether proximity to mining disturbance affected occupancy and reproductive success of both species. We quantified occupancy using multi-season occupancy models and reproductive success using stochastic partial differential equations capable of accounting for unexplained spatiotemporal variation. Occupancy of both species was best explained by year effects. Occupancy remained relatively stable across time for peregrine falcons (λ = 0.99 ± 0.04) but fluctuated drastically for rough-legged hawks (λ = 3.41 ± 2.17). For both species, most of the spatiotemporal variation in reproductive success was unexplained (presumably from underlying abiotic and biotic factors), which led to the differential presence and count of nestlings across the study area and time. Neither distance to disturbance nor primary production explained variation in occupancy and reproductive success. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Seasonal Patterns of Resource Use Within Natural Populations of Burying Beetles.
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Issar, Swastika, Leroy, Chloé, d'Ettorre, Patrizia, and Kilner, Rebecca M.
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BURYING beetles , *WEATHER , *BIOLOGICAL fitness , *LIFE history theory , *BEETLES - Abstract
For organisms in temperate environments, seasonal variation in resource availability and weather conditions exert fluctuating selection pressures on survival and fitness, resulting in diverse adaptive responses. By manipulating resource availability on a local spatial scale, we studied seasonal patterns of resource use within natural populations of burying beetles Nicrophorus vespilloides in a Norfolk woodland. Burying beetles are necrophagous insects that breed on vertebrate carcasses. They are active in Europe between April and October, after which they burrow into the soil and overwinter. Using breeding and chemical analyses, we compared the fecundity and physiological state of beetles that differed in their seasonal resource use. We found seasonal variation in carrion use by wild burying beetles and correlated differences in their reproductive success and cuticular hydrocarbon profiles. Our results provide novel insight into the seasonal correlates of behaviour, physiology and life history in burying beetles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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9. The Functional Dilemma of Nectar Mimic Staminodes in Parnassia wightiana (Celastraceae): Attracting Pollinators and Florivorous Beetles.
- Author
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Wen, Shi‐Jia, Chen, Shan, Rech, Andre Rodrigo, Ji, Ling, Wang, Hong, Wang, Zhiyong, Wu, Ding, and Ren, Zong‐Xin
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BIOLOGICAL fitness , *FLEA beetles , *NECTARIES , *PLANT populations , *CHRYSOMELIDAE - Abstract
While floral signaling plays a central role in the reproductive success of all animal‐pollinated plants, it may also attract herbivores eager to feed on flowers. False nectaries with glossy surfaces reflecting incident light may produce signals that attract floral visitors guiding their movements to and within the flower. Whether false nectaries also attract herbivores that lower the reproductive success of natural populations requires attention. In this study, we focus on Parnassia wightiana, a subalpine species with a whorl of staminodes that act as false nectaries attracting bees, flies, and herbivorous beetles. We tested the functions of staminodes using controlled manipulative experiments under field and lab conditions. We found a significant decrease in pollinator visits, and subsequent seed set, in flowers in which we removed staminodes or staminode apices confirming the function of these organs. In our natural populations, we found that a beetle, Nonarthra variabilis (Alticinae; Chrysomelidae), chews first on staminode apices, then it eats the entire staminodes and other flower parts, but rarely feeds on ovaries. Additional experiments suggested these beetles preferred staminodes to ovaries. Our results suggest this is a case of selective florivory, in which staminodes play a dual role, attracting pollinators and herbivores at the same time causing the attractive dilemma. Although selective florivory by beetles did not directly damage fruits, it influenced plant‐pollinator interactions, decreasing reproductive success in plant populations. Our study highlights the importance of plant‐pollinator‐herbivore interactions in selecting floral traits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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10. Flower position within plants influences reproductive success both directly and via phenology.
- Author
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Valdés, Alicia and Ehrlén, Johan
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PLANT phenology , *FRUIT seeds , *BIOLOGICAL fitness , *LATHYRUS , *PLANT variation - Abstract
Premise: In plants, within‐individual trait variation might result from mechanisms related to ontogenetic contingency, i.e., to the position of a particular structure within the plant, previous developmental events, and/or the developmental environment. Flower position within inflorescences as well as inflorescence position within plants can influence resource provisioning, phenology, biotic interactions, and reproductive success. Despite the potential implications of within‐individual variation in plant reproductive phenotypes, its causes and effects on reproductive success are still little explored. Methods: We assessed how reproductive success, in terms of fruit and seed set, and seed predation of 5883 flowers in Lathyrus vernus were influenced by their position within and among racemes, to what extent relationships between flower position and reproductive success and seed predation were mediated by phenology, and if positional effects on reproductive success depended on the external environment. Results: In three years, basal flowers and racemes opened earlier and had higher fruit set than distal. Basal flowers also experienced higher seed predation. Differences among racemes in fruit and seed set were largely related to phenology, while differences in fruit set, seed set, and seed predation within racemes were not. In one year, differences in fruit set among flowers at different positions depended on flowering duration. Conclusions: Our results highlight the important role of ontogenetic contingency for within‐individual variation in phenology and reproductive success. As the spatial distribution of reproductive structures affects both within‐plant trait distributions and fitness, it is a likely target for natural selection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Finding a balance: Reproductive trade-offs in parasitic isopods of the family Cymothoidae.
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Nayak, Nirmalya, Mohapatra, Sandeep Kumar, Kar, Preetinanda, Mohanty, Matruprasad, Roy, Sanmitra, Sahu, Hemanta Kumar, and Seth, Jaya Kishor
- Abstract
In this study conducted along the coast of Odisha, India, reproductive trade-offs in isopods of the family Cymothoidae were investigated, focusing on the relationship between the number vs. volume of eggs and the percentage of brood to body volume. Ovigerous females from species with substantial sample sizes (n > 30) were analyzed to understand their survival strategies. The findings highlight distinct strategies among different parasite types within Cymothoidae. Buccal parasites such as Cymothoa frontalis and Cymothoa indica, along with branchial parasites like Joryma sawayah and Agarna malayi, generally produced a higher number of smaller eggs, except for A. malayi, which produced fewer but larger eggs. In contrast, the external body surface-attaching parasite, Nerocila orbignyi, was observed to produce fewer eggs of larger size. Across all parasite types (intraspecific), there was a statistically significant negative correlation between egg number and egg volume (p < 0.05). Buccal parasites were observed to have the highest percentage of marsupium volume relative to body volume, indicating a strategy to maximize egg storage. Conversely, external body surface-attaching parasites had the lowest percentage, possibly reflecting adaptation to a different reproductive environment. Additional observations revealed anatomical adaptations in all the studied isopod species which include the shift of the alimentary canal to the dorsal side to accommodate the development of the marsupial sac for egg incubation. In summary, these findings illustrate how parasitic isopods of the family Cymothoidae manage trade-offs between reproductive potential and success, crucial for their species’ continuity and survival strategies in coastal ecosystems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. Factors influencing variation in reproduction in invasive species: a case study of the Asian shore crab Hemigrapsus sanguineus.
- Author
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Griffen, Blaine D., Bolander, Mikayla, Fletcher, Laura S., Luckett, Johanna, Repetto, Michele F., Smith, Nanette, Stancil, Carter, and Toscano, Benjamin J.
- Abstract
Reproductive success is a strong determinant of invasive species success. It is common for studies on invasive species to assess reproduction by measuring size-specific fecundity and scaling this up using population size or densities. Yet, reproductive success is influenced by numerous factors that are not accounted for in such calculations. We examined the influence of several factors on fecundity (clutch size) and egg size in the Asian shore crab Hemigrapsus sanguineus, including body size, spatial variation throughout the invaded range, season, fertilization success, brood loss, and diet. We show that all of these factors influence reproduction simultaneously within the invaded North American range of this species, though the relative importance of these different factors varied across sites or sampling times. Our study demonstrates that numerous factors may influence the reproductive success of invasive species and that studies that rely on fecundity measured at a single place and time, or that ignore factors such as offspring quality or brood loss, may provide a skewed picture of reproduction, and thus of potential invasive success. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. Estimated reproductive parameters for a vulnerable Australian humpback dolphin population.
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Hawkins, Elizabeth R. and Dunleavy, Merryn
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MARINE mammals ,BIOLOGICAL fitness ,ENDANGERED species ,BIRTH rate ,SURVIVAL rate - Abstract
Understanding reproductive output and success is integral to the conservation and management of threatened species and populations. Little is known about the reproductive parameters of Australian humpback dolphins (Sousa sahulensis), a species subject to cumulative pressures from anthropogenic threats due to their coastal distribution and strong site fidelity. This study assesses several reproductive parameters, including crude birth, recruitment, fecundity, and calf survival rates, in addition to interbirth intervals of Australian humpback dolphins inhabiting the near‐urban embayment of Moreton Bay, Queensland. Between 2014 and 2020, 106 adult females were photographically identified during 222 boat surveys. Of these, 75.5% (n = 80) were observed with calves. Birth seasonality was apparent and coincided with austral autumn and winter months. Interbirth intervals ranged between 1 and >6 years, with an average of 3.1 (SD = 1.1) years if offspring survived. Findings indicate declining fecundity rates (p <.05, M = 0.12, SD = 0.02), relatively low recruitment rates (M = 0.04, SD = 0.01) and calf survival rates to 1 year of age (M = 0.63, SD = 0.15). This study provides a useful baseline that can inform viability assessments and conservation measures, for both this population and others throughout the species range. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. No detrimental effects of wing‐harnessed GPS devices on the breeding performance of Yellow‐legged Gulls (Larus michahellis): A multi‐colony evaluation.
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Souc, Charly, Leray, Carole, Blanchon, Thomas, Dagonet, Thomas, Vittecoq, Marion, Ramos, Raül, and McCoy, Karen D.
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COLONIES (Biology) ,COLONIAL birds ,BIOLOGICAL fitness ,GPS receivers ,ANIMAL welfare - Abstract
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- 2024
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15. A comparative study on semen quality and cryopreservation ability in Italian native chicken breeds
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Michele Di Iorio, Stefano Paolo Marelli, Emanuele Antenucci, Manuela Madeddu, Luisa Zaniboni, Silvia Belcredito, Giusy Rusco, Achille Schiavone, Dominga Soglia, Mauro Penasa, Cesare Castellini, Arianna Buccioni, Margherita Marzoni, Lucia Maiuro, Nicolaia Iaffaldano, and Silvia Cerolini
- Subjects
italian chicken breeds ,fresh semen quality ,cryopreservation sensitivity ,breed-specific differences ,reproductive success ,Animal culture ,SF1-1100 - Abstract
This study provides a comparative assessment of fresh semen quality and sensitivity to cryopreservation in several Italian chicken breeds. The research involved 145 roosters from 13 breeds. The results showed a wide variability in all the parameters considered among the different breeds, especially in the quantitative variables of fresh semen, such as volume and concentration. For the qualitative characteristics (sperm membrane integrity and motility parameters), the variability across breeds was more pronounced for frozen than fresh semen. Interestingly, apart from total motility in fresh semen, breed had a significant effect on all semen quality parameters in both fresh and thawed ejaculates. Considering the overall qualitative characteristics, the Robusta maculata, Siciliana, and Mericanel della Brianza breeds produced ejaculates with better semen quality compared to other Italian breeds. By evaluating the main parameters of semen quality, our results underline the potential of these traits to influence the reproductive success and genetic conservation. The Bionda piemontese, Bianca di Saluzzo, Livorno bianca, Pepoi, and Siciliana breeds showed better resilience to cryopreservation, suggesting the need for breed-specific protocols to optimise semen quality after thawing. Importantly, the research highlights the central role of semen quality for both immediate fertilisation success and long-term conservation efforts. Future studies integrating OMICS technologies could elucidate molecular markers influencing breed-specific differences, helping to refine cryopreservation techniques and improve conservation strategies for indigenous Italian chicken breeds. This work contributes valuable insights to global efforts aimed at safeguarding poultry genetic diversity and sustainability.
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- 2024
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16. Climate Change Could Reduce the Geographic Distribution of the Natterjack Toad in Semi-Arid Regions: A 34-Year Study in Central Spain
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Carlos Cano-Barbacil and Javier Cano Sánchez
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biogeography ,climatic variables ,community of madrid ,conservation ,epidalea calamita ,phenology ,reproductive success ,temporal series ,temporary ponds ,weather conditions ,Geography. Anthropology. Recreation ,Human ecology. Anthropogeography ,GF1-900 ,Cities. Urban geography ,GF125 ,Geography (General) ,G1-922 - Abstract
Amphibians are globally threatened due to pollution, infection diseases, invasive species, habitat loss and climate change. Rising temperatures and shifts in precipitation regimes can have a major impact on the persistence of amphibian populations, especially in semi-arid regions. In this study, we used a long term time series spanning 34 years in central Spain to evaluate the effect of three climatic variables on the reproductive success of the natterjack toad (Epidalea calamita) in temporary ponds. Our results showed that reproductive success was only possible for seven years (20.6%). We found that reproductive success is positively related to the accumulated spring precipitation, while negatively related to mean spring temperature and spring evaporation. This study highlights the importance of conserving and restoring amphibian breeding habitats in order to minimize the potential impacts of climate change and habitat loss.
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- 2024
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17. Cinereous Vulture (<italic>Aegypius monachus</italic>) Welfare Monitoring in a Breeding Center during the Breeding Season.
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Plácido, Margarida, Tallo-Parra, Oriol, and Salas, Marina
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- *
BEHAVIORAL assessment , *BIOLOGICAL fitness , *SOCIAL norms , *VULTURES , *BIRDS of prey - Abstract
One of the conservation measures of the globally near-threatened cinereous vulture is restoring populations via translocations, with some vultures originating from breeding centers. These centers need to have reproductive success, and securing good welfare levels should be a priority due to the negative implications a compromised welfare has on reproduction. Thus, assessing welfare in breeding centers is essential. Remote methods should be preferred, such as behavior analysis and use of space using camera systems. The study’s first objective was to develop an activity budget that could be used as a baseline for detecting behavior irregularities. The second was to determine if behavior analysis and use of space could detect potential welfare issues in a breeding center. The study developed an activity budget that could be used as a standard for behavior analysis for the captive population. Behavior irregularities were detected, and the potential need to improve the enclosure and its surroundings were noticed. Altogether, the proposed methodology and results will contribute to the detection of possible welfare issues in breeding centers and, consequently, improve reproductive success and species’ conservation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. Reproductive Performance of the Alpine Plant Species Ranunculus kuepferi in a Climatic Elevation Gradient: Apomictic Tetraploids Do Not Show a General Fitness Advantage over Sexual Diploids.
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Ladinig, Ursula, Hörandl, Elvira, Klatt, Simone, and Wagner, Johanna
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MOUNTAIN plants , *FLOWER development , *POLLEN tube , *FLOWER seeds , *FLORAL morphology - Abstract
Previous studies on the mountain plant Ranunculus kuepferi concluded that apomictic self-compatible tetraploids have experienced a niche shift toward a colder climate during the Holocene, which suggests a fitness advantage over the sexual, self-sterile diploid parents under cold and stressful high-mountain conditions. However, there is still a lack of information on whether reproductive development would be advantageous for tetraploids. Here, we report on microsporogenesis, megagametogenesis, the dynamics of flower and seed development, and the consequences for reproductive success in a common garden experiment along a 1000 m climatic elevation gradient and in natural populations. Flower buds were initiated in the year preceding anthesis and passed winter in a pre-meiotic stage. Flower morphology differed in the known cytotype-specific way in that tetraploid flowers produced about twice as many carpels and fewer petals, stamens, and pollen grains than diploid flowers. Tetraploids developed precociously aposporous embryo sacs and showed a high rate of developmental disturbances. Sexual seed formation prevailed in diploids and pseudogamous apomixis in tetraploids. Along the elevation gradient, stigma pollen load, pollen performance, and seed output decreased. Combinations of reproductive traits, namely, bypass of meiosis irregularities and uniparental reproduction, might have promoted the vast expansion of apomictic R. kuepferi lines across the European Alps. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. A Sex‐Specific Trade‐Off Between Pesticide Resistance and Tolerance to Heat‐Induced Sterility in Tetranychus urticae.
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Costa, Sofia G., Magalhães, Sara, Santos, Inês, Zélé, Flore, and Rodrigues, Leonor R.
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PESTICIDE resistance , *GLOBAL warming , *AGRICULTURAL pests , *TWO-spotted spider mite , *BIOPESTICIDES - Abstract
Current pest management relies extensively on pesticide application worldwide, despite the frequent rise of pesticide resistance in crop pests. This is particularly worrisome because resistance is often not costly enough to be lost in populations after pesticide application, resulting in increased dependency on pesticide application. As climate warming increases, effort should be put into understanding how heat tolerance will affect the persistence of pesticide resistance in populations. To address this, we measured heat tolerance in two populations of the spider mite crop pest Tetranychus urticae that differ in the presence or absence of a target‐site mutation conferring resistance to etoxazole pesticide. We found that developmental time and fertility, but not survival, were negatively affected by increasing temperatures in the susceptible population. Furthermore, we found no difference between resistant and susceptible populations in all life‐history traits when both sexes developed at control temperature, nor when females developed at high temperature. Resistant heat‐stressed males, in contrast, showed lower fertility than susceptible ones, indicating a sex‐specific trade‐off between heat tolerance and pesticide resistance. This suggests that global warming could lead to reduced pesticide resistance in natural populations. However, resistant females, being as affected by high temperature as susceptible individuals, may buffer the toll in resistant male fertility, and the shorter developmental time at high temperatures may accelerate adaptation to temperature, the pesticide or the cost thereof. Ultimately, the complex dynamic between these two factors will determine whether resistant populations can persist under climate warming. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. Formulation and evaluation of solid lipid nanoparticles loaded with papaya seed chloroform extract for long-term antifertility effects on the male rat, Bandicota bengalensis.
- Author
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Thukral, Ruchika, Arora, Payal, Sharma, Sunidhi, Choudhury, Diptiman, and Singla, Neena
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CONTROLLED release drugs , *CONTRACEPTIVE drugs , *BIOLOGICAL fitness , *SPERM motility , *SPERM count , *PAPAYA - Abstract
The study is the first to formulate and investigate potential of papaya seed chloroform extract based solid lipid nanoparticles (PSCEN) as antifertility agents on male Bandicota bengalensis. The prepared nanoparticles were spherical of size 300–600 nm. The release kinetics showed a controlled release of the drug with major release over 48 h. To assess the antifertility effects of PSCEN, adult male rats were fed a diet containing two different concentrations of PSCEN (5% and 10%) for 15 days under bi-choice conditions. The mean total active ingredient ingestion of the rats in the two treated groups ranged from 2.13–3.31 and 3.92–5.87 g/100g body weight, respectively. No adverse effects of treatment on body weight were observed. Also, no mortality of rats was observed. The treatment had a significant effect on the weight of the testis and the epididymis, but not on the other organs. Sperm motility (%), sperm viability (%), sperm count (millions/ml), sperm mitochondrial activity (%), sperm nuclear chromatin de-condensation (%) and sperm hypo-osmotic swelling (%) were significantly decreased, and sperm abnormality (%) significantly increased compared to the vehicle control group. The reproductive success rates of male rats treated with 5% and 10% PSCEN and mated with untreated female rats were 20.00–66.67% and 16.67%, respectively, while in untreated female rats mated with male rats of vehicle control group, reproductive success rate was 33.33 to 80%. The study found a maximal antifertility effect of the 10% PSCEN containing bait, which was irreversible up to 105 days after stopping treatment, suggesting long-term efficacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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21. Nanoselenium improves drought tolerance of sorghum via reduced transpiration rate and osmolytic accumulation.
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Djanaguiraman, M., Priyanka, A.S., Haripriya, S., Kalarani, M.K., and Umapathi, M.
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POLLEN , *BIOLOGICAL fitness , *SEED yield , *PHOTOSYNTHETIC rates , *DROUGHT tolerance , *SORGHUM - Abstract
• Nanoselenium (n-Se) up to 20 mg L−1 did not cause toxicity at any trophic levels. • Application of n-Se at 20 mg L−1 reduced sorghum transpiration rate under drought. • Application of n-Se at 20 mg L−1 increased sorghum photosynthetic rate under drought. • During drought, n-Se enhanced seed-set by preserving reproductive tissue structures. Sorghum [ Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench] grain yield is vulnerable to drought stress. Therefore, developing appropriate technologies to mitigate drought is essential. We hypothesize that inhibition of photosynthesis and reproductive success by drought in sorghum can be improved by enhanced osmolyte accumulation and antioxidant defence system by foliar application of nanoselenium. In this study, the ecotoxicity potential and the physiological basis of drought alleviation by nanoselenium were evaluated. Nanoselenium did not cause toxicity to soil, aquatic and terrestrial organisms up to 20 mg L−1. During drought, foliar application of nanoselenium at 20 mg L−1 reduced the transpiration rate (16 %) compared to water spray. The superoxide radical content (50 %), hydrogen peroxide content (35 %), and membrane damage (26 %) were reduced, indicating antioxidant activity was exerted by nanoselenium. In contrast, the leaf turgor potential (80 %), relative water content (17 %), reducing sugars (57 %), non-reducing sugars (11 %), and proline (35 %) contents were increased by nanoselenium than water spray, indicating a higher tissue water content was maintained, which has increased the photosynthetic rate (26 %). Higher reproductive success in nanoselenium-sprayed plants under drought was associated with reproductive tissue morphology and an increased number of pollen grains attached to the stigma. Foliar application of nanoselenium at 20 mg L−1 increased seed-set percentage (21 %) and seed yield (26 %) under drought than control. A similar response was observed by foliar spray with sodium selenate. Overall, foliar application of nanoselenium at 20 mg L−1 improved the drought tolerance of sorghum by reducing the transpiration rate and increasing the antioxidant defense system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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22. Fitness consequences of variation in social group size are not population‐specific but are associated with access to food in the communally breeding rodent, Octodon degus.
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Hayes, Loren D., Strom, Madeline K., León, Cecilia, Ramírez‐Estrada, Juan, Grillo, Sara, Gao, Cuilan L., Vásquez, Rodrigo A., and Ebensperger, Luis A.
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SOCIAL groups , *BIOLOGICAL fitness , *SOCIAL impact , *COMMUNAL living , *SOCIAL structure - Abstract
Studies that concurrently investigate the functional benefits of group living in multiple populations of the same species are rare. Over a 3‐year period (2014–2016), we examined two ecologically contrasting populations to test multiple hypotheses for the adaptive significance of group living in the communally breeding rodent Octodon degus. We quantified the size of social units (number of adults, number of adult females), edible vegetation at burrow systems, and per capita offspring weaned (PCOW) in each population. Contrary to expectations, we did not observe population‐specific associations between group size and edible vegetation or PCOW nor universal benefits of group living. In one population, PCOW increased in mid‐sized groups with more edible vegetation. However, this trend was not consistent across years. Notably, we observed a complete reproductive failure in one population during the first year of study, one that was characterized by low rainfall and no detectable edible vegetation. This result is important because reproductive failure occurred regardless of group size, suggesting that communal living may not buffer degus against the harshest of environmental conditions. Examining how social organization shapes individual reproductive success under extreme variation in food availability is an important step towards understanding how populations will respond to a changing climate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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23. Adult telomere length is positively correlated with survival and lifetime reproductive success in a wild passerine.
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Chik, Heung Ying Janet, Mannarelli, Maria‐Elena, dos Remedios, Natalie, Simons, Mirre J. P., Burke, Terry, Schroeder, Julia, and Dugdale, Hannah L.
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BIOLOGICAL fitness , *REPRODUCTION , *BABY birds , *ENGLISH sparrow , *TELOMERES , *ADULTS , *LIFE history theory , *DNA sequencing - Abstract
Explaining variation in individual fitness is a key goal in evolutionary biology. Recently, telomeres, repeating DNA sequences capping chromosome ends, have gained attention as a biomarker for body state, physiological costs, and senescence. Existing research has provided mixed evidence for whether telomere length correlates with fitness, including survival and reproductive output. Moreover, few studies have examined how the rate of change in telomere length correlates with fitness in wild populations. Here, we intensively monitored an insular population of house sparrows, and collected longitudinal telomere and life history data (16 years, 1225 individuals). We tested whether telomere length and its rate of change predict fitness measures, namely survival, lifespan and annual and lifetime reproductive effort and success. Telomere length positively predicted short‐term survival, independent of age, but did not predict lifespan, suggesting either a diminishing telomere length—survival correlation with age or other extrinsic factors of mortality. The positive association of telomere length with survival translated into reproductive benefits, as birds with longer telomeres produced more genetic recruits, hatchlings and reared more fledglings over their lifetime. In contrast, there was no association between telomere dynamics and annual reproductive output, suggesting telomere dynamics might not reflect the costs of reproduction in this population, potentially masked by variation in individual quality. The rate of change of telomere length did not correlate with neither lifespan nor lifetime reproductive success. Our results provide further evidence that telomere length correlates with fitness, and contribute to our understanding of the selection on, and evolution of, telomere dynamics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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24. Does the potential strength of sexual selection differ between mating systems with and without defensive behaviours? A meta‐analysis.
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Macedo‐Rego, Renato C., Jennions, Michael D., and Santos, Eduardo S. A.
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SEXUAL selection , *FEMALES , *SPERM competition , *HUMAN sexuality , *POLYANDRY , *BIOLOGICAL fitness , *PATERNITY - Abstract
The Darwin–Bateman paradigm predicts that females enhance their fitness by being choosy and mating with high‐quality males, while males should compete to mate with as many females as possible. In many species, males enhance their fitness by defending females and/or resources used by females. That is, males directly defend access to mating opportunities. However, paternity analyses have repeatedly shown that females in most species mate polyandrously, which contradicts traditional expectations that male defensive behaviours lead to monandry. Here, in an extensive meta‐analysis, encompassing 109 species and 1026 effect sizes from across the animal kingdom, we tested if the occurrence of defensive behaviours modulates sexual selection on females and males. If so, we can illuminate the extent to which males really succeed in defending access to mating and fertilisation opportunities. We used four different indices of the opportunity for sexual selection that comprise pre‐mating and/or post‐mating episodes of selection. We found, for both sexes, that the occurrence of defensive behaviours does not modulate the potential strength of sexual selection. This implies that male defensive behaviours do not predict the true intensity of sexual selection. While the most extreme levels of sexual selection on males are in species with male defensive behaviours, which indicates that males do sometimes succeed in restricting females' re‐mating ability (e.g. elephant seals, Mirounga leonina), estimates of the opportunity for sexual selection vary greatly across species, regardless of whether or not defensive behaviours occur. Indeed, widespread polyandry shows that females are usually not restricted by male defensive behaviours. In addition, our results indicate that post‐mating episodes of selection, such as cryptic female choice and sperm competition, might be important factors modulating the opportunity for sexual selection. We discuss: (i) why male defensive behaviours fail to lower the opportunity for sexual selection among females or fail to elevate it for males; (ii) how post‐mating events might influence sexual selection; and (iii) the role of females as active participants in sexual selection. We also highlight that inadequate data reporting in the literature prevented us from extracting effect sizes from many studies that had presumably collected the relevant data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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25. Pollinator shift ensures reproductive success in a camouflaged alpine plant.
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Huang, Tao, Song, Bo, Chen, Zhe, Sun, Hang, and Niu, Yang
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POLLINATORS , *POLLINATION , *BIOLOGICAL fitness , *MOUNTAIN plants , *BUMBLEBEES , *MOUNTAIN ecology , *FRITILLARIA - Abstract
Background and Aims There are intrinsic conflicts between signalling to mutualists and concealing (camouflaging) from antagonists. Like animals, plants also use camouflage as a defence against herbivores. However, this can potentially reduce their attractiveness to pollinators. Methods Using Fritillaria delavayi , an alpine camouflaged plant with inter-population floral colour divergence, we tested the influence of floral trait differences on reproduction. We conducted pollination experiments, measured floral morphological characteristics, estimated floral colours perceived by pollinators, analysed floral scent and investigated reproductive success in five populations. Key Results We found that the reproduction of F. delavayi depends on pollinators. Under natural conditions, a flower-camouflaged population had 100 % fruit set and similar seed set to three out of four yellow-flowered populations. Bumblebees are important pollinators in the visually conspicuous yellow-flowered populations, whereas flies are the only pollinator in the flower-camouflaged population, visiting flowers more frequently than bumblebees. The camouflaged flowers cannot be discriminated from the rock background as perceived by pollinators, but may be located by flies through olfactory cues. Conclusions Collectively, our results demonstrate that the flower-camouflaged population has different reproductive traits from the visually conspicuous yellow-flowered populations. A pollinator shift from bumblebees to flies, combined with high visitation frequency, compensates for the attractiveness disadvantage in camouflaged plants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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26. Untangling the plant reproductive success of changing community composition and pollinator foraging choices.
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Allen‐Perkins, Alfonso, Artamendi, Maddi, Montoya, Daniel, Rubio, Encarnación, and Magrach, Ainhoa
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- *
PLANT competition , *BIOLOGICAL fitness , *POLLINATORS , *PLANT species diversity , *FLOWERING of plants , *FLORAL morphology - Abstract
Pollinator choices when selecting flowers for nectar or pollen collection are crucial in determining the effectiveness of pollination services provided to plants. From the plant's perspective, this effectiveness is a phenomenon shaped by factors at both the species‐ (e.g. pollinator density and flower morphology) and community‐level, including pollinator diversity and plant competition for pollinators. At the species level, individual pollinator effectiveness is influenced by foraging choices, plant identity, and the resulting pollen flow within and between plant species. In natural ecosystems, these species coexist within a complex community, where various interactions can modify foraging choices and alter pollen flows, giving rise to community‐level effectiveness, a less explored aspect of pollinator effectiveness. This study investigates the drivers of individual pollinator foraging choices across two study areas and two flowering seasons. It also assesses the community‐level effectiveness of pollination services received by different plant species, considering indirect interactions between plants through shared pollinators and evaluating their impact on plant reproductive success. Our results show that the determinants of pollinator foraging choices are consistent across different habitats, with floral constancy and flower abundance playing pivotal roles across all species and sites. Foraging choices can shift throughout the flowering season as plant and pollinator composition changes, significantly impacting pollination effectiveness. The overlap in pollination service use by individuals of the same plant species decreases their fruit set, whereas sharing pollinator services with individuals of other plant species increases fruit set. Our results support significant, positive biodiversity–ecosystem functioning associations driven by both plant and pollinator species richness, suggesting that the overlap in pollination service use by different plant species fosters facilitative interactions rather than competition. This is likely influenced by more stable pollination supplies under high plant species diversity conditions and the existence of mechanisms to mitigate the negative impacts of heterospecific pollen deposition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. Sex‐specific overdominance at the maturation vgll3 gene for reproductive fitness in wild Atlantic salmon.
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Mobley, Kenyon B., Barton, Henry J., Ellmén, Mikko, Ruokolainen, Annukka, Guttorm, Olavi, Pieski, Hans, Orell, Panu, Erkinaro, Jaakko, and Primmer, Craig R.
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ATLANTIC salmon , *REPRODUCTION , *GENETIC variation , *BIOLOGICAL fitness , *GENES , *GENOTYPES - Abstract
Linking reproductive fitness with adaptive traits at the genomic level can shed light on the mechanisms that produce and maintain sex‐specific selection. Here, we construct a multigenerational pedigree to investigate sex‐specific selection on a maturation gene, vgll3, in a wild Atlantic salmon population. The vgll3 locus is responsible for ~40% of the variation in maturation (sea age at first reproduction). Genetic parentage analysis was conducted on 18,265 juveniles (parr) and 685 adults collected at the same spawning ground over eight consecutive years. A high proportion of females (26%) were iteroparous and reproduced two to four times in their lifetime. A smaller proportion of males (9%) spawned at least twice in their lifetime. Sex‐specific patterns of reproductive fitness were related to vgll3 genotype. Females showed a pattern of overdominance where vgll3*EL genotypes had three‐fold more total offspring than homozygous females. In contrast, males demonstrated that late‐maturing vgll3*LL individuals had two‐fold more offspring than either vgll3*EE or vgll3*EL males. Taken together, these data suggest that balancing selection in females contributes to the maintenance of variation at this locus via increased fitness of iteroparous vgll3*EL females. This study demonstrates the utility of multigenerational pedigrees for uncovering complex patterns of reproduction, sex‐specific selection and the maintenance of genetic variation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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28. Compensating from a bad start in life: linking male energy reserves to reproductive output in a polyphagous moth.
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Lorrain-Soligon, Léa, Muller, Karen, Teixeira, Maria, Thiéry, Denis, and Moreau, Jérôme
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ENERGY levels (Quantum mechanics) , *PHYTOPHAGOUS insects , *POPULATION dynamics , *HOST plants , *BIOLOGICAL fitness , *SPERMATOPHORES - Abstract
Reproduction is known to be energetically and physiologically costly. Consequently, individuals in good condition are assumed to invest substantial resources in reproduction, while those in poor condition are unable to do so. This is particularly relevant in insects, where reproduction is a nutrient-limited process for males and females and is largely related to their energy reserves. Lepidopteran phytophagous insects are an ideal model to evaluate how larval nutrition affects adult reproductive strategies, because larval host plant is considered a key determinant of the adult phenotype and the performance of both males and females. We studied a capital breeder moth species, the European grapevine moth (Lobesia botrana), to investigate how male energy reserves, body condition and reproductive traits might influence female reproductive output, using different host plants as a means of obtaining different male quality. We found that the host cultivar for the larvae strongly influenced the energy reserves of male adult moths, affecting their body condition and ultimately their reproductive potential through the content of spermatophores they transfer to females at mating. Moreover, males having different levels of energy reserves may alter the allocation of energy between their body condition and spermatophore size and composition, supporting the idea that organisms can buffer the effect of nutritional constraints by changing allocation to different fitness-related traits. Females also seem to be able to adjust latency to oviposition accordingly. These results have important implications for understanding the population dynamics of this moth species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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29. Ecological drivers of nesting behavior in a subtropical city: An observational study on spotted doves.
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Sheng, Yao, Lu, Mengjie, Bai, Junpeng, Xie, Xiaobin, Ma, Long, Li, Wanyou, Zhang, Zhen, Ming, Fang, Zhang, Xueli, Zhang, Ziwei, Xu, Zhifeng, Han, Yuqing, Guan, Bicai, and Ruan, Luzhang
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HABITAT selection , *NEST building , *BIOLOGICAL fitness , *ARTIFICIAL satellite tracking , *FIELD research , *NEST predation , *BIRD nests - Abstract
Due to rapid homogenization in habitat types as a result of urbanization, some urban birds adapt their nesting strategies to changes in local habitat characteristics. Bird nesting decisions might have been mainly linked to resource constraints and ensuring reproductive success. In this study, we examined patterns of nesting behavior by spotted doves (Spilopelia chinensis) in a rapidly urbanizing area of Nanchang, China using ArcGIS 10.8, satellite tracking, camera traps, and field survey. To explore the mechanisms underlying nesting behavior in urban habitats, we assessed the correlations between nest reuse and reproductive success, and between nest reuse and nest predation. From December 2018 to December 2021, a total of 302 breeding nests were surveyed. The results revealed that the nest reuse rate was 38.08% (n = 115). Nests closer to trunk, with lower nest position and higher large‐scale urbanization score tended to have higher reuse rate. In addition, nests with the higher the nest height and percent of canopy cover, and the lower small‐scale urbanization score were more likely to reproduce successfully, and the reused nests also reproduce more successfully. The reproductive success associated with nest reuse was significantly higher than that associated with new nests (χ2 = 8.461, p =.004). High degree of urbanization promoted nest reuse of spotted doves (large‐scale urbanization score, z = 2.094, p =.036), which apparently enhanced their reproductive success (nest reuse, z = 2.737, p =.006). In conclusion, a nest structure with good permeability is the material basis for the nest reuse in spotted dove, while the relatively low risk of predation in urban habitat and the scarcity of nest site resources due to urbanization increase the tendency of birds to reuse old nests, which is associated with their reproductive success and evolutionary fitness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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30. Nest predation and climate change as drivers of alternative reproductive tactics in a migratory species.
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Pöysä, Hannu
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- *
NEST predation , *LIFE history theory , *MIGRATORY animals , *BROOD parasitism , *EGGS , *PHENOTYPIC plasticity , *BIRD eggs - Abstract
Alternative reproductive tactics enable individuals to choose a reproductive tactic relative to their status and prevailing environmental conditions in a way that increases their fitness. For example, females in many avian species show phenotypic plasticity and employ alternative reproductive tactics to cope with changes in predation risk and climate. Conspecific brood parasitism (CBP), in which females lay eggs in nests of conspecifics, is one example of such behaviour. It has been proposed that when prospects for successful nesting are low and/or costs of reproduction are high, females employ tactics of low effort such as non‐breeding and parasitic laying. When environmental conditions are ideal and prospects for success high, females can increase their reproductive effort above typical nesting by laying parasitic eggs prior to initiating their own nest. Here, I used this flexible life‐history strategy concept and long‐term (1994‒2022) population level data of the common goldeneye Bucephala clangula to study how the rate of parasitic laying varies in relation to variation in nest predation risk and in the timing and length of the breeding season, the latter being measured by the timing of ice breakup. Nest predation rate in the previous year and timing of ice breakup interactively affected parasitic laying, the rate of parasitic laying being particularly high in years with late ice breakup and high nest predation rate in the previous year. Furthermore, the proportion of predated eggs was lower in parasitized nests than in non‐parasitized nests, while the opposite was true for the proportion of eggs that failed in other way. As a consequence, the final number of young produced per nest was higher for parasitized nests. The findings of this study show that changes in environmental conditions affect the dynamics of alternative reproductive tactics in goldeneyes, with consequences to population level reproductive output. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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31. Effect of robbing intensity on reproductive success of Symphytum officinale (Boraginaceae).
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Ehmet, Nurbiye, Wang, Tai-Hong, Zhang, Yi-Ping, Zhao, Xiang, Sun, Kun, and Hou, Qin-Zheng
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- *
BIOLOGICAL fitness , *BORAGINACEAE , *FORAGING behavior , *NECTAR , *POLLINATORS - Abstract
The intervention of nectar robbers in plant pollination systems will cause some pollinators to modify their foraging behavior to act as secondary robbers, consequently adopting a mixed foraging strategy. The influence of nectar robbing on pollinator behavior may be affected by spatio-temporal difference of robbing intensity, and consequently, may have different effects on the pollination of host plants. However, whether and how the nectar robbing might influence pollinators under different robbing intensity still needs further investigation. In this study, Symphytum officinale was used to detect the effect of nectar robbers on pollinators under different robbing intensity as well as their effects on plant reproductive success. Six robbing levels and three bumblebees with mixed foraging behaviors were used to evaluate the effect of different robbing intensity on pollinator behavior, visitation rate, flower longevity and pollen deposition. Our results indicated that the robbing rate increased gradually with the proportion of robbed flowers, but which did not affect the frequency of legitimate visits. The increase of robbing rate promoted the corolla abscission, and then enhanced the self-pollen deposition, but which had no significant effect on cross-pollen deposition. These results indicate that the overall fitness of S. officinale was improved by combined self and cross-pollination modes when visited by both pollinators and nectar robbers simultaneously. Although nectar robbing is not uncommon, its consequences for pollination in the interaction web have not been well studied. Our results emphasize the significance of indirect impacts in mediating the adaptive outcomes of species interactions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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32. Evidence of honest signalling in a suboscine bird: Southwestern willow flycatcher song frequency is positively related to apparent reproductive success.
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Mahoney, S.M., Davis, P., Dodge, C., Edwards, C., Holmes, J.A., Jennings, Q., Johnson, M.J., Lundgren, E.J., McLeod, M.A., Moore, D., Motyka, P.J., Pellegrini, A., Rakestraw, D.N., Smith, A.N.B., Winton, R.R., and Woodhouse, E.
- Subjects
- *
BIOLOGICAL fitness , *ANIMAL behavior , *SEXUAL selection , *SONGBIRDS , *IDENTIFICATION of animals , *BIRDSONGS - Abstract
Acoustic signalling mediates key animal behaviours, but the factors driving inter- and intra-specific variation remain elusive, especially in non-learning suboscine birds. Acoustic traits may evolve to signal an individual's quality through a process termed honest signalling. Most studies on bird song evolution via honest signalling focus on oscine bird species (song learners) while fewer evaluate honest signalling in suboscines. We tested whether song was an honest signal of male quality in southwestern willow flycatchers (Empidonax traillii extimus), a suboscine, by monitoring nest success and recording male advertisement songs. Based on song characteristics known to vary among individuals, we found higher minimum song frequency, but not temporal components, was positively correlated with the number of fledglings and nest success, after accounting for first egg date, the number of eggs, and clutch number. Our study therefore offers evidence that suboscine song may have evolved as an honest signal of reproductive success. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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33. Offspring sex ratio increases with paternal reproductive success in a colony of southern elephant seals.
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Allegue, Hassen, Guinet, Christophe, Patrick, Samantha C., Ribout, Cécile, Bichet, Coraline, Lepais, Olivier, and Réale, Denis
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BIOLOGICAL fitness ,ANIMAL offspring sex ratio ,SONS ,SEX ratio ,SOCIAL status ,GENETIC markers ,POLYGYNY - Abstract
In polygynous species, male reproductive success is often determined by their ability to dominate female harems. Harem‐holders sire a disproportionate number of offspring. Male dominance tends to correlate with age, but intense competition and early male mortality limit most males from achieving high social status. To maximize reproductive success despite low rank, offspring sex ratio adjustment may have evolved, favoring the sex with higher fitness. If traits influencing dominance are heritable and confer reproductive advantages, we expect fathers with higher reproductive success to produce more sons, as they are more likely to become dominant. In contrast, subordinate males with lower success may benefit from siring more daughters. We tested this hypothesis on a colony of southern elephant seals breeding on the Kerguelen Archipelago. We used genetic markers to link the paternity of 540 pups to 58 breeding males. We found that the probability of siring a son increases from 43% to 54% with paternal relative reproductive success, supporting the offspring sex ratio adjustment hypothesis. Given that various factors influence sex ratio in a population, future studies should tease apart these ecological processes (e.g., paternal dominance, maternal condition, local density, or adult sex ratio) and investigate how they interact with each other. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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34. The Functional Dilemma of Nectar Mimic Staminodes in Parnassia wightiana (Celastraceae): Attracting Pollinators and Florivorous Beetles
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Shi‐Jia Wen, Shan Chen, Andre Rodrigo Rech, Ling Ji, Hong Wang, Zhiyong Wang, Ding Wu, and Zong‐Xin Ren
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floral trait ,florivory ,nectary‐mimicking staminode ,pollinator attraction ,reproductive success ,staminodes ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
ABSTRACT While floral signaling plays a central role in the reproductive success of all animal‐pollinated plants, it may also attract herbivores eager to feed on flowers. False nectaries with glossy surfaces reflecting incident light may produce signals that attract floral visitors guiding their movements to and within the flower. Whether false nectaries also attract herbivores that lower the reproductive success of natural populations requires attention. In this study, we focus on Parnassia wightiana, a subalpine species with a whorl of staminodes that act as false nectaries attracting bees, flies, and herbivorous beetles. We tested the functions of staminodes using controlled manipulative experiments under field and lab conditions. We found a significant decrease in pollinator visits, and subsequent seed set, in flowers in which we removed staminodes or staminode apices confirming the function of these organs. In our natural populations, we found that a beetle, Nonarthra variabilis (Alticinae; Chrysomelidae), chews first on staminode apices, then it eats the entire staminodes and other flower parts, but rarely feeds on ovaries. Additional experiments suggested these beetles preferred staminodes to ovaries. Our results suggest this is a case of selective florivory, in which staminodes play a dual role, attracting pollinators and herbivores at the same time causing the attractive dilemma. Although selective florivory by beetles did not directly damage fruits, it influenced plant‐pollinator interactions, decreasing reproductive success in plant populations. Our study highlights the importance of plant‐pollinator‐herbivore interactions in selecting floral traits.
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- 2024
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35. Seasonal Patterns of Resource Use Within Natural Populations of Burying Beetles
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Swastika Issar, Chloé Leroy, Patrizia d'Ettorre, and Rebecca M. Kilner
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age structure ,burying beetles ,cuticular hydrocarbons ,phenology ,reproductive success ,seasonality ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
ABSTRACT For organisms in temperate environments, seasonal variation in resource availability and weather conditions exert fluctuating selection pressures on survival and fitness, resulting in diverse adaptive responses. By manipulating resource availability on a local spatial scale, we studied seasonal patterns of resource use within natural populations of burying beetles Nicrophorus vespilloides in a Norfolk woodland. Burying beetles are necrophagous insects that breed on vertebrate carcasses. They are active in Europe between April and October, after which they burrow into the soil and overwinter. Using breeding and chemical analyses, we compared the fecundity and physiological state of beetles that differed in their seasonal resource use. We found seasonal variation in carrion use by wild burying beetles and correlated differences in their reproductive success and cuticular hydrocarbon profiles. Our results provide novel insight into the seasonal correlates of behaviour, physiology and life history in burying beetles.
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- 2024
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36. The effect of experimental warming on reproductive performance and parental care in the burying beetle Nicrophorus nepalensis
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Tanzil Gaffar Malik, Benjamin J. M. Jarrett, and Syuan-Jyun Sun
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climate change ,reproductive success ,life-history traits ,nest construction ,Science - Abstract
Rising temperatures can adversely affect parental care and reproductive performance across a range of taxa. However, the warming impact is contingent upon understanding how temperature affects the spectrum of parental behaviours and their interplay. Here, we assessed how temperature affects parental care and reproductive success in the burying beetle, Nicrophorus nepalensis, which exhibits complex parental care behaviours. We exposed breeding pairs of N. nepalensis, to three temperature regimes (18°C, 20°C and 22°C) and assessed changes in parental care, and the subsequent development and growth of their offspring. Our findings show that 22°C disrupts carcass nest building by the parents and results in smaller clutches. Moreover, no eggs successfully hatched in the 22°C treatment. A milder increase to 20°C did not affect the hatching rate but resulted in smaller broods and lighter offspring, even when considering brood size, suggesting a change in post-hatching care quality. Our research suggests that warming may weakly affect parental care but has strong detrimental effects on offspring performance. These findings highlight the necessity of investigating the effect of ambient temperature across a diversity of traits and behaviours and across a range of life-history stages to fully assess species vulnerability in the face of future climate change.
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- 2024
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37. Understanding Diversity and Inclusion in the Context of Fractured Globalization
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Moghaddam, Fathali M. and Moghaddam, Fathali M.
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- 2024
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38. The positive impact of honeybee activity on fennel crop production and sustainability.
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Ali, Mahmoud Abbas, Al-Farga, Ammar, and Seddik, M. A.
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- *
AGRICULTURAL productivity , *AGRICULTURAL conservation , *FENNEL , *HONEYBEES , *BEE colonies , *BEEKEEPING - Abstract
This study investigates the ecological interaction between honeybees (Apis mellifera) and fennel (Foeniculum vulgare) plants, examining the mutual benefits of this relationship. Field experiments conducted in Egypt from December 2022 to May 2023 recorded diverse insect pollinators attracted to fennel flowers, especially honeybees. Assessing honeybee colonies near fennel fields showed improvements in sealed brood (357.5–772.5 cells), unsealed brood (176.3–343.8 cells), pollen collection (53.25–257.5 units), honey accumulation (257.5–877.5 units), and colony strength (7.75–10) over three weeks. Fennel exposure explained 88–99% of variability in foraging metrics. Comparing open versus self-pollinated fennel revealed enhanced attributes with bee pollination, including higher flower age (25.67 vs 19.67 days), more seeds per umbel (121.3 vs 95.33), bigger seeds (6.533 vs 4.400 mm), heavier seeds (0.510 vs 0.237 g/100 seeds), and increased fruit weight per umbel (0.619 vs 0.226 g). Natural variation in seed color and shape also occurred. The outcomes demonstrate the integral role of honeybees in fennel agroecosystems through efficient pollination services that improve crop productivity and quality. Fennel provides abundant nutritional resources that bolster honeybee colony health. This research elucidates the symbiotic bee-fennel relationship, underscoring mutualistic benefits and the importance of ecological conservation for sustainable agriculture. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Embryonic heart rate is higher in species that experience greater nest predation risk during incubation.
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Di Giovanni, Alexander J., Jones, Todd M., Benson, Thomas J., and Ward, Michael P.
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PREDATION , *NEST predation , *HEART beat , *EMBRYOLOGY , *ANIMAL clutches , *BIRD eggs , *SPECIES , *EMBRYOS , *LOW temperatures - Abstract
Avian eggs develop outside of the female body, and therefore embryonic development is subject to multiple internal (physiological) and external (ecological) factors. Embryonic developmental rate has important consequences for survival. Within species, embryos that develop too quickly often experience deformities, disorders, or mortality, while embryos that develop slowly risk inviability and increase the time they are exposed to various sources of mortality in the nest. These contrasting forces may lead to interspecific variation in developmental rates. We investigated potential factors affecting embryonic heart rate (EHR), a proxy of development, across 14 passerine species in the field. More specifically, we investigated if nest predation risk, clutch size, seasonality, and egg volume influenced EHR. From previous research, we expected, and found, that EHR was positively associated with embryonic age and egg temperature. Species with greater nest predation risk had higher EHR, shorter incubation periods, and lower nest temperature variance. EHR increased as the season progressed and with egg volume, while EHR declined with clutch size. Bird species exhibit varying strategies to increase nestling and fledgling survival in response to predation risk, and these results suggest that variation in embryonic development may be related to species‐specific differences in nest predation risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Successful reproduction of female loggerhead sea turtles with severe limb amputations.
- Author
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Marco, A., Sáez, A., Martins, S., Abella‐Pérez, E., Clarke, L. J., and Crespo‐Picazo, J. L.
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LOGGERHEAD turtle , *ANIMAL clutches , *AMPUTATION , *TURTLE nests , *BIOLOGICAL fitness - Abstract
We evaluate the frequency of flipper amputation and its impact on reproduction in the threatened loggerhead turtle (Caretta caretta) population of the Eastern Atlantic, through a long‐term study on several high‐density nesting beaches of Cabo Verde. 5982 adult females were individually identified, tagged and measured, and the presence of limb amputations was recorded. 918 of them had one or multiple amputations of the rear or front flippers. Most of these turtles (n = 778) had partial rather than complete flipper amputations. However, we found no difference in body condition indices (1.2 vs. 1.1), clutch size (82 vs. 83 eggs), or hatching success (79 vs. 80%) between amputated and non‐amputated females. While amputations may cause individual mortality or reduced fitness, our results indicate that some amputated turtles successfully nest and survive across multiple nesting seasons. Moreover, the amputations do not appear to be impacting the strong recovery of this population. This study provides evidence of the successful reproductive capacity of amputated loggerhead sea turtles and, by extension, the potential reproductive success of amputees released from recovery centers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Effect of Chemical Pollution on the Fertility of Male Rodents from Natural Populations: Сomparing the Response of Sperm Morphology, Motility, and Concentration.
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Smirnov, G. Yu. and Davydova, Yu. A.
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POLLUTION , *SPERMATOZOA , *FERTILITY , *RODENTS , *APODEMUS , *INDUSTRIAL pollution , *SEMEN - Abstract
The results of studies of epididymal spermatozoa of three species of rodents (bank vole Clethrionomys glareolus, northern red-backed vole Cl. rutilus, and herb field mouse Sylvaemus uralensis) living under long-term exposure to atmospheric emissions from two large copper smelters in the Middle Urals are summarized (Middle Ural and Kirovgrad copper smelters). The impact of pollution (including at the individual level on the accumulation of Cu, Zn, Pb, and Cd in the liver) was assessed for indicators characterizing the quality of sperm from different aspects: morphology (proportion of cells with head and tail defects), motility (proportion of motile cells, velocity, and straightness of movement) and concentration. Sperm motility responds to pollution: in impact zones, the proportion of motile cells and their velocity were lower than in background zones. The occurrence of abnormal cells and sperm concentration were not statistically significantly different between impact and background zones. The reaction of sperm to chemical pollution is species-specific: voles react more strongly than the herb field mouse. The consistency of changes in sperm parameters (in the direction of their deterioration) in response to increased pollution was found only in the bank vole. Effect sizes for sperm parameters are much smaller compared to those for liver Cd accumulation and animal abundance. In general, the reaction of sperm to pollution turned out to be weak, none of the studied indicators can be a reliable marker of industrial pollution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Applying parentage methods to detect gravel augmentation effects on juvenile Chinook Salmon recruitment rates.
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Blankenship, Scott M., Scherer, Avery, Dean, Cheryl, Sellheim, Kirsten, Sweeney, Jamie, and Merz, Joseph
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CHINOOK salmon ,FISH spawning ,SPAWNING ,GRAVEL ,GENETIC techniques ,BODY size ,HABITATS ,RACTOPAMINE - Abstract
Quantifiable measurement of habitat restoration effects on salmonid reproductive performance is limited, although it is necessary for evaluating whether population responses follow management actions. We investigated using close‐kin mark‐recapture methods to partition restoration effects within standard monitoring metrics of juvenile emigrants leaving the natal reach. This approach allowed for statistical comparison of relative juvenile capture rates (recruitment) from Chinook Salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) naturally reproducing in gravel augmented (restored) and nonaugmented (unrestored) reaches of a highly managed California River. Genetic parentage techniques linked adult females that had spawned in augmented and nonaugmented spawning habitats with juvenile Chinook Salmon sampled the following spring at a trap located below the natal spawning area. Successful recruitment was documented from both augmented and nonaugmented habitats, with no statistical difference between the two habitat types. The capture rate per adult female was low (0.19–0.24 juveniles/female) compared to rates observed in other systems. Within the juvenile collections, most females in the study had 0 or 1 offspring observed; however, one female that spawned in a restored habitat had 25 offspring recovered at the trap. We modeled juvenile capture rates in relation to a range of biological and environmental variables including spawning habitat site, spawning habitat treatment (augmented and nonaugmented), annual spawner abundance, year spawned, female fork length, spawning and hatch day, and flow maximum and variance. There was an inverse relationship between annual adult abundance (escapement obtained from carcass surveys) and recruitment (juvenile recoveries at trap), suggesting habitat limitation may be creating density‐dependent effects. Additionally, female body size was positively associated with recruitment, while spawning day and mean daily temperature were inversely associated with recruitment, suggesting that both biological and environmental factors independent of habitat influenced reproduction potential. This study provides evidence that habitat restoration could have an additive (incremental) positive effect on recruitment rate, informing hatchery management and restoration activities related to population recovery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Nesting ecology and confirmed breeding of the invasive pond slider Trachemys scripta in an urban environment, Romania.
- Author
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Fănaru, Geanina, Petrovan, Silviu, Băncilă, Raluca I., Vizireanu, Miruna G., Drăgan, Ovidiu, Vlad, Sabina E., Rozylowicz, Laurentiu, and Cogălniceanu, Dan
- Subjects
WETLANDS ,CONSTRUCTED wetlands ,PONDS ,BIOLOGICAL fitness ,FRESHWATER habitats ,METROPOLIS ,EGG incubation ,EGGS - Abstract
The pond slider (Trachemys scripta) is a major invasive species in freshwater habitats across the world. For decades, the main cause of individuals' occurrences in the wild was the illegal release of pet animals. Recently, as an important component of their management, there has been an increasing focus on their ability to successfully reproduce in the invaded regions. In Romania, the species is reported as widespread in urban wetland environments within major cities, but information about its nesting and potential breeding remains scarce or anecdotal. We surveyed a large population of pond sliders in an artificial urban wetland site in Constanţa, SE Romania, and described their nesting ecology and reproductive output. Although eggs from several nests failed to hatch or were predated, potentially limiting their reproductive success, sliders were found to breed successfully at this site, with 18.6% viable hatchlings recorded. Our study could serve as a baseline for additional targeted surveys and to inform decision-making for successfully managing this invasive species. Although the importation, trading, and breeding of this species are prohibited by EU legislation, active and effective management is now required to address the successful reproduction and further potential spread of T. scripta. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Polyploidy‐induced floral changes lead to unexpected pollinator behavior in Arabidopsis arenosa.
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Schmickl, Roswitha, Vallejo Marín, Mario, Hojka, Jakub, Gorospe, Juan Manuel, Haghighatnia, Mohammad Javad, İltaş, Ömer, Kantor, Adam, Slovák, Marek, and Lafon Placette, Clément
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POLLINATORS , *ASSORTATIVE mating , *INSECT behavior , *ARABIDOPSIS ,REPRODUCTIVE isolation - Abstract
The paradox between the ubiquity of polyploid lineages in plants and the early obstacles to the establishment of polyploids is a long‐studied yet unresolved question in evolutionary biology. It is assumed that to successfully persist after emergence, newly formed polyploids need to display certain fitness advantages and show a certain extent of reproductive isolation with their diploid progenitors. In this study, we tested whether immediate floral changes following polyploidization can improve pollinator visitation and enable pollinator preference leading to assortative mating, i.e. build a premating reproductive barrier between diploids and polyploids. For this purpose, we generated synthetic tetraploids of Arabidopsis arenosa and measured insect visitor behavior on diploids and synthetic tetraploids. We found that the increased floral size that accompanied polyploidization did not lead to a measurable increase in visitor preference, with insects visiting diploid and tetraploid plants at equal frequency. Despite this observation, tetraploids set more fruits than diploids, suggesting a positive impact of polyploidization on pollen transfer via other means. In addition, polyploidization did not lead to assortative mating but instead promoted interploidy pollen exchange, since visitors preferentially switched between cytotypes rather than preferring one. Consistent with this switching behavior, most of the progeny from tetraploid plants were triploid. Our data suggest that polyploidization has an immediate impact on mating in plants, but in a more complex way than has been assumed previously. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Contest competition and injury in adult male sub-Antarctic fur seals.
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Bester, M. N., Rossouw, G. J., and van Staden, P. J.
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MATING grounds , *FUR , *ADULTS , *SUMMER , *MALES , *INTRAUTERINE contraceptives - Abstract
We recorded intra-sexual behaviour of adult male sub-Antarctic fur seals Arctocephalus tropicalis at Gough Island, Southern Ocean, during the 1975/76 summer breeding season. Our re-analysed data address male 'contest competition', which relates to the costs of intra-sexual disputes, including fights. We considered the risks/benefits of fighting through investigation of injuries (n = 353) sustained by adult males (n = 124) in fights. Injuries were predominantly on the forequarters, especially around the insertion areas of the front flippers (41%) with its sparse pelage, compared to the neck and chest areas combined (29%), an area which is well protected by thick pelage. The infliction of serious, sometimes debilitating, injuries to competitors increases a male's access to females. Injuries predominate in injured, defeated males that gather at non-breeding sites, suggesting that injuries inflicted by dominant males were successful in excluding competing males from breeding sites. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Hitching a Ride in the Phyllosphere: Surfactant Production of Pseudomonas spp. Causes Co-swarming of Pantoea eucalypti 299R.
- Author
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Kunzler, Michael, Schlechter, Rudolf O., Schreiber, Lukas, and Remus-Emsermann, Mitja N. P.
- Subjects
- *
SURFACE active agents , *PSEUDOMONAS , *BIOLOGICAL fitness , *AGAR plates , *EUCALYPTUS , *FLUORESCENT proteins - Abstract
Here, we demonstrate the beneficial effect of surfactant-producing pseudomonads on Pantoea eucalypti 299R. We conducted a series of experiments in environments of increasing complexity. P. eucalypti 299R (Pe299R), and Pseudomonas sp. FF1 (Pff1) or Pe299R and surfactant-production deficient Pseudomonas sp. FF1::ΔviscB (Pff1ΔviscB) were co-inoculated in broth, on swarming agar plates, and on plants. In broth, there were no differences in the growth dynamics of Pe299R when growing in the presence of Pff1 or Pff1ΔviscB. By contrast, on swarming agar plates, Pe299R was able to co-swarm with Pff1 which led to a significant increase in Pe299R biomass compared to Pe299R growing with Pff1ΔviscB or in monoculture. Finally in planta, and using the single-cell bioreporter for reproductive success (CUSPER), we found a temporally distinct beneficial effect of Pff1 on co-inoculated Pe299R subpopulations that did not occur in the presence of Pff1ΔviscB. We tested three additional surfactant-producing pseudomonads and their respective surfactant knockout mutants on PE299R on swarming agar showing similar results. This led us to propose a model for the positive effect of surfactant production during leaf colonization. Our results indicate that co-motility might be common during leaf colonization and adds yet another facet to the already manyfold roles of surfactants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Causes and consequences of pre-hibernation body mass in golden-mantled ground squirrels (Callospermophilus lateralis).
- Author
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Howland, Summer, Wells, Caitlin P, and Vuren, Dirk H Van
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- *
GROUND squirrels , *LIFE history theory , *SNOWMELT , *BIOLOGICAL fitness , *SNOW accumulation , *REPRODUCTION , *WINTER - Abstract
Mammals that cope with harsh environmental conditions by hibernating show seasonal variation in body mass, as fat reserves are accumulated during summer and depleted during winter. In hibernating species, pre-hibernation mass is often considered a key phenotypic trait that can influence future survival and reproductive success—yet we know little about how variation in environmental conditions and seasonality affect pre-hibernation mass. We used 30 years of demographic data from a high-elevation population of golden-mantled ground squirrels (Callospermophilus lateralis) to identify life history and environmental variables that influenced pre-hibernation mass in females. Additionally, we determined if pre-hibernation mass influenced overwinter survival or subsequent reproduction. Growth curves revealed female-biased size dimorphism in body mass; adult mass was not attained until age 2 years, so we considered 3 age classes of females: juveniles, yearlings, and adults (≥2 years). We found that earlier snow melt during spring is associated with higher subsequent pre-hibernation body mass for yearlings and adults, and that juveniles emerging earlier from their natal burrows had higher pre-hibernation masses than later-emerging juveniles. Estimates of food quantity or quality did not affect pre-hibernation mass for any age class, nor was there an effect of reproductive status. Juvenile females with greater pre-hibernation mass were more likely to survive overwinter and reproduce as yearlings, but we found no such effect for yearlings or adult females. We did not find an effect of snow depth or winter duration on either survival or reproduction. Our results indicate that time appears to be the key variable for golden-mantled ground squirrels to acquire sufficient body mass to survive and reproduce, but the effects vary by age class. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Using PIT tags to infer bat reproductive status and parturition date: busy nights during lactation.
- Author
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Fontaine, Amélie, Simard, Anouk, Simard, Valérie, Broders, Hugh G, and Elliott, Kyle H
- Subjects
- *
LACTATION , *LITTLE brown bat , *PARTURITION , *BATS , *SPRING , *POPULATION dynamics - Abstract
Passive integrated transponders (PIT tags) can aid in the collection of important demographic data for species for which other methods, such as GPS technology, are not suitable. PIT tags can be particularly suitable to monitor small and cryptic species like bats and permit inference on their behavioral ecology. Literature for several species of bats states that females change their nightly activity patterns—going out and in of the roost only once per night during gestation compared to several times during lactation. Hence, we tested whether PIT tag detection patterns could be used to infer reproductive status and parturition date of female bats. From 2017 to 2021, we recorded detections of PIT-tagged little brown (Myotis lucifugus) and northern long-eared bats (M. septentrionalis) at the entrance of 2 maternity roosts in Québec and Newfoundland, Canada. We also used the maternity roost in Québec as a case study to further evaluate the potential of this method to link behavior and demography and investigated factors affecting parturition date. We were able to infer reproductive status for 63% to 97% of tagged individuals detected during both the gestation and the lactation periods, and parturition date for 61% to 95% of reproductive individuals, depending on the year and roost. Early spring arrival at the roost and warm spring mean temperature at night were associated with earlier parturition dates. Herein, we highlight that PIT tag systems may be useful to detect changes in activity patterns of female bats and infer individual reproductive parameters, which is on the long-term less stressful for bats and easier for researchers. We demonstrate that this approach is useful to investigate intrinsic and extrinsic factors of reproductive parameters, improving our understanding of bat population dynamics resulting in more informed population management decisions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. First detailed report of cooperative breeding in red-billed blue magpie (Urocissa erythrorhyncha) in central China.
- Author
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Guo, Weibin, Lin, Buge, Hu, Zhiqing, Cao, Hanqing, and Wang, Changcao
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- *
BROOD parasitism , *NEST predation , *BIOLOGICAL evolution , *MAGPIES , *BIRD breeding , *SOCIAL evolution - Abstract
The cooperative breeding system of birds is an ideal model for studying and exploring social evolution in animals. However, a basic question, i.e., how many cooperative-breeding bird species exist in the world, remains controversial due to the lack of accumulated knowledge of the natural history of many birds, which prevents a generalized understanding of the evolution of cooperative breeding in birds and challenges the accuracy of results in many comparative studies. In this paper, we provide the first evidence of cooperative breeding in red-billed blue magpies (Urocissa erythrorhyncha). Moreover, we document and discuss potential relationships between cooperative breeding and nest predation, brood parasitism and breeding performance in U. erythrorhyncha. These findings about cooperative breeding in red-billed blue magpie will lay a foundation for further research on this species' sociality and provide useful insights into the evolution of cooperative breeding and other social systems in birds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. HIGHLY PATHOGENIC AVIAN INFLUENZA VIRUS RESULTED IN UNPRECEDENTED REPRODUCTIVE FAILURE AND MOVEMENT BEHAVIOUR BY NORTHERN GANNETS.
- Author
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CAREEN, NOAH G., COLLINS, SYDNEY M., D'ENTREMONT, KYLE J. N., WIGHT, JORDAN, RAHMAN, ISHRAQ, HARGAN, KATHRYN E., LANG, ANDREW S., and MONTEVECCHI, WILLIAM A.
- Subjects
- *
AVIAN influenza A virus , *GANNETS , *MARINE heatwaves , *COLONIAL birds , *AVIAN influenza - Abstract
In 2022, highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) virus resulted in mass mortality throughout seabird colonies in the North Atlantic Ocean. While mortalities and transmission of the virus are being documented, other effects are less understood. We documented nest abandonment and unprecedented reproductive failure by Northern Gannets Morus bassanus at Cape St. Mary's, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada, the species' southernmost colony. Reproductive success in 2022 was the lowest on record at 17%, which was likely a result of adults abandoning the nest and succumbing to avian influenza virus (AIV) infection. Following the AIV outbreak at Cape St. Mary's, we also documented extremely long foraging trips, including the second known instance of inter-colony movement by an adult Northern Gannet, who embarked on two trips to the gannet colony on Baccalieu Island. This inter-colony movement represents a possible means of viral transmission between colonies. The effects of HPAI may have been exacerbated as a result of heat stress during a marine heatwave, which coincided with the major outbreak at this colony. As this HPAI virus could continue to circulate in seabirds, ongoing monitoring of mortality and other indirect effects of AIV outbreaks are needed to inform future impacts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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