2,262 results on '"Krams, I"'
Search Results
2. Correction to 'Adiposity, compared to masculinity, serves as a more valid cue to immunocompetence in human mate choice'
- Author
-
Rantala, M. J., Coetzee, V., Moore, F. R., Skrinda, I., Kecko, S., Krama, T., Kivleniece, I., and Krams, I.
- Published
- 2017
3. Lie to me to lay with me: Females deceive males via terminal investment.
- Author
-
Mendoza-Díaz de León L, Cordero-Molina S, Krams I, and Contreras-Garduño J
- Subjects
- Female, Male, Animals, Tenebrio physiology, Tenebrio drug effects, Paraquat pharmacology, Sexual Behavior, Animal drug effects, Sexual Behavior, Animal physiology, Lipopolysaccharides pharmacology
- Abstract
Historically, males have frequently been portrayed as the manipulative and deceptive gender, while females are often seen as adopting a coy and passive role. In this context, it is proposed that males use a terminal investment strategy, misleading females about their true poor condition, while females passively opt to mate with these deceptive males. However, we hypothesize that females in suboptimal condition may also engage in a terminal investment strategy by mimicking or enhancing their attractiveness to match that of females in better conditions. We studied this hypothesis in Tenebrio molitor, by subjecting females to three varying doses of lipopolysaccharides of Escherichia coli (LPS; 0.25, 0.5, or 1 mg ml-1), or three doses of the pro-oxidant Paraquat (PQ; 20, 40 or 80 mM), and subsequently assessing their survival and attractiveness to males. The LPS treatments and 20 mM of PQ had no significant effect on the survival or attractiveness of the females. However, females treated with 40 or 80 mM PQ survived fewer days compared to the control group. Those injected with 40 mM were more attractive than their control counterparts, while those treated with 80 mM were less attractive. Since the identical doses of LPS, which induce terminal investment in males, had no effect on females, we suggest sexual dimorphism in terminal investment. Furthermore, similar to males, if the stressor reaches a sufficiently high level, the signal becomes honest. These findings highlight how the quantity of stressors influences support for the terminal investment strategy in both males and females. Notably, this study challenges prevailing notions regarding gender roles in sexual selection, indicating that females, not just males, conceal their poor condition to attract mating partners., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2024 Mendoza-Díaz de León et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The son-killer microbe Arsenophonus nasoniae is a widespread associate of the parasitic wasp Nasonia vitripennis in Europe
- Author
-
Nadal-Jimenez, P., Frost, C.L., Cláudia Norte, A., Garrido-Bautista, J., Wilkes, T.E., Connell, R., Rice, A., Krams, I., Eeva, T., Christe, P., Moreno-Rueda, G., and Hurst, GDD
- Subjects
Female ,Male ,Animals ,Wasps/microbiology ,Nuclear Family ,Gammaproteobacteria ,Enterobacteriaceae ,Insecta ,Europe ,Arsenophonus nasoniae ,Endosymbiont ,Infection model ,Nasonia vitripennis - Abstract
Heritable microbes that exhibit reproductive parasitism are common in insects. One class of these are the male-killing bacteria, which are found in a broad range of insect hosts. Commonly, our knowledge of the incidence of these microbes is based on one or a few sampling sites, and the degree and causes of spatial variation are unclear. In this paper, we examine the incidence of the son-killer microbe Arsenophonus nasoniae across European populations of its wasp host, Nasonia vitripennis. In preliminary work, we noticed two female N. vitripennis producing highly female biased sex ratios in a field study from the Netherlands and Germany. When tested, the brood from Germany was revealed to be infected with A. nasoniae. We then completed a broad survey in 2012, in which fly pupal hosts of N. vitripennis were collected from vacated birds' nests from four European populations, N. vitripennis wasps allowed to emerge and then tested for A. nasoniae presence through PCR assay. We then developed a new screening methodology based on direct PCR assays of fly pupae and applied this to ethanol-preserved material collected from great tit (Parus major) nests in Portugal. These data show A. nasoniae is found widely in European N. vitripennis, being present in Germany, the UK, Finland, Switzerland and Portugal. Samples varied in the frequency with which they carry A. nasoniae, from being rare to being present in 50% of the pupae parasitised by N. vitripennis. Direct screening of ethanol-preserved fly pupae was an effective method for revealing both wasp and A. nasoniae infection, and will facilitate sample transport across national boundaries. Future research should examine the causes of variation in frequency, in particular testing the hypothesis that N. vitripennis superparasitism rates drive the variation in A. nasoniae frequency through providing opportunities for infectious transmission.
- Published
- 2023
5. The effect of climate change on avian offspring production:a global meta-analysis
- Author
-
Halupka, L. (Lucyna), Arlt, D. (Debora), Tolvanen, J. (Jere), Millon, A. (Alexandre), Bize, P. (Pierre), Adamik, P. (Peter), Albert, P. (Pascal), Arendt, W. J. (Wayne J.), V. Artemyev, A. (Alexander), Baglione, V. (Vittorio), Banbura, J. (Jerzy), Banbura, M. (Miroslawa), Barba, E. (Emilio), Barrett, R. T. (Robert T.), Becker, P. H. (Peter H.), Belskii, E. (Eugen), Bolton, M. (Mark), Bowers, E. K. (E. Keith), Bried, J. (Joel), Brouwer, L. (Lyanne), Bukacinska, M. (Monika), Bukacinski, D. (Dariusz), Bulluck, L. (Lesley), Carstens, K. F. (Kate F.), Catry, I. (Ines), Charter, M. (Motti), Chernomorets, A. (Anna), Covas, R. (Rita), Czuchra, M. (Monika), Dearborn, D. C. (Donald C.), de Lope, F. (Florentino), Di Giacomo, A. S. (Adrian S.), Dombrovski, V. C. (Valery C.), Drummond, H. (Hugh), Dunn, M. J. (Michael J.), Eeva, T. (Tapio), Emmerson, L. M. (Louise M.), Espmark, Y. (Yngve), Fargallo, J. A. (Juan A.), Gashkov, S. I. (Sergey I.), Golubova, E. Y. (Elena Yu.), Griesser, M. (Michael), Harris, M. P. (Michael P.), Hoover, J. P. (Jeffrey P.), Jagielio, Z. (Zuzanna), Korell, P. (Patrik), Kloskowski, J. (Janusz), Koenig, W. D. (Walter D.), Kolunen, H. (Heikki), Korczak-Abshire, M. (Magorzata), Korpimaeki, E. (Erkki), Krams, I. (Indrikis), Krist, M. (Milos), Kruger, S. C. (Sonja C.), Kuranov, B. D. (Boris D.), Lambin, X. (Xavier), Lombardo, M. P. (Michael P.), Lyakhov, A. (Andrey), Marzal, A. (Alfonso), Moller, A. P. (Anders P.), Neves, V. C. (Veronica C.), Nielsen, J. T. (Jan Tottrup), Numerov, A. (Alexander), Orlowska, B. (Beata), Oro, D. (Daniel), oest, M. (Markus), Phillips, R. A. (Richard A.), Pietiaeinen, H. (Hannu), Polo, V. (Vicente), Porkert, J. (Jiri), Potti, J. (Jaime), Poeysae, H. (Hannu), Printemps, T. (Thierry), Prop, J. (Jouke), Quillfeldt, P. (Petra), Ramos, J. A. (Jaime A.), Ravussin, P.-A. (Pierre-Alain), Rosenfield, R. N. (Robert N.), Roulin, A. (Alexandre), Rubenstein, D. R. (Dustin R.), Samusenko, I. E. (Irina E.), Saunders, D. A. (Denis A.), Schaub, M. (Michael), Senar, J. C. (Juan C.), Sergio, F. (Fabrizio), Solonen, T. (Tapio), V. Solovyeva, D. (Diana), Stepniewski, J. (Janusz), Thompson, P. M. (Paul M.), Tobolka, M. (Marcin), Toeroek, J. (Janos), van de Pol, M. (Martijn), Vernooij, L. (Louis), Visser, M. E. (Marcel E.), Westneat, D. F. (David F.), Wheelwright, N. T. (Nathaniel T.), Wiacek, J. (Jaroslaw), Wiebe, K. L. (Karen L.), Wood, A. G. (Andrew G.), Wuczynski, A. (Andrzej), Wysocki, D. (Dariusz), Zarybnicka, M. (Marketa), Margalida, A. (Antoni), Halupka, K. (Konrad), Halupka, L. (Lucyna), Arlt, D. (Debora), Tolvanen, J. (Jere), Millon, A. (Alexandre), Bize, P. (Pierre), Adamik, P. (Peter), Albert, P. (Pascal), Arendt, W. J. (Wayne J.), V. Artemyev, A. (Alexander), Baglione, V. (Vittorio), Banbura, J. (Jerzy), Banbura, M. (Miroslawa), Barba, E. (Emilio), Barrett, R. T. (Robert T.), Becker, P. H. (Peter H.), Belskii, E. (Eugen), Bolton, M. (Mark), Bowers, E. K. (E. Keith), Bried, J. (Joel), Brouwer, L. (Lyanne), Bukacinska, M. (Monika), Bukacinski, D. (Dariusz), Bulluck, L. (Lesley), Carstens, K. F. (Kate F.), Catry, I. (Ines), Charter, M. (Motti), Chernomorets, A. (Anna), Covas, R. (Rita), Czuchra, M. (Monika), Dearborn, D. C. (Donald C.), de Lope, F. (Florentino), Di Giacomo, A. S. (Adrian S.), Dombrovski, V. C. (Valery C.), Drummond, H. (Hugh), Dunn, M. J. (Michael J.), Eeva, T. (Tapio), Emmerson, L. M. (Louise M.), Espmark, Y. (Yngve), Fargallo, J. A. (Juan A.), Gashkov, S. I. (Sergey I.), Golubova, E. Y. (Elena Yu.), Griesser, M. (Michael), Harris, M. P. (Michael P.), Hoover, J. P. (Jeffrey P.), Jagielio, Z. (Zuzanna), Korell, P. (Patrik), Kloskowski, J. (Janusz), Koenig, W. D. (Walter D.), Kolunen, H. (Heikki), Korczak-Abshire, M. (Magorzata), Korpimaeki, E. (Erkki), Krams, I. (Indrikis), Krist, M. (Milos), Kruger, S. C. (Sonja C.), Kuranov, B. D. (Boris D.), Lambin, X. (Xavier), Lombardo, M. P. (Michael P.), Lyakhov, A. (Andrey), Marzal, A. (Alfonso), Moller, A. P. (Anders P.), Neves, V. C. (Veronica C.), Nielsen, J. T. (Jan Tottrup), Numerov, A. (Alexander), Orlowska, B. (Beata), Oro, D. (Daniel), oest, M. (Markus), Phillips, R. A. (Richard A.), Pietiaeinen, H. (Hannu), Polo, V. (Vicente), Porkert, J. (Jiri), Potti, J. (Jaime), Poeysae, H. (Hannu), Printemps, T. (Thierry), Prop, J. (Jouke), Quillfeldt, P. (Petra), Ramos, J. A. (Jaime A.), Ravussin, P.-A. (Pierre-Alain), Rosenfield, R. N. (Robert N.), Roulin, A. (Alexandre), Rubenstein, D. R. (Dustin R.), Samusenko, I. E. (Irina E.), Saunders, D. A. (Denis A.), Schaub, M. (Michael), Senar, J. C. (Juan C.), Sergio, F. (Fabrizio), Solonen, T. (Tapio), V. Solovyeva, D. (Diana), Stepniewski, J. (Janusz), Thompson, P. M. (Paul M.), Tobolka, M. (Marcin), Toeroek, J. (Janos), van de Pol, M. (Martijn), Vernooij, L. (Louis), Visser, M. E. (Marcel E.), Westneat, D. F. (David F.), Wheelwright, N. T. (Nathaniel T.), Wiacek, J. (Jaroslaw), Wiebe, K. L. (Karen L.), Wood, A. G. (Andrew G.), Wuczynski, A. (Andrzej), Wysocki, D. (Dariusz), Zarybnicka, M. (Marketa), Margalida, A. (Antoni), and Halupka, K. (Konrad)
- Abstract
Climate change affects timing of reproduction in many bird species, but few stud-ies have investigated its influence on annual reproductive output. Here, we assess changes in the annual production of young by female breeders in 201 populations of 104 bird species (N = 745,962 clutches) covering all continents between 1970 and 2019. Overall, average offspring production has declined in recent decades, but considerable differences were found among species and populations. A total of 56.7% of populations showed a declining trend in offspring production (significant in 17.4%), whereas 43.3% exhibited an increase (significant in 10.4%). The results show that climatic changes affect offspring production through compounded effects on ecological and life history traits of species. Migratory and larger-bodied species experienced reduced offspring production with increasing temperatures during the chick-rearing period, whereas smaller-bodied, sedentary species tended to produce more offspring. Likewise, multi-brooded species showed increased breeding success with increasing temperatures, whereas rising temperatures were unrelated to repro-ductive success in single-brooded species. Our study suggests that rapid declines in size of bird populations reported by many studies from different parts of the world are driven only to a small degree by changes in the production of young.
- Published
- 2023
6. Immune response in paper wasp workers: Task matters more than age.
- Author
-
Prato A, Fernando Santos E, Mendes Ferreira H, Akemi Oi C, Santos do Nascimento F, Rantala MJ, Krams I, and Rodrigues de Souza A
- Subjects
- Bees, Animals, Social Behavior, Behavior, Animal physiology, Immunity, Wasps physiology, Ants physiology
- Abstract
Workers of social hymenopterans (ants, bees and wasps) display specific tasks depending on whether they are younger or older. The relative importance of behavior and age in modulating immune function has seldom been addressed. We compared the strength of encapsulation-melanization immune response (hereafter melanotic encapsulation) in paper wasps displaying age polyethism or experimentally prevented from behavioral specialization. Foragers of Polybia paulista had higher melanotic encapsulation than guards, regardless of their age. Nevertheless, melanotic encapsulation decreased with age when wasps were prevented from behavioral specialization. Thus, in this species, worker melanotic encapsulation seems more sensitive to task than age. Foraging is considered one of the riskier behaviors in terms of pathogen exposure, so upregulating melanotic encapsulation in foragers can possibly improve both individual and colony-level resistance against infections., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. The effect of yin yoga intervention on state and trait anxiety during the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Author
-
Somere K, Munkevics M, Krams R, Rača G, Luoto S, and Krams I
- Abstract
Introduction: Although some findings indicate that yoga can reduce stress and anxiety, many studies present mixed results. The potential of yoga interventions to alleviate anxiety, including the mechanisms and boundary conditions by which it does so, is an under-researched topic. Anxiety is often divided into "state anxiety" and "trait anxiety," the former being a temporary reaction to stressful events, while the latter is a more stable personality feature that responds to adverse situations or perceived threats., Materials and Methods: This study investigates whether a yin yoga intervention delivered online reduces state anxiety immediately after each yoga session and whether the anxiety levels are significantly lower at the end of the 10-week yoga intervention than at the beginning of the study. We also predicted no effect of yin yoga intervention on trait anxiety. The study was conducted during the COVID-19 pandemic when participants ( N = 48 Latvian women) experienced heightened anxiety levels., Results: This study shows that a ten-week online yin yoga intervention significantly reduced state anxiety in the intervention group compared with the control group. State anxiety levels also significantly decreased after each yin yoga session, providing more support for the anxiety-reducing effect of yin yoga. In contrast, yoga participation did not cause differences in trait anxiety between the control and intervention groups, even though trait anxiety decreased in the intervention group and increased in the control group over the study period., Conclusion: The positive effects of yin yoga on state anxiety indicate the potential of yin yoga intervention as a first-line treatment to control and reduce state anxiety, with possible additional effects on trait anxiety., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Somere, Munkevics, Krams, Rača, Luoto and Krams.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Sex‐specific compensatory growth in the larvae of the greater wax moth Galleria mellonella
- Author
-
Kecko, S., Mihailova, A., Kangassalo, K., Elferts, D., Krama, T., Krams, R., Luoto, S., Rantala, M. J., and Krams, I. A.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Interaction of climate change with effects of conspecific and heterospecific density on reproduction
- Author
-
Møller, A.P., Balbontín, J., Dhondt, A.A., Adriaensen, F., Artemyev, A., Bańbura, J., Barba, E., Biard, C., Blondel, J., Bouvier, J.-C., Camprodon, J., Cecere, F., Charter, M., Cichoń, M., Cusimano, C., Dubiec, A., Eens, M., Eeva, T., Ferns, P.N., Forsman, J.T., Goldshtein, A., Goodenough, A.E., Gosler, A.G., Gustafsson, L., Harnist, I., Hartley, I.R., Heeb, P., Hinsley, S.A., Jacob, S., Järvinen, A., Juškaitis, R., Korpimäki, E., Krams, I., Laaksonen, T., Leclercq, B., Lehikoinen, E., Loukola, O., Mainwaring, M.C., Mänd, R., Massa, B., Matthysen, E., Mazgajski, T.D., Merino, S., Mitrus, C., Mönkkönen, M., Nager, R.G., Nilsson, J.-Å., Nilsson, S.G., Norte, A.C., von Numers, M., Orell, M., Pimentel, C.S., Pinxten, R., Priedniece, I., Remeš, V., Richner, H., Robles, H., Rytkönen, S., Senar, J.C., Seppänen, J.T., da Silva, L.P., Slagsvold, T., Solonen, T., Sorace, A., Stenning, M.J., Török, J., Tryjanowski, P., van Noordwijk, A.J., Walankiewicz, W., Lambrechts, M.M., Møller, A.P., Balbontín, J., Dhondt, A.A., Adriaensen, F., Artemyev, A., Bańbura, J., Barba, E., Biard, C., Blondel, J., Bouvier, J.-C., Camprodon, J., Cecere, F., Charter, M., Cichoń, M., Cusimano, C., Dubiec, A., Eens, M., Eeva, T., Ferns, P.N., Forsman, J.T., Goldshtein, A., Goodenough, A.E., Gosler, A.G., Gustafsson, L., Harnist, I., Hartley, I.R., Heeb, P., Hinsley, S.A., Jacob, S., Järvinen, A., Juškaitis, R., Korpimäki, E., Krams, I., Laaksonen, T., Leclercq, B., Lehikoinen, E., Loukola, O., Mainwaring, M.C., Mänd, R., Massa, B., Matthysen, E., Mazgajski, T.D., Merino, S., Mitrus, C., Mönkkönen, M., Nager, R.G., Nilsson, J.-Å., Nilsson, S.G., Norte, A.C., von Numers, M., Orell, M., Pimentel, C.S., Pinxten, R., Priedniece, I., Remeš, V., Richner, H., Robles, H., Rytkönen, S., Senar, J.C., Seppänen, J.T., da Silva, L.P., Slagsvold, T., Solonen, T., Sorace, A., Stenning, M.J., Török, J., Tryjanowski, P., van Noordwijk, A.J., Walankiewicz, W., and Lambrechts, M.M.
- Abstract
We studied the relationship between temperature and the coexistence of great tit Parus major and blue tit Cyanistes caeruleus, breeding in 75 study plots across Europe and North Africa. We expected an advance in laying date and a reduction in clutch size during warmer springs as a general response to climate warming and a delay in laying date and a reduction in clutch size during warmer winters due to density-dependent effects. As expected, as spring temperature increases laying date advances and as winter temperature increases clutch size is reduced in both species. Density of great tit affected the relationship between winter temperature and laying date in great and blue tit. Specifically, as density of great tit increased and temperature in winter increased both species started to reproduce later. Density of blue tit affected the relationship between spring temperature and blue and great tit laying date. Thus, both species start to reproduce earlier with increasing spring temperature as density of blue tit increases, which was not an expected outcome, since we expected that increasing spring temperature should advance laying date, while increasing density should delay it cancelling each other out. Climate warming and its interaction with density affects clutch size of great tits but not of blue tits. As predicted, great tit clutch size is reduced more with density of blue tits as temperature in winter increases. The relationship between spring temperature and density on clutch size of great tits depends on whether the increase is in density of great tit or blue tit. Therefore, an increase in temperature negatively affected the coexistence of blue and great tits differently in both species. Thus, blue tit clutch size was unaffected by the interaction effect of density with temperature, while great tit clutch size was affected in multiple ways by these interactions terms.
- Published
- 2020
10. Sympatric divergence and clinal variation in multiple coloration traits of Ficedula flycatchers
- Author
-
LAAKSONEN, T., SIRKIÄ, P. M., CALHIM, S., BROMMER, J. E., LESKINEN, P. K., PRIMMER, C. R., ADAMÍK, P., ARTEMYEV, A. V., BELSKII, E., BOTH, C., BUREŠ, S., BURGESS, M. D., DOLIGEZ, B., FORSMAN, J. T., GRINKOV, V., HOFFMANN, U., IVANKINA, E., KRÁL, M., KRAMS, I., LAMPE, H. M., MORENO, J., MÄGI, M., NORD, A., POTTI, J., RAVUSSIN, P.-A., and SOKOLOV, L.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. A diabetes-like biochemical and behavioural phenotype of Drosophila induced by predator stress.
- Author
-
Krama T, Bahhir D, Ots L, Popovs S, Bartkevičs V, Pugajeva I, Krams R, Merivee E, Must A, Rantala MJ, Krams I, and Jõers P
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Drosophila, Drosophila melanogaster, Predatory Behavior physiology, Food Chain, Diabetes Mellitus, Metabolic Diseases
- Abstract
Predation can have both lethal and non-lethal effects on prey. The non-lethal effects of predation can instil changes in prey life history, behaviour, morphology and physiology, causing adaptive evolution. The chronic stress caused by sustained predation on prey is comparable to chronic stress conditions in humans. Conditions like anxiety, depression, and post-traumatic stress syndrome have also been implicated in the development of metabolic disorders such as obesity and diabetes. In this study, we found that predator stress induced during larval development in fruit flies Drosophila melanogaster impairs carbohydrate metabolism by systemic inhibition of Akt protein kinase, which is a central regulator of glucose uptake. However, Drosophila grown with predators survived better under direct spider predation in the adult phase. Administration of metformin and 5-hydroxytryptophan (5-HTP), a precursor of the neurotransmitter serotonin, reversed these effects. Our results demonstrate a direct link between predator stress and metabolic impairment, suggesting that a diabetes-like biochemical phenotype may be adaptive in terms of survival and reproductive success. We provide a novel animal model to explore the mechanisms responsible for the onset of these metabolic disorders, which are highly prevalent in human populations.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. The son-killer microbe Arsenophonus nasoniae is a widespread associate of the parasitic wasp Nasonia vitripennis in Europe.
- Author
-
Nadal-Jimenez P, Frost CL, Cláudia Norte A, Garrido-Bautista J, Wilkes TE, Connell R, Rice A, Krams I, Eeva T, Christe P, Moreno-Rueda G, and Hurst GDD
- Subjects
- Female, Male, Animals, Nuclear Family, Enterobacteriaceae, Insecta, Europe, Wasps microbiology, Gammaproteobacteria
- Abstract
Heritable microbes that exhibit reproductive parasitism are common in insects. One class of these are the male-killing bacteria, which are found in a broad range of insect hosts. Commonly, our knowledge of the incidence of these microbes is based on one or a few sampling sites, and the degree and causes of spatial variation are unclear. In this paper, we examine the incidence of the son-killer microbe Arsenophonus nasoniae across European populations of its wasp host, Nasonia vitripennis. In preliminary work, we noticed two female N. vitripennis producing highly female biased sex ratios in a field study from the Netherlands and Germany. When tested, the brood from Germany was revealed to be infected with A. nasoniae. We then completed a broad survey in 2012, in which fly pupal hosts of N. vitripennis were collected from vacated birds' nests from four European populations, N. vitripennis wasps allowed to emerge and then tested for A. nasoniae presence through PCR assay. We then developed a new screening methodology based on direct PCR assays of fly pupae and applied this to ethanol-preserved material collected from great tit (Parus major) nests in Portugal. These data show A. nasoniae is found widely in European N. vitripennis, being present in Germany, the UK, Finland, Switzerland and Portugal. Samples varied in the frequency with which they carry A. nasoniae, from being rare to being present in 50% of the pupae parasitised by N. vitripennis. Direct screening of ethanol-preserved fly pupae was an effective method for revealing both wasp and A. nasoniae infection, and will facilitate sample transport across national boundaries. Future research should examine the causes of variation in frequency, in particular testing the hypothesis that N. vitripennis superparasitism rates drive the variation in A. nasoniae frequency through providing opportunities for infectious transmission., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: Gregory Hurst reports financial support was provided by Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council. Gregory Hurst reports financial support was provided by Natural Environment Research Council. Eeva Tapio reports financial support was provided by Academy of Finland. Indirikis Krams reports financial support was provided by Latvian Council of Sciences. Ana Norte reports financial support was provided by Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia. Gregorio Moreno-Rueda reports financial support was provided by Spanish Ministry of Education., (Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Flock size increases with the diversity and abundance of local predators in an avian family.
- Author
-
Beauchamp G and Krams I
- Subjects
- Humans, Animals, Phylogeny, Ecology, Predatory Behavior physiology, Acclimatization, Passeriformes
- Abstract
Group living has long been viewed as an adaptation to reduce predation risk. Earlier comparative analyses provided support for the hypothesis but typically ignored variation in group size at the local scale and included proxies of predation risk rather than more direct estimates. Here, we related variation in group size at the scale of a study site in various species with the diversity and abundance of local predators. If larger groups provide protection against predators, we expected larger groups to evolve in species facing locally more diverse and abundant predators. We examined this hypothesis in one avian family, the Paridae, which are small arboreal birds that include some of the better studied species in ecology. From the literature, we gathered 275 flock size estimates from 34 species. In a phylogenetic framework and controlling for the potential confounding effect of latitude, we found that flock size increased with predation risk but only in flocks that included more than one species. We suggest that competition sets an upper limit to the size of flocks including conspecifics only. Joining flocks with other species, thus, allows individuals to increase flock size in response to higher predation risk without a substantial increase in competition. Overall, our results based on more direct estimates of predation risk provide further comparative evidence for an association between predation and the evolution of flocking in birds., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Male mealworm beetles increase resting metabolic rate under terminal investment
- Author
-
KRAMS, I. A., KRAMA, T., MOORE, F. R., KIVLENIECE, I., KUUSIK, A., FREEBERG, T. M., MÄND, R., RANTALA, M. J., DAUKŠTE, J., and MÄND, M.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. The effect of climate change on avian offspring production: A global meta-analysis.
- Author
-
Halupka L, Arlt D, Tolvanen J, Millon A, Bize P, Adamík P, Albert P, Arendt WJ, Artemyev AV, Baglione V, Bańbura J, Bańbura M, Barba E, Barrett RT, Becker PH, Belskii E, Bolton M, Bowers EK, Bried J, Brouwer L, Bukacińska M, Bukaciński D, Bulluck L, Carstens KF, Catry I, Charter M, Chernomorets A, Covas R, Czuchra M, Dearborn DC, de Lope F, Di Giacomo AS, Dombrovski VC, Drummond H, Dunn MJ, Eeva T, Emmerson LM, Espmark Y, Fargallo JA, Gashkov SI, Golubova EY, Griesser M, Harris MP, Hoover JP, Jagiełło Z, Karell P, Kloskowski J, Koenig WD, Kolunen H, Korczak-Abshire M, Korpimäki E, Krams I, Krist M, Krüger SC, Kuranov BD, Lambin X, Lombardo MP, Lyakhov A, Marzal A, Møller AP, Neves VC, Nielsen JT, Numerov A, Orłowska B, Oro D, Öst M, Phillips RA, Pietiäinen H, Polo V, Porkert J, Potti J, Pöysä H, Printemps T, Prop J, Quillfeldt P, Ramos JA, Ravussin PA, Rosenfield RN, Roulin A, Rubenstein DR, Samusenko IE, Saunders DA, Schaub M, Senar JC, Sergio F, Solonen T, Solovyeva DV, Stępniewski J, Thompson PM, Tobolka M, Török J, van de Pol M, Vernooij L, Visser ME, Westneat DF, Wheelwright NT, Wiącek J, Wiebe KL, Wood AG, Wuczyński A, Wysocki D, Zárybnická M, Margalida A, and Halupka K
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Seasons, Chickens, Reproduction, Climate Change, Life History Traits
- Abstract
Climate change affects timing of reproduction in many bird species, but few studies have investigated its influence on annual reproductive output. Here, we assess changes in the annual production of young by female breeders in 201 populations of 104 bird species (N = 745,962 clutches) covering all continents between 1970 and 2019. Overall, average offspring production has declined in recent decades, but considerable differences were found among species and populations. A total of 56.7% of populations showed a declining trend in offspring production (significant in 17.4%), whereas 43.3% exhibited an increase (significant in 10.4%). The results show that climatic changes affect offspring production through compounded effects on ecological and life history traits of species. Migratory and larger-bodied species experienced reduced offspring production with increasing temperatures during the chick-rearing period, whereas smaller-bodied, sedentary species tended to produce more offspring. Likewise, multi-brooded species showed increased breeding success with increasing temperatures, whereas rising temperatures were unrelated to reproductive success in single-brooded species. Our study suggests that rapid declines in size of bird populations reported by many studies from different parts of the world are driven only to a small degree by changes in the production of young.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Effect of juvenile hormone on phenoloxidase and hemocyte number: The role of age, sex, and immune challenge.
- Author
-
Amaro-Sánchez T, Ruiz-Guzmán G, Hernández-Martínez S, Krams I, Rantala MJ, and Contreras-Garduño J
- Subjects
- Animals, Monophenol Monooxygenase, Hemocytes, Reproduction, Juvenile Hormones pharmacology, Methoprene
- Abstract
Hormones are key factors in determining the response of organisms to their environment. For example, the juvenile hormone (JH) coordinates the insects' development, reproduction, and survival. However, it is still unclear how the impact of juvenile hormone on insect immunity varies depending on the sex and reproductive state of the individual, as well as the type of the immune challenge (i.e., Gram-positive or Gram-negative bacteria). We used Tenebrio molitor and methoprene, a JH analog (JHa) to explore these relationships. We tested the effect of methoprene on phenoloxidase activity (PO), an important component of humoral immunity in insects, and hemocyte number. Lyophilized Gram-positive Staphylococcus aureus or Gram-negative Escherichia coli were injected for the immune challenge. The results suggest that JH did not affect the proPO, PO activity, or hemocyte number of larvae. JH and immune challenge affected the immune response and consequently, affected adult developmental stage and sex. We propose that the influence of JH on the immune response depends on age, sex, the immune response parameter, and the immune challenge, which may explain the contrasting results about the role of JH in the insect immune response., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare no competing or financial interests., (Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Interspecific Communication
- Author
-
Krams, I., primary
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Senescence in immune priming and attractiveness in a beetle
- Author
-
DAUKŠTE, J., KIVLENIECE, I., KRAMA, T., RANTALA, M. J., and KRAMS, I.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. There is more than one way to skin a G matrix
- Author
-
ROFF, D. A., PROKKOLA, J. M., KRAMS, I., and RANTALA, M. J.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The honey bees immune memory.
- Author
-
Burciaga RA, Ruiz-Guzmán G, Lanz-Mendoza H, Krams I, and Contreras-Garduño J
- Subjects
- Animals, Bees, Defensins, Hemocytes metabolism, Immunologic Memory, Escherichia coli metabolism, Monophenol Monooxygenase metabolism
- Abstract
Invertebrates' immune priming or innate immune memory is an analogous response to the vertebrates' adaptive memory. We investigated if honey bees have immune memory. We compared survival and immune response between bees that were: 1) manipulated (Naïve), 2) challenged twice with the same pathogen Escherichia coli (Memory), 3) challenged twice with different pathogens (Staphylococcus aureus versus E. coli, Micrococcus lysodeikticus versus E. coli), or 4) with PBS (the diluent of bacteria) versus E. coli (heterologous challenge; Control). Results indicate better survival in the Memory than the Control group, and the Memory group showed a similar survival than Naïve insects. The Memory group had higher lytic activity but lower prophenoloxidase, phenoloxidase activity, and hemocyte count than the Control and Naïve groups. No differences were found in relative expression of defensin-1. This first demonstration of immune memory opens the questions about its molecular mechanisms and whether, immune memory could be used against natural parasites that affect honey bees, hence, if they could be "vaccinated" against some natural parasites., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest All authors declare that there is no conflict of interest regarding the publication of this paper., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Interaction of climate change with effects of conspecific and heterospecific density on reproduction
- Author
-
Moller, A. P. (Anders Pape), Balbontin, J. (Javier), Dhondt, A. A. (Andre A.), Adriaensen, F. (Frank), Artemyev, A. (Alexandr), Banbura, J. (Jerzy), Barba, E. (Emilio), Biard, C. (Clotilde), Blondel, J. (Jacques), Bouvier, J.-C. (Jean-Charles), Camprodon, J. (Jordi), Cecere, F. (Francesco), Charter, M. (Motti), Cichon, M. (Mariusz), Cusimano, C. (Camillo), Dubiec, A. (Anna), Eens, M. (Marcel), Eeva, T. (Tapio), Ferns, P. N. (Peter N.), Forsman, J. T. (Jukka T.), Goldshtein, A. (Aya), Goodenough, A. E. (Anne E.), Gosler, A. G. (Andrew G.), Gustafsson, L. (Lars), Harnist, I. (Iga), Hartley, I. R. (Ian R.), Heeb, P. (Philipp), Hinsley, S. A. (Shelley A.), Jacob, S. (Staffan), Jarvinen, A. (Antero), Juskaitis, R. (Rimvydas), Korpimaki, E. (Erkki), Krams, I. (Indrikis), Laaksonen, T. (Toni), Leclercq, B. (Bernard), Lehikoinen, E. (Esa), Loukola, O. (Olli), Mainwaring, M. C. (Mark C.), Mand, R. (Raivo), Massa, B. (Bruno), Matthysen, E. (Erik), Mazgajski, T. D. (Tomasz D.), Merino, S. (Santiago), Mitrus, C. (Cezary), Monkkonen, M. (Mikko), Nager, R. G. (Ruedi G.), Nilsson, J.-a. (Jan-ake), Nilsson, S. G. (Sven G.), Norte, A. C. (Ana C.), von Numers, M. (Mikael), Orell, M. (Markku), Pimentel, C. S. (Carla S.), Pinxten, R. (Rianne), Priedniece, I. (Ilze), Remes, V. (Vladimir), Richner, H. (Heinz), Robles, H. (Hugo), Rytkonen, S. (Seppo), Senar, J. C. (Juan Carlos), Seppanen, J. T. (Janne T.), da Silva, L. P. (Luis P.), Slagsvold, T. (Tore), Solonen, T. (Tapio), Sorace, A. (Alberto), Stenning, M. J. (Martyn J.), Torok, J. (Janos), Tryjanowski, P. (Piotr), van Noordwijk, A. J. (Arie J.), Walankiewicz, W. (Wieslaw), Lambrechts, M. M. (Marcel M.), Moller, A. P. (Anders Pape), Balbontin, J. (Javier), Dhondt, A. A. (Andre A.), Adriaensen, F. (Frank), Artemyev, A. (Alexandr), Banbura, J. (Jerzy), Barba, E. (Emilio), Biard, C. (Clotilde), Blondel, J. (Jacques), Bouvier, J.-C. (Jean-Charles), Camprodon, J. (Jordi), Cecere, F. (Francesco), Charter, M. (Motti), Cichon, M. (Mariusz), Cusimano, C. (Camillo), Dubiec, A. (Anna), Eens, M. (Marcel), Eeva, T. (Tapio), Ferns, P. N. (Peter N.), Forsman, J. T. (Jukka T.), Goldshtein, A. (Aya), Goodenough, A. E. (Anne E.), Gosler, A. G. (Andrew G.), Gustafsson, L. (Lars), Harnist, I. (Iga), Hartley, I. R. (Ian R.), Heeb, P. (Philipp), Hinsley, S. A. (Shelley A.), Jacob, S. (Staffan), Jarvinen, A. (Antero), Juskaitis, R. (Rimvydas), Korpimaki, E. (Erkki), Krams, I. (Indrikis), Laaksonen, T. (Toni), Leclercq, B. (Bernard), Lehikoinen, E. (Esa), Loukola, O. (Olli), Mainwaring, M. C. (Mark C.), Mand, R. (Raivo), Massa, B. (Bruno), Matthysen, E. (Erik), Mazgajski, T. D. (Tomasz D.), Merino, S. (Santiago), Mitrus, C. (Cezary), Monkkonen, M. (Mikko), Nager, R. G. (Ruedi G.), Nilsson, J.-a. (Jan-ake), Nilsson, S. G. (Sven G.), Norte, A. C. (Ana C.), von Numers, M. (Mikael), Orell, M. (Markku), Pimentel, C. S. (Carla S.), Pinxten, R. (Rianne), Priedniece, I. (Ilze), Remes, V. (Vladimir), Richner, H. (Heinz), Robles, H. (Hugo), Rytkonen, S. (Seppo), Senar, J. C. (Juan Carlos), Seppanen, J. T. (Janne T.), da Silva, L. P. (Luis P.), Slagsvold, T. (Tore), Solonen, T. (Tapio), Sorace, A. (Alberto), Stenning, M. J. (Martyn J.), Torok, J. (Janos), Tryjanowski, P. (Piotr), van Noordwijk, A. J. (Arie J.), Walankiewicz, W. (Wieslaw), and Lambrechts, M. M. (Marcel M.)
- Abstract
We studied the relationship between temperature and the coexistence of great tit Parus major and blue tit Cyanistes caeruleus, breeding in 75 study plots across Europe and North Africa. We expected an advance in laying date and a reduction in clutch size during warmer springs as a general response to climate warming and a delay in laying date and a reduction in clutch size during warmer winters due to density‐dependent effects. As expected, as spring temperature increases laying date advances and as winter temperature increases clutch size is reduced in both species. Density of great tit affected the relationship between winter temperature and laying date in great and blue tit. Specifically, as density of great tit increased and temperature in winter increased both species started to reproduce later. Density of blue tit affected the relationship between spring temperature and blue and great tit laying date. Thus, both species start to reproduce earlier with increasing spring temperature as density of blue tit increases, which was not an expected outcome, since we expected that increasing spring temperature should advance laying date, while increasing density should delay it cancelling each other out. Climate warming and its interaction with density affects clutch size of great tits but not of blue tits. As predicted, great tit clutch size is reduced more with density of blue tits as temperature in winter increases. The relationship between spring temperature and density on clutch size of great tits depends on whether the increase is in density of great tit or blue tit. Therefore, an increase in temperature negatively affected the coexistence of blue and great tits differently in both species. Thus, blue tit clutch size was unaffected by the interaction effect of density with temperature, while great tit clutch size was affected in multiple ways by these interactions terms.
- Published
- 2020
22. Schizophrenia: The new etiological synthesis.
- Author
-
Rantala MJ, Luoto S, Borráz-León JI, and Krams I
- Subjects
- Humans, Dysbiosis complications, Biological Evolution, Inflammation complications, Schizophrenia genetics, Toxoplasma
- Abstract
Schizophrenia has been an evolutionary paradox: it has high heritability, but it is associated with decreased reproductive success. The causal genetic variants underlying schizophrenia are thought to be under weak negative selection. To unravel this paradox, many evolutionary explanations have been suggested for schizophrenia. We critically discuss the constellation of evolutionary hypotheses for schizophrenia, highlighting the lack of empirical support for most existing evolutionary hypotheses-with the exception of the relatively well supported evolutionary mismatch hypothesis. It posits that evolutionarily novel features of contemporary environments, such as chronic stress, low-grade systemic inflammation, and gut dysbiosis, increase susceptibility to schizophrenia. Environmental factors such as microbial infections (e.g., Toxoplasma gondii) can better predict the onset of schizophrenia than polygenic risk scores. However, researchers have not been able to explain why only a small minority of infected people develop schizophrenia. The new etiological synthesis of schizophrenia indicates that an interaction between host genotype, microbe infection, and chronic stress causes schizophrenia, with neuroinflammation and gut dysbiosis mediating this etiological pathway. Instead of just alleviating symptoms with drugs, the parasite x genotype x stress model emphasizes that schizophrenia treatment should focus on detecting and treating possible underlying microbial infection(s), neuroinflammation, gut dysbiosis, and chronic stress., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Hidden Costs in the Physiology of Argia anceps (Zigoptera: Coenagrionidae) due to Pollution
- Author
-
Juárez-Hernández, E, primary, Villalobos-Jiménez, G, additional, Gutierrez-Corona, J F, additional, Krams, I, additional, González-Soriano, E, additional, and Contreras-Garduño, J, additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Effects of the Sex Ratio and Socioeconomic Deprivation on Male Mortality
- Author
-
Moore, F. R., primary, Macleod, M., additional, Starkey, C., additional, Krams, I., additional, and Roy, T., additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The environmental mismatch model of bipolar disorder is supported by evidence: A response to Partonen et al.
- Author
-
Rantala MJ, Luoto S, Borráz-León JI, and Krams I
- Subjects
- Humans, Bipolar Disorder
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Is it interspecific information use or aggression between putative competitors that steers the selection of nest‐site characteristics?:a reply to Slagsvold and Wiebe
- Author
-
Forsman, J. T. (Jukka T.), Seppänen, J.-T. (Janne-Tuomas), Mönkkönen, M. (Mikko), Thomson, R. L. (Robert L.), Kivelä, S. M. (Sami M.), Krams, I. (Indrikis), and Loukola, O. J. (Olli J.)
- Subjects
nest-site selection ,interspecific information use ,interspecific competition - Abstract
A growing number of studies have demonstrated that heterospecific individuals with overlapping resource needs — putative competitors — can provide information to each other that improves the outcomes of decisions. Our studies using cavity nesting resident tits (information provider) and migratory flycatchers (Ficedula spp., information user) have shown that selective interspecific information use (SIIU) can result in flycatchers copying and rejecting the apparent nest‐site feature preferences of tits, depending on a perceivable fitness correlate (clutch size) of the tits. These, and other results on the interspecific information use, challenge the predictions of traditional theory of species coexistence. Recently, Slagsvold and Wiebe (2017) proposed an alternative hypothesis, the owner aggression hypothesis (OAH), to explain our results. Their main points of critique are: 1) a lack of evidence that flycatchers make visits into tit nests prior to nesting and 2) flycatchers do not have an ability to assess tit clutch size. According to Slagsvold and Wiebe, interspecific aggression between tits and flycatchers, not information use, is the mechanism explaining our results. In this reply we show that part of Slagsvold and Wiebe’s criticism is based on mischaracterization of the assumptions of SIIU, resulting in misinterpretations of our results. We also provide new evidence that flycatchers (mostly males) frequently visit tit nests prior to settlement and can acquire information about tit clutch size and thereby on the quality of the tutoring tit individual and its decisions. In short, as intriguing as OAH is, we suggest that 1) some of the assumptions are highly speculative and lack evidence, while 2) our earlier experiment (Loukola et al. 2013) has clearly demonstrated the importance of the visible clutch size of tits for flycatcher decisions. Therefore, SIIU can more parsimoniously than OAH explain the behaviour of flycatchers.
- Published
- 2018
27. Effects of the Sex Ratio and Socioeconomic Deprivation on Male Mortality.
- Author
-
Moore, F. R., Macleod, M., Starkey, C., Krams, I., and Roy, T.
- Subjects
SEX ratio ,MORTALITY ,GENDER role - Abstract
We explored relationships between male mortality and the sex ratio. (We tested relationships across 142 societies and in longitudinal data from Scotland. A male-biased sex ratio was associated with reduced mortality by intentional self-harm across 142 societies. This was replicated in longitudinal Scottish data, and men were less likely to die by suicide and assault when there were more men in the population only when levels of unemployment were low. We argue that this is consistent with a theoretical model in which men increase investment in relationships and offspring as "competition" under a male-biased sex ratio, and that the conflicting results of previous work may stem from divergent effects of the sex ratio on mortality depending upon relative deprivation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Editorial: Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) and Its Psychobehavioral Consequences.
- Author
-
Luoto S, Prokosch ML, Varella MAC, Krams I, and Fincher CL
- Abstract
Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Bipolar disorder: An evolutionary psychoneuroimmunological approach.
- Author
-
Rantala MJ, Luoto S, Borráz-León JI, and Krams I
- Subjects
- Affect, Biological Evolution, Humans, Bipolar Disorder immunology, Bipolar Disorder psychology, Sleep Wake Disorders, Suicide
- Abstract
Bipolar disorder is a mental health disorder characterized by extreme shifts in mood, high suicide rate, sleep problems, and dysfunction of psychological traits like self-esteem (feeling inferior when depressed and superior when manic). Bipolar disorder is rare among populations that have not adopted contemporary Western lifestyles, which supports the hypothesis that bipolar disorder results from a mismatch between Homo sapiens's evolutionary and current environments. Recent studies have connected bipolar disorder with low-grade inflammation, the malfunctioning of the internal clock, and the resulting sleep disturbances. Stress is often a triggering factor for mania and sleep problems, but stress also causes low-grade inflammation. Since inflammation desynchronizes the internal clock, chronic stress and inflammation are the primary biological mechanisms behind bipolar disorder. Chronic stress and inflammation are driven by contemporary Western lifestyles, including stressful social environments, unhealthy dietary patterns, limited physical activity, and obesity. The treatment of bipolar disorder should focus on reducing stress, stress sensitivity, and inflammation by lifestyle changes rather than just temporarily alleviating symptoms with psychopharmacological interventions., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Sex-specific compensatory growth in the larvae of the greater wax mothGalleria mellonella
- Author
-
Kecko, S., primary, Mihailova, A., additional, Kangassalo, K., additional, Elferts, D., additional, Krama, T., additional, Krams, R., additional, Luoto, S., additional, Rantala, M. J., additional, and Krams, I. A., additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Hidden Costs in the Physiology of Argia anceps(Zigoptera: Coenagrionidae) due to Pollution
- Author
-
Juárez-Hernández, E, Villalobos-Jiménez, G, Gutierrez-Corona, J F, Krams, I, González-Soriano, E, and Contreras-Garduño, J
- Abstract
Before a population becomes extinct, there are hidden costs in the physiology at the individual level that provide valuable insights into their condition. Here, we study two dams with one species in common (Argia ancepsGarrison, 1996) to evaluate whether their physiological condition differed (total protein quantity, prophenoloxidase (proPO) and phenoloxidase (PO) activity, and protein carbonylation) during two consecutive years. The first dam, “El Gallinero” (contaminated, C), contains organic input from mines and agricultural activity, whereas the second, “Paso de Vaqueros” (non-contaminated, NC), is part of a biosphere reserve. Although at a phenological level, some physiological differences were observed (2012 vs 2013), individuals from the contaminated population had less total protein (2012, median = 1.815 μg/μL; 2013, 0.081 μg/μL) and more carbonylations in their proteins (2012, median = 19.00 nmol/mg; 2013, median = 121.69 nmol/mg) compared with the non-contaminated population (protein quantity in 2012, median = 3.716 μg/μL; 2013, median = 0.054 μg/μL; protein carbonylations in 2012, median = 0.00 nmol/mg; 2013, median = 99.44 nmol/mg). However, no significant differences were found in prophenoloxidase (C, median = 0.002 Vmax; NC, median = 0.002 Vmax) and phenoloxidase activity (C, median = 0.002 Vmax; NC, median = 0.001 Vmax). In addition, the biological oxygen demand (BOD) and Zn were more elevated in the C than NC population (C, BOD = 11.7, Zn = 0.17; NC, BOD = 8, Zn = 0.14). The results show that the impact of human activity can be observed not only through the extinction of species, but also at the physiological level of the individuals composing the populations through the evaluation of biomolecular damage, which can be observed at a much shorter scale compared with species extinction.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. MHC Class II Heterozygosity Associated With Attractiveness of Men and Women.
- Author
-
Hakkarainen TJ, Krams I, Coetzee V, Skrinda I, Kecko S, Krama T, Ilonen J, and Rantala MJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Humans, Male, Major Histocompatibility Complex genetics, Sexual Partners
- Abstract
The genes of the Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC), which plays a fundamental role in the immune system, are some of the most diverse genes in vertebrates and have been connected to mate choice in several species, including humans. While studies suggest a positive relationship between MHC diversity and male facial attractiveness, the connection of MHC diversity to other visual traits and female attractiveness is still unclear. The purpose of this study was to investigate further whether MHC heterozygosity, indicating genetic quality, is associated with visual traits affecting mate preferences in humans. In total 74 Latvian men and 49 women were genotyped for several MHC loci and rated for facial and, in men, also body attractiveness. The results indicate a preference for MHC heterozygous female and male faces. However, the initially positive relationship between MHC heterozygosity and facial attractiveness becomes non-significant in females, when controlling for multiple testing, and in males, when age and fat content is taken into account, referring to the importance of adiposity in immune function and thus also attractiveness. Thus overall the effect of MHC heterozygosity on attractiveness seems weak. When considering separate loci, we show that the main gene related to facial attractiveness is the MHC class II DQB1; a gene important also in viral infections and autoimmune diseases. Indeed, in our study, heterozygous individuals are rated significantly more attractive than their homozygous counterparts, only in relation to gene DQB1. This study is the first to indicate a link between DQB1 and attractiveness in humans.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Insect Immune Evasion by Dauer and Nondauer Entomopathogenic Nematodes.
- Author
-
Lara-Reyes N, Jiménez-Cortés JG, Canales-Lazcano J, Franco B, Krams I, and Contreras-Garduño J
- Subjects
- Analysis of Variance, Animals, Catechol Oxidase metabolism, Cobra Cardiotoxin Proteins metabolism, Enzyme Precursors metabolism, Larva immunology, Lepidoptera enzymology, Lepidoptera immunology, Monophenol Monooxygenase metabolism, Strongyloidea pathogenicity, Strongyloidea ultrastructure, Time Factors, Virulence, Immune Evasion physiology, Lepidoptera parasitology, Strongyloidea immunology
- Abstract
The immune response of animals, including insects, is overcome by some parasites. For example, dauer larvae (DL) of the obligate entomopathogenic nematodes (EPNs) Heterorhabditis and Steinernema can invade insects, evade their defenses, and cause death. Although DL were long assumed to be the only infective stage of nematodes, recent reports suggest that L2-L3 larvae of facultative EPNs are also capable of killing insects. There are no studies, to our knowledge, about the role of nonimmunological barriers (the exoskeleton and its openings) in avoiding infection by DL and L2-L3 larvae, or whether these larval stages evade the host immune system in the same way. The objective of this study was to examine these questions by infecting Galleria mellonella with the facultative parasitic nematode Rhabditis regina. DL or L2-L3 larvae were either deposited on or near the moths or injected into their hemocoel. Once nematodes reached the hemocoel, the following host immune response parameters were quantified: prophenoloxidase, phenoloxidase, lytic activity, and the number of granular hemocytes. DL showed a greater ability to penetrate the exoskeleton than L2-L3 larvae. Once inside, however, both went unnoticed by the immune system and killed the insect. A higher number of granular hemocytes was activated by L2-L3 larvae than DL. We show for the first time that L2-L3 larvae can penetrate and evade the insect immune system. Further research is needed to compare facultative and specialized EPNs to determine which is more likely, with both DL and L2-L3 larvae, to evade insect defense barriers and produce death. The results will contribute to understanding the evolution of virulence in entomopathogenic nematodes., (© American Society of Parasitologists 2021.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Mixed company: a framework for understanding the composition and organization of mixed-species animal groups.
- Author
-
Goodale E, Sridhar H, Sieving KE, Bangal P, Colorado Z GJ, Farine DR, Heymann EW, Jones HH, Krams I, Martínez AE, Montaño-Centellas F, Muñoz J, Srinivasan U, Theo A, and Shanker K
- Subjects
- Animals, Behavior Observation Techniques, Biological Evolution, Birds physiology, Eating physiology, Feeding Behavior physiology, Fishes physiology, Mammals physiology, Predatory Behavior physiology, Reptiles physiology, Spatial Behavior physiology, Time Factors, Behavior, Animal physiology, Biodiversity, Birds classification, Fishes classification, Mammals classification, Reptiles classification
- Abstract
Mixed-species animal groups (MSGs) are widely acknowledged to increase predator avoidance and foraging efficiency, among other benefits, and thereby increase participants' fitness. Diversity in MSG composition ranges from two to 70 species of very similar or completely different phenotypes. Yet consistency in organization is also observable in that one or a few species usually have disproportionate importance for MSG formation and/or maintenance. We propose a two-dimensional framework for understanding this diversity and consistency, concentrating on the types of interactions possible between two individuals, usually of different species. One axis represents the similarity of benefit types traded between the individuals, while the second axis expresses asymmetry in the relative amount of benefits/costs accrued. Considering benefit types, one extreme represents the case of single-species groups wherein all individuals obtain the same supplementary, group-size-related benefits, and the other extreme comprises associations of very different, but complementary species (e.g. one partner creates access to food while the other provides vigilance). The relevance of social information and the matching of activities (e.g. speed of movement) are highest for relationships on the supplementary side of this axis, but so is competition; relationships between species will occur at points along this gradient where the benefits outweigh the costs. Considering benefit amounts given or received, extreme asymmetry occurs when one species is exclusively a benefit provider and the other a benefit user. Within this parameter space, some MSG systems are constrained to one kind of interaction, such as shoals of fish of similar species or leader-follower interactions in fish and other taxa. Other MSGs, such as terrestrial bird flocks, can simultaneously include a variety of supplementary and complementary interactions. We review the benefits that species obtain across the diversity of MSG types, and argue that the degree and nature of asymmetry between benefit providers and users should be measured and not just assumed. We then discuss evolutionary shifts in MSG types, focusing on drivers towards similarity in group composition, and selection on benefit providers to enhance the benefits they can receive from other species. Finally, we conclude by considering how individual and collective behaviour in MSGs may influence both the structure and processes of communities., (© 2020 The Authors. Biological Reviews published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Cambridge Philosophical Society.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Fecundity selection does not vary along a large geographical cline of trait means in a passerine bird
- Author
-
Sarkiä, P.M., Adamík, P., Atemyev, A. V., Belskii, E., Both, Christiaan, Burês, S., Burgess, M.D., Bushuev, A.V., Forsman, JT, Grinkov, V., Hoffmann, D., Järvinen, A., Král, M., Krams, I., Lampe, H.M., Moreno Klemming, Juan, Mägi, M., Nord, A., Potti, Jaime, Ravussin, Pierre Alain, Sokolov, Leonid V., and Laaksonen, T.
- Subjects
Ornamentation ,Plumage ,Phenotype ,Coloration ,Species variation ,Fitness ,Melanin - Abstract
Local environmental and ecological conditions are commonly expected to result in local adaptation, although there are few examples of variation in phenotypic selection across continent-wide spatial scales. We collected standardized data on selection with respect to the highly variable plumage coloration of pied flycatcher (Ficedula hypoleucaPall.) males from 17 populations across the species' breeding range. The observed selection on multiple male coloration traits via the annual number of fledged young was generally relatively weak. The main aim of the present study, however, was to examine whether the current directional selection estimates are associated with distance to the sympatric area with the collared flycatcher (Ficedula albicollisTemminck), a sister species with which the pied flycatcher is showing character displacement. This pattern was expected because plumage traits in male pied flycatchers are changing with the distance to these areas of sympatry. However, we did not find such a pattern in current selection on coloration. There were no associations between current directional selection on ornamentation and latitude or longitude either. Interestingly, current selection on coloration traits was not associated with the observed mean plumage traits of the populations. Thus, there do not appear to be geographical gradients in current directional fecundity selection on male plumage ornamentation. The results of the present study do not support the idea that constant patterns in directional fecundity selection would play a major role in the maintenance of coloration among populations in this species. By contrast, the tendency for relatively weak mosaic-like variation in selection among populations could reflect just a snapshot of temporally variable, potentially environment-dependent, selection, as suggested by other studies in this system. Such fine-grained variable selection coupled with gene flow could maintain extensive phenotypic variation across populations.
- Published
- 2015
36. Interspecific variation in the relationship between clutch size, laying date and intensity of urbanisation in four species of hole-nesting birds.
- Author
-
VAUGOYEAU, M., ADRIAENSEN, F., ARTEMYEV, A., BAŃBURA, J., BARBA, E., BIARD, C., BLONDEL, J., BOUSLAMA, Z., BOUVIER, J-C., CAMPRODON, J., CECERE, F., CHARMANTIER, A., CHARTER, M., CICHOŃ, M., CUSIMANO, C., CZESZCZEWIK, D., DEMEYRIER, V., DOLIGEZ, B., DOUTRELANT, C., DUBIEC, A., EENS, M., EEVA, T., FAIVRE, B., FERNS, P. N., FORSMAN, J. T., GARCÍA-DEL-REY, E., GOLDSHTEIN, A., GOODENOUGH, A. E., GOSLER, A. G., GRÉGOIRE, A., GUSTAFSSON, L., HARNIST, I., HARTLEY, I. R., HEEB, P., HINSLEY, S. A., ISENMANN, P., JACOB, S., JUŠKAITIS, R., KORPIMÄKI, E., KRAMS, I., LAAKSONEN, T., LAMBRECHTS, M. M., LECLERCQ, B., LEHIKOINEN, E., LOUKOLA, O., LUNDBERG, A., MAINWARING, M. C., MÄND, R., MASSA, B., MAZGAJSKI, T. D., MERINO, S., MITRUS, C., MÖNKKÖNEN, M., MORIN, X., NAGER, R. G., NILSSON, J-Å., NILSSON, S. G., NORTE, A. C., ORELL, M., PERRET, P., PERRINS, C. M., PIMENTEL, C. S., PINXTEN, R., RICHNER, H., ROBLES, H., RYTKÖNEN, S., SENAR, J. C., SEPPÄNEN, J. T., DA SILVA, L. P., SLAGSVOLD, T., SOLONEN, T., SORACE, A., STENNING, M. J., TRYJANOWSKI, P., VON NUMERS, M., WALANKIEWICZ, W., MØLLER, A. P. and VAUGOYEAU, M., ADRIAENSEN, F., ARTEMYEV, A., BAŃBURA, J., BARBA, E., BIARD, C., BLONDEL, J., BOUSLAMA, Z., BOUVIER, J-C., CAMPRODON, J., CECERE, F., CHARMANTIER, A., CHARTER, M., CICHOŃ, M., CUSIMANO, C., CZESZCZEWIK, D., DEMEYRIER, V., DOLIGEZ, B., DOUTRELANT, C., DUBIEC, A., EENS, M., EEVA, T., FAIVRE, B., FERNS, P. N., FORSMAN, J. T., GARCÍA-DEL-REY, E., GOLDSHTEIN, A., GOODENOUGH, A. E., GOSLER, A. G., GRÉGOIRE, A., GUSTAFSSON, L., HARNIST, I., HARTLEY, I. R., HEEB, P., HINSLEY, S. A., ISENMANN, P., JACOB, S., JUŠKAITIS, R., KORPIMÄKI, E., KRAMS, I., LAAKSONEN, T., LAMBRECHTS, M. M., LECLERCQ, B., LEHIKOINEN, E., LOUKOLA, O., LUNDBERG, A., MAINWARING, M. C., MÄND, R., MASSA, B., MAZGAJSKI, T. D., MERINO, S., MITRUS, C., MÖNKKÖNEN, M., MORIN, X., NAGER, R. G., NILSSON, J-Å., NILSSON, S. G., NORTE, A. C., ORELL, M., PERRET, P., PERRINS, C. M., PIMENTEL, C. S., PINXTEN, R., RICHNER, H., ROBLES, H., RYTKÖNEN, S., SENAR, J. C., SEPPÄNEN, J. T., DA SILVA, L. P., SLAGSVOLD, T., SOLONEN, T., SORACE, A., STENNING, M. J., TRYJANOWSKI, P., VON NUMERS, M., WALANKIEWICZ, W., MØLLER, A. P.
- Published
- 2016
37. Variation in clutch size in relation to nest size in birds
- Author
-
MØLLER, A. P., ADRIAENSEN, F., ARTEMYEV, A., BANBURA, J., BARBA, E., BIARD, C., BLONDEL, J., BOUSLAMA, Z., BOUVIER, J-C., CAMPRODON, J., CECERE, F., CHARMANTIER, A., CHARTER, M., CICHON, M., CUSIMANO, C., CZESZCZEWIK, D., DEMEYRIER, V., DOLIGEZ, B., DOUTRELANT, C., DUBIEC, A., EENS, M., EEVA, T., FAIVRE, B., FERNS, P.N., FORSMAN, J.T., GARCÍA-DEL-REY, E., GOLDSHTEIN, A., GOODENOUGH, A.E., GOSLER, A.G., GÓZDZ, I., GRÉGOIRE, A., GUSTAFSSON, L., HARTLEY, I.R., HEEB, P., HINSLEY, S.A., ISENMANN, P., JACOB, S., JÄRVINEN, A., JUSKAITIS, R., KORPIMÄKI, E., KRAMS, I., LAAKSONEN, T., LECLERCQ, B., LEHIKOINEN, E., LOUKOLA, E., LUNDBERG, A., MAINWARING, M.C., MÄND, R., MASSA, B., MAZGAJSKI, T.D., MERINO, S., MITRUS, C., MÖNKKÖNEN, M., MORALES-FERNAZ, J., MORIN, X., NAGER, R.G., NILSSON, J-A., NILSSON, S.G., NORTE, A.C., ORELL, M., PERRET, P., PIMENTEL, C.S., PINXTEN, R., PRIEDNIECE, I., QUIDOZ, M-C., REMES, V., RICHNER, H., ROBLES, H., RYTKÖNEN, S., SENAR, J.C., SEPPÄNEN, J.T., DA SILVA, L.P., SLAGSVOLD, T., SOLONEN, T., SORACE, A., STENNING, M.J., TÖRÖK, J., TRYJANOWSKI, P., VAN NOORDWIJK, A.J., VON NUMERS, M., WALANKIEWICZ, W., LAMBRECHTS, M.M.
- Subjects
education - Published
- 2014
38. Large-scale geographical variation in eggshell metal and calcium content in a passerine bird (Ficedula hypoleuca)
- Author
-
Ruuskanen, S., Morales, J., Laaksonen, T., Moreno, J., Mateo, R., Belskii, E., Bushuev, A., Jarvinen, A., Kerimov, A., Krams, I., Morosinotto, C., Mand, R., Orell, M., Qvarnstrom, A., Slater, F.M., Siitari, H., Tilgar, V., Visser, M.E., Winkel, W., Zang, H., Eeva, T., Academy of Finland, Emil Aaltonen Foundation, Finnish Cultural Foundation, Kone Foundation, University of Turku, Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research, Russian Academy of Sciences, European Commission, Ministry of Education and Research (Estonia), Russian Foundation for Basic Research, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (España), Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Animal Ecology (AnE), and Animal Population Biology
- Subjects
Avian clutch size ,Pollution ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Zoology ,Arsenic ,Egg Shell ,biology.animal ,Biomonitoring ,Environmental Chemistry ,Animals ,Passeriformes ,Eggshell ,media_common ,Pollutant ,biology ,Geography ,Ecology ,Ficedula ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Clutch Size ,Passerine ,Europe ,Metals ,international ,Environmental Pollutants ,Bioindicator ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
Birds have been used as bioindicators of pollution, such as toxic metals. Levels of pollutants in eggs are especially interesting, as developing birds are more sensitive to detrimental effects of pollutants than adults. Only very few studies have monitored intraspecific, large-scale variation in metal pollution across a species' breeding range. We studied large-scale geographic variation in metal levels in the eggs of a small passerine, the pied flycatcher (Ficedula hypoleuca), sampled from 15 populations across Europe. We measured 10 eggshell elements (As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Ni, Pb, Zn, Se, Sr, and Ca) and several shell characteristics (mass, thickness, porosity, and color). We found significant variation among populations in eggshell metal levels for all metals except copper. Eggshell lead, zinc, and chromium levels decreased from central Europe to the north, in line with the gradient in pollution levels over Europe, thus suggesting that eggshell can be used as an indicator of pollution levels. Eggshell lead levels were also correlated with soil lead levels and pH. Most of the metals were not correlated with eggshell characteristics, with the exception of shell mass, or with breeding success, which may suggest that birds can cope well with the current background exposure levels across Europe., This study was financially supported by Turku University Foundation, Finnish Cultural Foundation, Kone Foundation (grants to SR) and Emil Aaltonen Foundation (a grant to TL), and Academy of Finland (a grant to TE, project 265859). EB was financed by Ural Branch of RAS (project 12-М-45-2072). Field work and analyses of eggshell structure and color were financed by project CGL2010-19233-C03-02 (Spanish Ministry of Science) to J. Moreno. J. Morales is supported by a contract “Junta de Ampliación de Estudios” funded by the Spanish Research Council-CSIC and the European Social Fund. Data collection in Moscow region was financially supported by RFBR (Russia, grants to AK and AB). Data collection in Estonia was financially supported by the Estonian Ministry of Education and Science (target-financing project number 0180004s09) and the European Regional Development Fund (Center of Excellence FIBIR). MEV was supported by a NWO-VICI grant.
- Published
- 2013
39. England first, America second: The ecological predictors of life history and innovation-ERRATUM.
- Author
-
Luoto S, Rantala MJ, and Krams I
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The costs of the immune memory within generations.
- Author
-
Contreras-Garduño J, Méndez-López TT, Patiño-Morales A, González-Hernández GA, Torres-Guzmán JC, Krams I, Mendoza-Cuenca L, and Ruiz-Guzmán G
- Subjects
- Animals, Energy Metabolism, Female, Larva immunology, Larva microbiology, Male, Metarhizium immunology, Life Cycle Stages immunology, Tenebrio immunology, Tenebrio microbiology
- Abstract
Immune response is evolutionary costly, but it is not clear whether these costs affect energetic expenditure (short-term cost), growth (medium-term cost), or reproduction (long-term cost). We tested the costs of immune memory in Tenebrio molitor against Metarhizium brunneum. To do this, we used two groups of T. molitor larvae: (a) the control group, which was injected first with Tween solution and 10 days later with M. brunneum and (b) the memory group, which was first injected with M. brunneum and 10 days later with M. brunneum. Compared to controls, larvae of the memory group were more likely to survive, but they also had an increased metabolic rate (CO
2 production), spent a long time before becoming pupae, and had a shorter time from pupae to adulthood. In the adult stage, control females preferred control males, but there was no significant difference in the preference of memory females. Finally, control and memory males preferred control females. These results confirm that immune memory has costs in terms of energetic expenditure, growth, and reproduction. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first experimental demonstration that immune memory in larvae is traded-off with adult sexual selection involving mate choice.- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Eating Disorders: An Evolutionary Psychoneuroimmunological Approach.
- Author
-
Rantala MJ, Luoto S, Krama T, and Krams I
- Abstract
Eating disorders are evolutionarily novel conditions. They lead to some of the highest mortality rates of all psychiatric disorders. Several evolutionary hypotheses have been proposed for eating disorders, but only the intrasexual competition hypothesis is extensively supported by evidence. We present the mismatch hypothesis as a necessary extension to the current theoretical framework of eating disorders. This hypothesis explains the evolutionarily novel adaptive metaproblem that has arisen when mating motives conflict with the large-scale and easy availability of hyper-rewarding but obesogenic foods. This situation is exacerbated particularly in those contemporary environments that are characterized by sedentary lifestyles, ever-present junk foods, caloric surplus and the ubiquity of social comparisons that take place via social media. Our psychoneuroimmunological model connects ultimate-level causation with proximate mechanisms by showing how the adaptive metaproblem between mating motives and food rewards leads to chronic stress and, further, to disordered eating. Chronic stress causes neuroinflammation, which increases susceptibility to OCD-like behaviors that typically co-occur with eating disorders. Chronic stress upregulates the serotonergic system and causes dysphoric mood in anorexia nervosa patients. Dieting, however, reduces serotonin levels and dysphoric mood, leading to a vicious serotonergic-homeostatic stress/starvation cycle whereby cortisol and neuroinflammation increase through stringent dieting. Our psychoneuroimmunological model indicates that between-individual and within-individual variation in eating disorders partially arises from (co)variation in gut microbiota and stress responsivity, which influence neuroinflammation and the serotonergic system. We review the advances that have been made in recent years in understanding how to best treat eating disorders, outlining directions for future clinical research. Current evidence indicates that eating disorder treatments should aim to reduce the chronic stress, neuroinflammation, stress responsivity and gut dysbiosis that fuel the disorders. Connecting ultimate causes with proximate mechanisms and treating biopsychosocial causes rather than manifest symptoms is expected to bring more effective and sophisticated long-term interventions for the millions of people who suffer from eating disorders., (Copyright © 2019 Rantala, Luoto, Krama and Krams.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Manipulating mtDNA in vivo reprograms metabolism via novel response mechanisms.
- Author
-
Bahhir D, Yalgin C, Ots L, Järvinen S, George J, Naudí A, Krama T, Krams I, Tamm M, Andjelković A, Dufour E, González de Cózar JM, Gerards M, Parhiala M, Pamplona R, Jacobs HT, and Jõers P
- Subjects
- Adenosine Triphosphate genetics, Animals, Carbohydrate Metabolism genetics, Carbohydrates genetics, DNA Restriction Enzymes genetics, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 metabolism, Drosophila melanogaster genetics, Drosophila melanogaster metabolism, Humans, Metabolic Networks and Pathways genetics, Mitochondria metabolism, Oxidative Phosphorylation, Oxidative Stress genetics, Cellular Reprogramming genetics, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 genetics, Mitochondria genetics
- Abstract
Mitochondria have been increasingly recognized as a central regulatory nexus for multiple metabolic pathways, in addition to ATP production via oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS). Here we show that inducing mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) stress in Drosophila using a mitochondrially-targeted Type I restriction endonuclease (mtEcoBI) results in unexpected metabolic reprogramming in adult flies, distinct from effects on OXPHOS. Carbohydrate utilization was repressed, with catabolism shifted towards lipid oxidation, accompanied by elevated serine synthesis. Cleavage and translocation, the two modes of mtEcoBI action, repressed carbohydrate rmetabolism via two different mechanisms. DNA cleavage activity induced a type II diabetes-like phenotype involving deactivation of Akt kinase and inhibition of pyruvate dehydrogenase, whilst translocation decreased post-translational protein acetylation by cytonuclear depletion of acetyl-CoA (AcCoA). The associated decrease in the concentrations of ketogenic amino acids also produced downstream effects on physiology and behavior, attributable to decreased neurotransmitter levels. We thus provide evidence for novel signaling pathways connecting mtDNA to metabolism, distinct from its role in supporting OXPHOS., Competing Interests: Authors declare that they have no competing interests.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. A Life History Approach to the Female Sexual Orientation Spectrum: Evolution, Development, Causal Mechanisms, and Health.
- Author
-
Luoto S, Krams I, and Rantala MJ
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Life History Traits, Sexual Behavior psychology, Women's Health standards
- Abstract
Women's capacity for sexual fluidity is at least as interesting a phenomenon from the point of view of evolutionary biology and behavioral endocrinology as exclusively homosexual orientation. Evolutionary hypotheses for female nonheterosexuality have failed to fully account for the existence of these different categories of nonheterosexual women, while also overlooking broader data on the causal mechanisms, physiology, ontogeny, and phylogeny of female nonheterosexuality. We review the evolutionary-developmental origins of various phenotypes in the female sexual orientation spectrum using the synergistic approach of Tinbergen's four questions. We also present femme-specific and butch-specific hypotheses at proximate and ultimate levels of analysis. This review article indicates that various nonheterosexual female phenotypes emerge from and contribute to hormonally mediated fast life history strategies. Life history theory provides a biobehavioral explanatory framework for nonheterosexual women's masculinized body morphology, psychological dispositions, and their elevated likelihood of experiencing violence, substance use, obesity, teenage pregnancy, and lower general health. This pattern of life outcomes can create a feedback loop of environmental unpredictability and harshness which destabilizes intrauterine hormonal conditions in mothers, leading to a greater likelihood of fast life history strategies, global health problems, and nonheterosexual preferences in female offspring. We further explore the potential of female nonheterosexuality to function as an alloparental buffer that enables masculinizing alleles to execute their characteristic fast life history strategies as they appear in the female and the male phenotype. Synthesizing life history theory with the female sexual orientation spectrum enriches existing scientific knowledge on the evolutionary-developmental mechanisms of human sex differences.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Response to Commentaries: Life History Evolution, Causal Mechanisms, and Female Sexual Orientation.
- Author
-
Luoto S, Krams I, and Rantala MJ
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Sexual Behavior
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Ecological Stoichiometry: A Link Between Developmental Speed and Physiological Stress in an Omnivorous Insect.
- Author
-
Trakimas G, Krams R, Krama T, Kortet R, Haque S, Luoto S, Eichler Inwood S, Butler DM, Jõers P, Hawlena D, Rantala MJ, Elferts D, Contreras-Garduño J, and Krams I
- Abstract
The elemental composition of organisms belongs to a suite of functional traits that may adaptively respond to fluctuating selection pressures. Life history theory predicts that predation risk and resource limitations impose selection pressures on organisms' developmental time and are further associated with variability in energetic and behavioral traits. Individual differences in developmental speed, behaviors and physiology have been explained using the pace-of-life syndrome (POLS) hypothesis. However, how an organism's developmental speed is linked with elemental body composition, metabolism and behavior is not well understood. We compared elemental body composition, latency to resume activity and resting metabolic rate (RMR) of western stutter-trilling crickets ( Gryllus integer ) in three selection lines that differ in developmental speed. We found that slowly developing crickets had significantly higher body carbon, lower body nitrogen and higher carbon-to-nitrogen ratio than rapidly developing crickets. Slowly developing crickets had significantly higher RMR than rapidly developing crickets. Male crickets had higher RMR than females. Slowly developing crickets resumed activity faster in an unfamiliar relative to a familiar environment. The rapidly developing crickets did the opposite. The results highlight the tight association between life history, physiology and behavior. This study indicates that traditional methods used in POLS research should be complemented by those used in ecological stoichiometry, resulting in a synthetic approach that potentially advances the whole field of behavioral and physiological ecology.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Women's preferences for men's facial masculinity are strongest under favorable ecological conditions.
- Author
-
Marcinkowska UM, Rantala MJ, Lee AJ, Kozlov MV, Aavik T, Cai H, Contreras-Garduño J, David OA, Kaminski G, Li NP, Onyishi IE, Prasai K, Pazhoohi F, Prokop P, Cardozo SLR, Sydney N, Taniguchi H, Krams I, and Dixson BJW
- Subjects
- Cultural Characteristics, Female, Heterosexuality, Humans, Male, Socioeconomic Factors, Choice Behavior, Ecological and Environmental Phenomena physiology, Face, Masculinity, Physical Appearance, Body
- Abstract
The strength of sexual selection on secondary sexual traits varies depending on prevailing economic and ecological conditions. In humans, cross-cultural evidence suggests women's preferences for men's testosterone dependent masculine facial traits are stronger under conditions where health is compromised, male mortality rates are higher and economic development is higher. Here we use a sample of 4483 exclusively heterosexual women from 34 countries and employ mixed effects modelling to test how social, ecological and economic variables predict women's facial masculinity preferences. We report women's preferences for more masculine looking men are stronger in countries with higher sociosexuality and where national health indices and human development indices are higher, while no associations were found between preferences and indices of intra-sexual competition. Our results show that women's preferences for masculine faces are stronger under conditions where offspring survival is higher and economic conditions are more favorable.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. A head start for life history development? Family income mediates associations between height and immune response in men.
- Author
-
Krams I, Luoto S, Rubika A, Krama T, Elferts D, Krams R, Kecko S, Skrinda I, Moore FR, and Rantala MJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Anthropology, Physical, Hepatitis B Antibodies blood, Hepatitis B Vaccines immunology, Humans, Latvia epidemiology, Male, Socioeconomic Factors, Young Adult, Body Height physiology, Immunity physiology, Income statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objectives: Male height and health affect a diverse range of social and economic outcomes such as competition for resources and mates. Life history theory predicts that limited availability of bioenergetic resources curbs the development of central life history functions such as somatic growth, immunity, and investment in offspring. Although genetic factors are important determinants of height, other factors such as income level may affect the incidence of infections during ontogeny, thus having indirect effects on somatic growth. We tested whether growing up in families with a higher income positively affects height and immune function., Materials and Methods: Seventy-three young Latvian men from various socioeconomic backgrounds were given a hepatitis B vaccine. Blood samples were subsequently collected to measure the antibodies produced in response to the vaccination. Tweedie compound Poisson generalized linear models were used to examine relationships between height, family income, and antibody titers., Results: Both height and family income positively correlated with the strength of men's immune response. However, when testing for the simultaneous effects of height and income on antibody titers, the statistical models showed that height affected antibody levels indirectly because income level mediated variance in height., Discussion: The results of this study show that the relationships between height and immune function in young men are more complex than previously thought. Associations between taller stature of men and the robustness of their immune response are indirect because resource availability affects both somatic growth and the development of the immune system., (© 2018 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The underlying causes of differential migration: assumptions, hypotheses, and predictions.
- Author
-
Paprocki N and Conway CJ
- Abstract
Mechanisms governing the migratory decisions of birds have long fascinated ecologists and sparked considerable debate. Identifying factors responsible for variation in migration distance, also known as differential migration, has been a popular approach to understanding the mechanisms underlying migratory behaviour more generally. However, research progress has been slowed by the continued testing of overlapping, non-mechanistic, and circular predictions among a small set of historically entrenched hypotheses. We highlight the body size hypothesis and suggest that the predictions commonly tested have impeded progress because body size relationships with migration distance are predictions made by several distinct hypotheses with contrasting mechanisms. The cost of migration itself has not been adequately accounted for in most hypotheses, and we propose two flight efficiency hypotheses with time- and energy-minimizing mechanisms that allow individuals to mitigate the risks inherent to longer migrations. We also advance two conceptual versions of the social dominance hypothesis based on two distinct underlying mechanisms related to distance minimization and food maximization that will help clarify the role of competition in driving migratory decisions. Overall, we describe and refine 12 mechanistic hypotheses proposed to explain differential migration (along with several other special-case hypotheses), seven of which have underlying mechanisms related to food limitation as past research has identified this to be an important driver of differential migration. We also thoroughly reviewed 145 publications to assess the amount of support for 10 critical assumptions underlying alternative hypotheses for differential migration in birds. Our review reveals that surprisingly few studies explicitly evaluate assumptions within a differential migration context. Generating and testing strong predictions and critical assumptions underlying mechanisms of alternative hypotheses will improve our ability to differentiate among these explanations of differential migration. Additionally, future intraspecific progress will be greatest if investigators continue to focus on mechanisms underlying variation in migration distance within rather than among demographic classes, as previous research has found differing mechanisms to be responsible for differential migration among demographic classes. Interspecifically, a thorough comparative analysis that seeks to explain variation in migration distance among species would broaden both our understanding of the mechanisms regulating current differential migration patterns and those that led to the evolution of migration more generally. Collectively, we provide a framework that, together with advances in animal-borne tracking and other technology, can be used to advance our understanding of the causes of differential migration distance, and migratory decisions more generally., (© 2024 Cambridge Philosophical Society.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Clutch-size variation in Western Palaearctic secondary hole-nesting passerine birds in relation to nest box design
- Author
-
Møller, A.P., Adriaensen, F., Artemyev, A., Bańbura, J., Barba, E., Biard, C., Blondel, J., Bouslama, Z., Bouvier, J.-C., Camprodon, J., Cecere, F., Chaine, A., Charmantier, A., Charter, M., Cichoń, M., Cusimano, C., Czeszczewik, D., Doligez, B., Doutrelant, C., Dubiec, A., Eens, M., Eeva, T., Faivre, B., Ferns, P.N., Forsman, J.T., García-del-Rey, E., Goldshtein, A., Goodenough, A.E., Gosler, A.G., Góźdź, I., Grégoire, A., Gustafsson, L., Hartley, I.R., Heeb, P., Hinsley, S.A., Isenmann, P., Jacob, S., Järvinen, A., Juškaitis, R., Kania, W., Korpimäki, E., Krams, I., Laaksonen, T., Leclercq, B., Lehikoinen, E., Loukola, O., Lundberg, A., Mainwaring, M.C., Mänd, R., Massa, B., Mazgajski, T.D., Merino, S., Mitrus, C., Mönkkönen, M., Morales-Fernaz, J., Moreno, J., Morin, X., Nager, R.G., Nilsson, J.-Å., Nilsson, S.G., Norte, A.C., Orell, M., Perret, P., Perrins, C.M., Pimentel, C.S., Pinxten, R., Priedniece, I., Quidoz, M.-C., Remeš, V., Richner, H., Robles, H., Russell, A., Rytkönen, S., Senar, J.C., Seppänen, J.T., Pascoal da Silva, L., Slagsvold, T., Solonen, T., Sorace, A., Stenning, M.J., Török, J., Tryjanowski, P., Van Noordwijk, A.J., von Numers, M., Walankiewicz, W., Lambrechts, M.M., Møller, A.P., Adriaensen, F., Artemyev, A., Bańbura, J., Barba, E., Biard, C., Blondel, J., Bouslama, Z., Bouvier, J.-C., Camprodon, J., Cecere, F., Chaine, A., Charmantier, A., Charter, M., Cichoń, M., Cusimano, C., Czeszczewik, D., Doligez, B., Doutrelant, C., Dubiec, A., Eens, M., Eeva, T., Faivre, B., Ferns, P.N., Forsman, J.T., García-del-Rey, E., Goldshtein, A., Goodenough, A.E., Gosler, A.G., Góźdź, I., Grégoire, A., Gustafsson, L., Hartley, I.R., Heeb, P., Hinsley, S.A., Isenmann, P., Jacob, S., Järvinen, A., Juškaitis, R., Kania, W., Korpimäki, E., Krams, I., Laaksonen, T., Leclercq, B., Lehikoinen, E., Loukola, O., Lundberg, A., Mainwaring, M.C., Mänd, R., Massa, B., Mazgajski, T.D., Merino, S., Mitrus, C., Mönkkönen, M., Morales-Fernaz, J., Moreno, J., Morin, X., Nager, R.G., Nilsson, J.-Å., Nilsson, S.G., Norte, A.C., Orell, M., Perret, P., Perrins, C.M., Pimentel, C.S., Pinxten, R., Priedniece, I., Quidoz, M.-C., Remeš, V., Richner, H., Robles, H., Russell, A., Rytkönen, S., Senar, J.C., Seppänen, J.T., Pascoal da Silva, L., Slagsvold, T., Solonen, T., Sorace, A., Stenning, M.J., Török, J., Tryjanowski, P., Van Noordwijk, A.J., von Numers, M., Walankiewicz, W., and Lambrechts, M.M.
- Abstract
* Secondary hole-nesting birds that do not construct nest holes themselves and hence regularly breed in nest boxes constitute important model systems for field studies in many biological disciplines with hundreds of scientists and amateurs involved. Those research groups are spread over wide geographic areas that experience considerable variation in environmental conditions, and researchers provide nest boxes of varying designs that may inadvertently introduce spatial and temporal variation in reproductive parameters. * We quantified the relationship between mean clutch size and nest box size and material after controlling for a range of environmental variables in four of the most widely used model species in the Western Palaearctic: great tit Parus major, blue tit Cyanistes caeruleus, pied flycatcher Ficedula hypoleuca and collared flycatcher F. albicollis from 365 populations and 79 610 clutches. * Nest floor area and nest box material varied non-randomly across latitudes and longitudes, showing that scientists did not adopt a random box design. Clutch size increased with nest floor area in great tits, but not in blue tits and flycatchers. Clutch size of blue tits was larger in wooden than in concrete nest boxes. * These findings demonstrate that the size of nest boxes and material used to construct nest boxes can differentially affect clutch size in different species. The findings also suggest that the nest box design may affect not only focal species, but also indirectly other species through the effects of nest box design on productivity and therefore potentially population density and hence interspecific competition. [KEYWORDS: geographic location habitat latitude longitude nest box floor area nest box material], * Secondary hole-nesting birds that do not construct nest holes themselves and hence regularly breed in nest boxes constitute important model systems for field studies in many biological disciplines with hundreds of scientists and amateurs involved. Those research groups are spread over wide geographic areas that experience considerable variation in environmental conditions, and researchers provide nest boxes of varying designs that may inadvertently introduce spatial and temporal variation in reproductive parameters. * We quantified the relationship between mean clutch size and nest box size and material after controlling for a range of environmental variables in four of the most widely used model species in the Western Palaearctic: great tit Parus major, blue tit Cyanistes caeruleus, pied flycatcher Ficedula hypoleuca and collared flycatcher F. albicollis from 365 populations and 79 610 clutches. * Nest floor area and nest box material varied non-randomly across latitudes and longitudes, showing that scientists did not adopt a random box design. Clutch size increased with nest floor area in great tits, but not in blue tits and flycatchers. Clutch size of blue tits was larger in wooden than in concrete nest boxes. * These findings demonstrate that the size of nest boxes and material used to construct nest boxes can differentially affect clutch size in different species. The findings also suggest that the nest box design may affect not only focal species, but also indirectly other species through the effects of nest box design on productivity and therefore potentially population density and hence interspecific competition. [KEYWORDS: geographic location habitat latitude longitude nest box floor area nest box material]
- Published
- 2014
50. Large-scale geographical variation in eggshell heavy metal and calcium content in a passerine bird (Ficedula hypoleuca)
- Author
-
Ruuskanen, S., Morales, J., Laaksonen, T., Moreno, J., Mateo, R., Belskii, E., Bushuev, A., Jarvinen, A., Kerimov, A., Krams, I., Morosinotto, C., Mand, R., Orell, M., Qvarnstrom, A., Slater, F.M., Siitari, H., Tilgar, V., Visser, M.E., Winkel, W., Zang, H., Eeva, T., Ruuskanen, S., Morales, J., Laaksonen, T., Moreno, J., Mateo, R., Belskii, E., Bushuev, A., Jarvinen, A., Kerimov, A., Krams, I., Morosinotto, C., Mand, R., Orell, M., Qvarnstrom, A., Slater, F.M., Siitari, H., Tilgar, V., Visser, M.E., Winkel, W., Zang, H., and Eeva, T.
- Abstract
Birds have been used as bioindicators of pollution, such as toxic metals. Levels of pollutants in eggs are especially interesting, as developing birds are more sensitive to detrimental effects of pollutants than adults. Only very few studies have monitored intraspecific, large-scale variation in metal pollution across a species' breeding range. We studied large-scale geographic variation in metal levels in the eggs of a small passerine, the pied flycatcher (Ficedula hypoleuca), sampled from 15 populations across Europe. We measured 10 eggshell elements (As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Ni, Pb, Zn, Se, Sr, and Ca) and several shell characteristics (mass, thickness, porosity, and color). We found significant variation among populations in eggshell metal levels for all metals except copper. Eggshell lead, zinc, and chromium levels decreased from central Europe to the north, in line with the gradient in pollution levels over Europe, thus suggesting that eggshell can be used as an indicator of pollution levels. Eggshell lead levels were also correlated with soil lead levels and pH. Most of the metals were not correlated with eggshell characteristics, with the exception of shell mass, or with breeding success, which may suggest that birds can cope well with the current background exposure levels across Europe., Birds have been used as bioindicators of pollution, such as toxic metals. Levels of pollutants in eggs are especially interesting, as developing birds are more sensitive to detrimental effects of pollutants than adults. Only very few studies have monitored intraspecific, large-scale variation in metal pollution across a species' breeding range. We studied large-scale geographic variation in metal levels in the eggs of a small passerine, the pied flycatcher (Ficedula hypoleuca), sampled from 15 populations across Europe. We measured 10 eggshell elements (As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Ni, Pb, Zn, Se, Sr, and Ca) and several shell characteristics (mass, thickness, porosity, and color). We found significant variation among populations in eggshell metal levels for all metals except copper. Eggshell lead, zinc, and chromium levels decreased from central Europe to the north, in line with the gradient in pollution levels over Europe, thus suggesting that eggshell can be used as an indicator of pollution levels. Eggshell lead levels were also correlated with soil lead levels and pH. Most of the metals were not correlated with eggshell characteristics, with the exception of shell mass, or with breeding success, which may suggest that birds can cope well with the current background exposure levels across Europe.
- Published
- 2014
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.