Publications by authors named "Carina Baskett"

Phototrophic metabolism, the capture of light for energy, was a pivotal biological innovation that greatly increased the total energy available to the biosphere. Chlorophyll-based photosynthesis is the most familiar phototrophic metabolism, but retinal-based microbial rhodopsins transduce nearly as much light energy as chlorophyll does, via a simpler mechanism, and are found in far more taxonomic groups. Although this system has apparently spread widely via horizontal gene transfer, little is known about how rhodopsin genes (with phylogenetic origins within prokaryotes) are horizontally acquired by eukaryotic cells with complex internal membrane architectures or the conditions under which they provide a fitness advantage.

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Many studies have quantified the distribution of heterozygosity and relatedness in natural populations, but few have examined the demographic processes driving these patterns. In this study, we take a novel approach by studying how population structure affects both pairwise identity and the distribution of heterozygosity in a natural population of the self-incompatible plant Antirrhinum majus. Excess variance in heterozygosity between individuals is due to identity disequilibrium, which reflects the variance in inbreeding between individuals; it is measured by the statistic g2.

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The longstanding biotic interactions hypothesis predicts that herbivore pressure declines with latitude, but the evidence is mixed. To address gaps in previous studies, we measured herbivory and defence in the same system, quantified defence with bioassays, and considered effects of leaf age. We quantified herbivory and defence of young and mature leaves along a continental gradient in eastern North America in the native herb Phytolacca americana L.

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Both herbivory and plant defenses against herbivores have been predicted to increase toward tropical regions. Early tests of this latitudinal herbivory-defense hypothesis (LHDH) were supportive, but accumulating evidence has been mixed. We argue that the lack of clarity might be due to heterogeneity in methodology and problems with study design and interpretation.

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