Publications by authors named "Gebler A"

Artificial light at night (ALAN) affects many areas of the world and is increasing globally. To date, there has been limited and inconsistent evidence regarding the consequences of ALAN for plant communities, as well as for the fitness of their constituent species. ALAN could be beneficial for plants as they need light as energy source, but they also need darkness for regeneration and growth.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Artificial light at night (ALAN) is predicted to have far-reaching consequences for natural ecosystems given its influence on organismal physiology and behaviour, species interactions and community composition. Movement and predation are fundamental ecological processes that are of critical importance to ecosystem functioning. The natural movements and foraging behaviours of nocturnal invertebrates may be particularly sensitive to the presence of ALAN.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Human activities cause substantial changes in biodiversity. Despite ongoing concern about the implications of invertebrate decline, few empirical studies have examined the ecosystem consequences of invertebrate biomass loss. Here, we test the responses of six ecosystem services informed by 30 above- and belowground ecosystem variables to three levels of aboveground (i.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Anthropogenic global warming has major implications for mobile terrestrial insects, including long-term effects from constant warming, for example, on species distribution patterns, and short-term effects from heat extremes that induce immediate physiological responses. To cope with heat extremes, they either have to reduce their activity or move to preferable microhabitats. The availability of favorable microhabitat conditions is strongly promoted by the spatial heterogeneity of habitats, which is often reduced by anthropogenic land transformation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Across the globe, ecological communities are confronted with multiple global environmental change drivers, and they are responding in complex ways ranging from behavioral, physiological, and morphological changes within populations to changes in community composition and food web structure with consequences for ecosystem functioning. A better understanding of global change-induced alterations of multitrophic biodiversity and the ecosystem-level responses in terrestrial ecosystems requires holistic and integrative experimental approaches to manipulate and study complex communities and processes above and below the ground. We argue that mesocosm experiments fill a critical gap in this context, especially when based on ecological theory and coupled with microcosm experiments, field experiments, and observational studies of macroecological patterns.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Ecosystems face threats from human-induced global changes, making it essential to study their functioning through experiments and modelling in controlled environments, known as ecotrons.
  • This paper highlights 13 advanced ecotrons available to researchers worldwide, which simulate various natural conditions for studying ecosystem processes while measuring greenhouse gas exchanges and other factors.
  • The research in these ecotrons covers a range of topics, primarily focusing on global changes, biodiversity loss, and ecosystem physiology, with a call for improved methodologies and stronger connections to modelling for future studies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Climate and land-use changes are causing a decline in invertebrate biomass, which in turn alters invertebrate communities and affects plant species abundance and flowering times.
  • In a controlled study using 24 experimental units, researchers tested the impact of varying invertebrate densities on an artificial grassland with 12 plant species, finding significant shifts in plant abundance and flowering phenology related to invertebrate presence.
  • The study highlights the need to consider biotic factors, like invertebrate abundance, alongside abiotic factors in understanding ecosystem dynamics, as declines could harm both plant and animal biodiversity and undermine essential ecosystem services.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are currently being tested in clinical trials for the treatment of various diseases owing to the ease of generating and expanding these cells, the ability to differentiate them into various specialized mesenchymal tissue types and their immunosuppressive properties. However, their immunomodulatory potential remains controversial. This review describes the constitutive and regulated expression of molecules of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I antigen processing machinery (APM), co-stimulatory B7 molecules and HLA-G.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The regulatory Ni-Fe hydrogenase (RH) from the H(2)-oxidizing bacterium Ralstonia eutropha functions as an oxygen-resistant hydrogen sensor, which is composed of the large, active-site-containing HoxC subunit and the small subunit HoxB carrying Fe-S clusters. In vivo, the HoxBC subunits form a dimer designated as RH(wt). The RH(wt) protein transmits its signals to the histidine protein kinase HoxJ, which itself forms a homotetramer and a stable complex with RH(wt) (RH(wt)-HoxJ(wt)), located in the cytoplasm.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This study provides the first evidence of pronounced temporary laryngeal descent in a bovid species. An elaborate acoustic display is prominent in male courtship behavior of polygynous Mongolian gazelle. During rut, rounding up of females is accompanied by continuous head-up barking by dominant males.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Laryngeal air sacs have evolved convergently in diverse mammalian lineages including insectivores, bats, rodents, pinnipeds, ungulates and primates, but their precise function has remained elusive. Among cervids, the vocal tract of reindeer has evolved an unpaired inflatable ventrorostral laryngeal air sac. This air sac is not present at birth but emerges during ontogenetic development.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In proteobacteria capable of H(2) oxidation under (micro)aerobic conditions, hydrogenase gene expression is often controlled in response to the availability of H(2). The H(2)-sensing signal transduction pathway consists of a heterodimeric regulatory [NiFe]-hydrogenase (RH), a histidine protein kinase and a response regulator. To gain insights into the signal transmission from the Ni-Fe active site in the RH to the histidine protein kinase, conserved amino acid residues in the L0 motif near the active site of the RH large subunit of Ralstonia eutropha H16 were exchanged.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The directionality patterns of sound emission in domestic dogs were measured in an anechoic environment using a microphone array. Mainly long-distance signals from four dogs were investigated. The radiation pattern of the signals differed clearly from an omnidirectional one with average differences in sound-pressure level between the frontal and rear position of 3-7 dB depending from the individual.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The entire head and neck of a wild adult male Mongolian gazelle (Procapra gutturosa) was dissected with special reference to its enlarged larynx. Two additional adult male specimens taken from the wild were analysed by computer tomography. The sternomandibularis, omohyoideus, thyrohyoideus and hyoepiglotticus muscles are particularly enlarged and improve laryngeal suspension and stabilization.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: There is a high incidence of occupational asthma and rhinitis caused by platinum (Pt) salts in precious-metal refineries.

Objective: We sought to assess exposure to Pt salts and the incidence of Pt salt allergy in a catalyst production plant.

Methods: A 5-year prospective cohort study was performed in 159 catalyst production workers (94.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To assess the health effects of transferral to low-exposure jobs on subjects with occupational asthma (OA).

Methods: We performed a cross-sectional survey of 83 workers in 2 platinum (Pt) refineries and 2 catalyst production plants, all with diagnosed OA due to Pt salts. In all, 9 workers (group A; 11%) continued to be exposed at the time of examination, 16 subjects (group B; 19%) had been transferred to other workplaces within the production building, 39 subjects (group C; 47%) had been transferred to areas outside the building but inside the plant, and 19 subjects (group D; 23%) had left the plant.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To test the reliability and to define the minimal detectable change of a new radiographic scoring method in rheumatoid arthritis (RA).

Methods: Following the recommendations of an expert panel a new radiographic scoring method was defined. It scores 38 joints [all proximal interphalangeal (PIP) and metacarpophalangeal joints, 4 sites in the wrists, IP of the great toes, and metatarsophalangeals 2 to 5], regarding only the amount of joint surface destruction on a 0 to 5 scale for each joint.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Quantitative bronchial challenge tests with flour dust for the diagnosis of bakers' asthma may be performed by inhalation of flour delivered to the patient's respiratory tract by sophisticated equipment.

Objective: This study was carried out to assess the diagnostic value of bronchial challenge tests with flour dust inhalation from capsules administered by a Spinhaler (Fisons Inc., Loughborough, U.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF