European honey bees are important commercial pollinators that have suffered greater than normal overwintering losses since 2007 in North America and Europe. Contributing factors likely include a combination of parasites, pesticides, and poor nutrition. We examined diet diversity, diet nutritional quality, and pesticides in honey bee-collected pollen from commercial colonies in the Canadian Maritime Provinces in spring and summer 2011.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpecies of Hepatozoon are apicomplexan parasites infecting tetrapod vertebrates and hematophagous arthropods. Two species, Hepatozoon catesbianae and Hepatozoon clamatae, have been described inhabiting the erythrocytes of bullfrogs and green frogs. A number of characteristics typically used to distinguish between members of this genus are shared between these 2 species, prompting speculation as to whether or not these organisms are in fact distinct species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA nuclear low-copy gene phylogeny provides strong evidence for the hybrid origin of seven polyploid species in Geinae (Rosaceae). In a gene tree, alleles at homologous loci in an allopolyploid species are expected to be sisters to orthologues in the ancestral taxa rather than to each other. Alleles at a duplicated locus in an autopolyploid, however, are expected to be more closely related to each other than they are to any orthologous copies in closely related species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFor 70 yr the leading hypothesis for the origin of the Maloideae has involved wide hybridization between ancestors of two other subfamilies. The basis of this hypothesis is that Maloideae have a base chromosome number of 17, whereas other Rosaceae are mostly x = 7, 8, or 9. To investigate this hypothesis we cloned and sequenced approximately 1.
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