72 results match your criteria: "Biodiversity and Climate Research Center[Affiliation]"

Social insects form complex societies with division of labour between different female castes. In most species, a single queen heads the colony; in others, several queens share the task of reproduction. These different social organisations are often associated with distinct queen morphologies and life-history strategies and occur in different environments.

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Article Synopsis
  • Global warming threatens crop yields, making it crucial to understand thermotolerance mechanisms in plants.
  • Several heat stress transcription factors (HSFs) regulate how plants respond to high temperatures, but the specific regulators of alternative splicing related to heat stress are still unclear.
  • In tomatoes, the splicing factors RS2Z35 and RS2Z36 play a key role in regulating HSFA2 splicing and influence nearly 50% of RNAs that undergo temperature-sensitive alternative splicing, suggesting that they help enhance plants' ability to cope with heat stress.
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Marine bivalves are important components of ecosystems and exploited by humans for food across the world, but the intrinsic vulnerability of exploited bivalve species to global changes is poorly known. Here, we expand the list of shallow-marine bivalves known to be exploited worldwide, with 720 exploited bivalve species added beyond the 81 in the United Nations FAO Production Database, and investigate their diversity, distribution and extinction vulnerability using a metric based on ecological traits and evolutionary history. The added species shift the richness hotspot of exploited species from the northeast Atlantic to the west Pacific, with 55% of bivalve families being exploited, concentrated mostly in two major clades but all major body plans.

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Splicing of pre-mRNAs critically contributes to gene regulation and proteome expansion in eukaryotes, but our understanding of the recognition and pairing of splice sites during spliceosome assembly lacks detail. Here, we identify the multidomain RNA-binding protein FUBP1 as a key splicing factor that binds to a hitherto unknown cis-regulatory motif. By collecting NMR, structural, and in vivo interaction data, we demonstrate that FUBP1 stabilizes U2AF2 and SF1, key components at the 3' splice site, through multivalent binding interfaces located within its disordered regions.

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Small-spored Alternaria spp. (section Alternaria) are common pathogens on wild tomato species.

Environ Microbiol

October 2023

Department for Phytopathology and Crop Protection, Institute for Phytopathology, Faculty of Agricultural and Nutritional Sciences, Christian Albrechts University, Kiel, Germany.

The wild relatives of modern tomato crops are native to South America. These plants occur in habitats as different as the Andes and the Atacama Desert and are, to some degree, all susceptible to fungal pathogens of the genus Alternaria. Alternaria is a large genus.

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Long-distance movements are hypothesized to positively influence population size and stability of mobile species. We tested this hypothesis with a novel modeling approach in which moving herbivores interact with the environment created by a dynamic global vegetation model using highly mobile Mongolian gazelles in the eastern Mongolian grasslands as a case study. Gazelle population dynamics were modeled from 1901 to 2018 under two scenarios, one allowing free movement and one restricting movement.

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Diel niche partitioning of a plant-hummingbird network in the Atlantic forest of Brazil.

Oecologia

April 2023

Laboratório de Interações e Biologia Reprodutiva, Universidade Federal do Paraná, Centro Politécnico, Jardim das Américas, 81531-990, Curitiba, PR, Brazil.

Niche partitioning is an important mechanism that allows species to coexist. Within mutualistic interaction networks, diel niche partitioning, i.e.

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Endothelial specification is a key event during embryogenesis; however, when, and how, endothelial cells separate from other lineages is poorly understood. In zebrafish, Npas4l is indispensable for endothelial specification by inducing the expression of the transcription factor genes , , and . We generated a knock-in reporter in zebrafish to visualize endothelial progenitors and their derivatives in wild-type and mutant embryos.

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Seven species complexes are treated, namely species complex (FASC) (two species), species complex (FBSC) (five species), species complex (FBURSC) (three species), species complex (FCAMSC) (three species), species complex (FCSC) (eight species), species complex (FCCSC) (five species) and the species complex (FCOSC) (four species). New species include from soil (Zimbabwe), and from soil associated with (Netherlands). New combinations include and Newly validated taxa include , , , and .

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A worldwide call to implement habitat protection aims to halt biodiversity loss. We constructed an open-source, standardized, and reproducible workflow that calculates two indexes to monitor the extent of coastal and marine habitats within protected areas and other effective area-based conservation measures. The Local Proportion of Habitats Protected Index (LPHPI) pinpoints the jurisdictions with the greatest opportunity to expand their protected or conserved areas, while the Global Proportion of Habitats Protected Index (GPHPI) showcases which jurisdictions contribute the most area to the protection of these habitats globally.

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Oaks may contribute to the stabilization of European forests under climate change. We utilized two common gardens established in contrasting growth regimes, in Greece (Olympiada) and Germany (Schwanheim), to compare the diurnal photosynthetic performance of a Greek and an Italian provenance of two Mediterranean oaks ( and ) during the 2019 growing season. Although the higher radiation in the southern common garden led to a strong midday depression of chlorophyll fluorescence parameters (maximum quantum efficiency of PSII, performance index on absorption basis), comparable light-saturated net photosynthetic rates were achieved in both study areas.

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HsfA7 coordinates the transition from mild to strong heat stress response by controlling the activity of the master regulator HsfA1a in tomato.

Cell Rep

January 2022

Department of Biosciences, Molecular Cell Biology of Plants, RNA Regulation in Higher Eukaryotes, Goethe University, Frankfurt am Main 60438, Germany. Electronic address:

Plants respond to higher temperatures by the action of heat stress (HS) transcription factors (Hsfs), which control the onset, early response, and long-term acclimation to HS. Members of the HsfA1 subfamily, such as tomato HsfA1a, are the central regulators of HS response, and their activity is fine-tuned by other Hsfs. We identify tomato HsfA7 as capacitor of HsfA1a during the early HS response.

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A new species of Apteroscirtus Karsch, 1891 (Ensifera, Tettigoniidae, Mecopodinae) from Angola.

Zootaxa

October 2021

Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales (CSIC), Coleccin de Entomologa. C/ Jos Gutirrez Abascal 2, 28006 Madrid (Espaa). .

A new species of Apteroscirtus is described from Angola, enlarging the known area of distribution of this genus to west-southern Africa.

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Ribosome assembly is an essential and carefully choreographed cellular process. In eukaryotes, several 100 proteins, distributed across the nucleolus, nucleus, and cytoplasm, co-ordinate the step-wise assembly of four ribosomal RNAs (rRNAs) and approximately 80 ribosomal proteins (RPs) into the mature ribosomal subunits. Due to the inherent complexity of the assembly process, functional studies identifying ribosome biogenesis factors and, more importantly, their precise functions and interplay are confined to a few and very well-established model organisms.

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Obligate endoparasitic oomycetes are known to ubiquitously occur in marine and freshwater diatoms, but their diversity is still largely unexplored. Many of these parasitoids are members of the early-diverging oomycete lineages (, ), others are within the of the (, ) and some have been described in the (, ). Even though some species have been recently described and two new genera were introduced ( and ), the phylogeny and taxonomy of most of these organisms remain unresolved.

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Recent publications have argued that there are potentially serious consequences for researchers in recognising distinct genera in the terminal fusarioid clade of the family . Thus, an alternate hypothesis, namely a very broad concept of the genus was proposed. In doing so, however, a significant body of data that supports distinct genera in based on morphology, biology, and phylogeny is disregarded.

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Unlabelled: Polyamine levels are controlled by biosynthesis, intra- and inter-cellular flux by the respective transporters, and catabolism. The catabolism is catalyzed by two groups of enzymes. One is copper-containing amine oxidases and the other is polyamine oxidases (PAOs).

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The genus () of the includes several species of holocarpic obligate aquatic parasites. These organisms are widely occurring in marine and freshwater habitats, mostly infecting filamentous green algae. Presently, all species are only known from their morphology and descriptive life cycle traits.

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polyamine oxidase 5 gene () functions as a thermospermine (T-Spm) oxidase. Aerial growth of its knock-out mutant () was significantly repressed by low dose(s) of T-Spm but not by other polyamines. To figure out the underlying mechanism, massive analysis of 3'-cDNA ends was performed.

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Plastid DNA sequence data have been traditionally widely used in plant phylogenetics because of the high copy number of plastids, their uniparental inheritance, and the blend of coding and non-coding regions with divergent substitution rates that allow the reconstruction of phylogenetic relationships at different taxonomic ranks. In the present study, we evaluate the utility of the plastome for the reconstruction of phylogenetic relationships in the pantropical plant family Ochnaceae (Malpighiales). We used the off-target sequence read fraction of a targeted sequencing study (targeting nuclear loci only) to recover more than 100 kb of the plastid genome from the majority of the more than 200 species of Ochnaceae and all but two genera using and reference-based assembly strategies.

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Most species are either parasites or exploited by parasites, making parasite-host interactions a driver of evolution. Parasites with complex life cycles often evolve strategies to facilitate transmission to the definitive host by manipulating their intermediate host. Such manipulations could explain phenotypic changes in the ant , the intermediate host of the cestode .

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Angiopoietin/TIE signalling plays a major role in blood and lymphatic vessel development. In mouse, (previously known as ) mutants die prenatally due to a severely underdeveloped cardiovascular system. In contrast, in zebrafish, previous studies have reported that although embryos injected with morpholinos (MOs) exhibit severe vascular defects, mutants display no obvious vascular malformations.

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Peptidoglycan (PG) is essential in most bacteria. Thus, it is often targeted by various assaults, including interbacterial attacks via the type VI secretion system (T6SS). Here, we report that the Gram-negative bacterium strain ATCC 17978 produces, secretes, and incorporates the noncanonical d-amino acid d-lysine into its PG during stationary phase.

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Flat latitudinal diversity gradient caused by the Permian-Triassic mass extinction.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

July 2020

School of Earth and Environment, University of Leeds, LS2 9JT Leeds, United Kingdom.

The latitudinal diversity gradient (LDG) is recognized as one of the most pervasive, global patterns of present-day biodiversity. However, the controlling mechanisms have proved difficult to identify because many potential drivers covary in space. The geological record presents a unique opportunity for understanding the mechanisms which drive the LDG by providing a direct window to deep-time biogeographic dynamics.

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A chlorophyll fluorescence (ChlF) assessment was carried out on oak seedlings (Quercus ilex L., Quercus pubescens Willd., Quercus frainetto Ten.

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