1,276 results match your criteria: "Centre for Ecology and Conservation[Affiliation]"

Why do mobile genetic elements transfer DNA of their hosts?

Trends Genet

November 2024

Environment and Sustainability Institute, University of Exeter, Penryn TR10 9FE, UK; Biomedical Sciences Research Complex, School of Biology, University of St Andrews, St Andrews KY16 9ST, UK.

The prokaryote world is replete with mobile genetic elements (MGEs) - self-replicating entities that can move within and between their hosts. Many MGEs not only transfer their own DNA to new hosts but also transfer host DNA located elsewhere on the chromosome in the process. This could potentially lead to indirect benefits to the host when the resulting increase in chromosomal variation results in more efficient natural selection.

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Predation risk is one of the most important factors generating behavioral differences among populations. In addition, recent attention focusses on predation as a potential driver of patterns of individual behavioral variation within prey populations. Previous studies provide mixed results, reporting either increased or decreased among-individual variation in response to risk.

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Trade and socioeconomic importance of an invasive giant snail in the endemic-rich island of São Tomé, Central Africa.

Conserv Biol

October 2024

Interdisciplinary Centre of Social Sciences (CICS.NOVA), School of Social Sciences and Humanities (NOVA FCSH), NOVA University Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal.

Managing invasive species is crucial to mitigate their negative impacts on ecosystems, yet conflicts may arise when their social benefits are disregarded. Human pressure on the endemic-rich forests of São Tomé has been high since the island was discovered by the Portuguese in the 15th century, and numerous species have been introduced. These include the invasive West African giant land snail (Archachatina marginata), which was introduced in the mid-20th century, is now widespread on the island, and is a potential threat to native flora and fauna.

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Article Synopsis
  • Passive acoustic monitoring helps track endangered vocal species, but analyzing large audio datasets can be slow and cumbersome.
  • An open-source deep learning framework was developed to automatically detect "great call" vocalizations of Bornean white-bearded gibbons, significantly speeding up the data analysis process.
  • The best model achieved an impressive performance (F score = 0.87), accurately identifying 98% of the calls and matching manual annotations, paving the way for further research on these gibbons' vocal behavior over time.
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Chemical pollution, land cover change, and climate change have all been established as important drivers of amphibian reproductive success and phenology. However, little is known about the relative impacts of these anthropogenic stressors, nor how they may interact to alter amphibian population dynamics. Addressing this gap in our knowledge is important, as it allows us to identify and prioritise the most needed conservation actions.

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Humans cooperate to build complex structures with culture-specific architectural styles. However, they are not the only animals to build complex structures nor to have culture. We show that social groups of white-browed sparrow weavers () build structures (nests for breeding and multiple single-occupant roosts for sleeping) that differ architecturally among groups.

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Parallel ecological and evolutionary responses to selection in a natural bacterial community.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

September 2024

Centre for Ecology and Conservation & Environment and Sustainability Institute, Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy, University of Exeter, Cornwall TR10 9FE, United Kingdom.

Evolution can occur over ecological timescales, suggesting a potentially important role for rapid evolution in shaping community trait distributions. However, evidence of concordant eco-evolutionary dynamics often comes from in vitro studies of highly simplified communities, and measures of ecological and evolutionary dynamics are rarely directly comparable. Here, we quantified how ecological species sorting and rapid evolution simultaneously shape community trait distributions by tracking within- and between-species changes in a key trait in a complex bacterial community.

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Discarded fishing nets, a major source of marine litter, significantly threaten the marine environment and contribute to plastic pollution due to the synthetic polymers they contain. Though Bangladesh is a maritime country with 0.5 million of fishers dependent on coastal and marine fishing, there have been no studies to date on the plastic pollution impact of fishing nets.

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Investigating fundamental processes in biology requires the ability to ground broad questions in species-specific natural history. This is particularly true in the study of behavior because an organism's experience of the environment will influence the expression of behavior and the opportunity for selection. Here, we provide a review of the natural history and behavior of burying beetles of the genus to provide the groundwork for comparative work that showcases their remarkable behavioral and ecological diversity.

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Twenty-five emerging questions when detecting, understanding, and predicting future fish distributions in a changing climate.

J Fish Biol

August 2024

Centro para el Estudio de Sistemas Marinos (CESIMAR)-Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET), Puerto Madryn, Argentina.

The 2023 Annual Symposium of the Fisheries Society of the British Isles hosted opportunities for researchers, scientists, and policy makers to reflect on the state of art of predicting fish distributions and consider the implications to the marine and aquatic environments of a changing climate. The outcome of one special interest group at the Symposium was a collection of questions, organized under five themes, which begin to capture the state of the field and identify priorities for research and management over the coming years. The five themes were Physiology, Mechanisms, Detect and Measure, Manage, and Wider Ecosystems.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Biodiversity is essential for ecosystem health but is under threat from human activities, particularly in the Southern Ocean, where proactive management is needed to address challenges like fishing and climate change.
  • - The Key Biodiversity Area (KBA) Standard helps identify important sites for global biodiversity, using tracking data from seabirds and pinnipeds to pinpoint areas crucial for various species' survival.
  • - The study identified 30 potential KBAs across the Southern Ocean, suggesting areas essential for marine predators and reinforcing the importance of KBAs in a broader strategy for marine conservation.
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Learning is a taxonomically widespread process by which animals change their behavioural responses to stimuli as a result of experience. In this way, it plays a crucial role in the development of individual behaviour and underpins substantial phenotypic variation within populations. Nevertheless, the impact of learning in social contexts on evolutionary change is not well understood.

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Despite sharing an autosomal genome, the often divergent reproductive strategies of males and females cause the selection to act in a sex-specific manner. Selection acting on one sex can have negative, positive, or neutral fitness consequences on the opposite sex. Here, we test how female-limited selection on reproductive investment in Japanese quail (Coturnix japonica) affects male fertility-related traits.

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Article Synopsis
  • Camouflage helps prey species like ground-nesting birds survive by using strategies such as background matching and disruptive coloration on their eggs.
  • The study explored how Japanese quail choose substrates for egg laying, comparing experienced females to those nesting for the first time.
  • Findings showed that while breeding experience improved choices for background matching, the selection for disruptive coloration was influenced by genetics, highlighting the importance of these behaviors for avoiding predators.
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The community background alters the evolution of thermal performance.

Evol Lett

August 2024

Environment and Sustainability Institute, The Centre for Ecology and Conservation, University of Exeter, Penryn, Cornwall, United Kingdom.

Microbes are key drivers of global biogeochemical cycles, and their functional roles arey dependent on temperature. Large population sizes and rapid turnover rates mean that the predominant response of microbes to environmental warming is likely to be evolutionary, yet our understanding of evolutionary responses to temperature change in microbial systems is rudimentary. Natural microbial communities are diverse assemblages of interacting taxa.

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The evolution of democratic peace in animal societies.

Nat Commun

August 2024

Centre for Ecology and Conservation, Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy, University of Exeter, Penryn Campus, Cornwall, UK.

A major goal in evolutionary biology is to elucidate common principles that drive human and other animal societies to adopt either a warlike or peaceful nature. One proposed explanation for the variation in aggression between human societies is the democratic peace hypothesis. According to this theory, autocracies are more warlike than democracies because autocratic leaders can pursue fights for private gain.

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A Cambrian spiny stem mollusk and the deep homology of lophotrochozoan scleritomes.

Science

August 2024

Yunnan Key Laboratory for Palaeobiology and MEC International Joint Laboratory for Palaeobiology and Palaeoenvironment, Institute of Palaeontology, Yunnan University, Kunming, China.

Mollusks encompass enormous disparity, including familiar clams and snails alongside less familiar aculiferans (chitons and vermiform aplacophorans) with complex multicomponent skeletons. Paleozoic fossils trace crown mollusks to forms exhibiting a combination of biomineralized shells and sclerites (e.g.

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The Cambrian radiation of euarthropods can be attributed to an adaptable body plan. Sophisticated brains and specialized feeding appendages, which are elaborations of serially repeated organ systems and jointed appendages, underpin the dominance of Euarthropoda in a broad suite of ecological settings. The origin of the euarthropod body plan from a grade of vermiform taxa with hydrostatic lobopodous appendages ('lobopodian worms') is founded on data from Burgess Shale-type fossils.

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Despite considerable research into the structure of cognition in non-human animal species, there is still much debate as to whether animal cognition is organised as a series of discrete domains or an overarching general cognitive factor. In humans, the existence of general intelligence is widely accepted, but less work has been undertaken in animal psychometrics to address this question. The relatively few studies on non-primate animal species that do investigate the structure of cognition rarely include tasks assessing social cognition and focus instead on physical cognitive tasks.

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Molecular Mechanisms of Temperature Tolerance Plasticity in an Arthropod.

Genome Biol Evol

August 2024

Section for Genetics, Ecology and Evolution, Centre for EcoGenetics, Department of Biology, Aarhus University, Aarhus C, Denmark.

How species thrive in a wide range of environments is a major focus of evolutionary biology. For many species, limited genetic diversity or gene flow among habitats means that phenotypic plasticity must play an important role in their capacity to tolerate environmental heterogeneity and to colonize new habitats. However, we have a limited understanding of the molecular components that govern plasticity in ecologically relevant phenotypes.

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Article Synopsis
  • Understanding insecticide resistance in Myzus persicae (green peach-potato aphid) is crucial for creating effective control strategies, particularly against neonicotinoids.
  • The study identified that resistance arises from two key mechanisms: metabolic resistance linked to P450 enzyme overexpression and a specific genetic mutation (R81T), with a significant interaction between these factors enhancing resistance levels.
  • Different genotypes of the R81T mutation show variability in resistance, indicating that multiple mechanisms must be considered together to fully explain resistance phenotypes.
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Gut microbiomes are widely hypothesised to influence host fitness and have been experimentally shown to affect host health and phenotypes under laboratory conditions. However, the extent to which they do so in free-living animal populations and the proximate mechanisms involved remain open questions. In this study, using long-term, individual-based life history and shallow shotgun metagenomic sequencing data (2394 fecal samples from 794 individuals collected between 2013-2019), we quantify relationships between gut microbiome variation and survival in a feral population of horses under natural food limitation (Sable Island, Canada), and test metagenome-derived predictions using short-chain fatty acid data.

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  • Logged and disturbed forests, often seen as degraded, actually harbor significant biodiversity and should not be dismissed in conservation efforts.
  • A study in Sabah, Malaysia examined the effects of logging intensity on 1,681 species, revealing two important conservation thresholds.
  • Lightly logged forests (less than 29% biomass removed) can recover well, while heavily degraded forests (over 68% biomass removed) may need more intensive recovery efforts, highlighting the varying conservation values of logged forests.
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Growth and population structure of Lodoicea maldivica in natural stands in Seychelles.

Plant Biol (Stuttg)

October 2024

Centre for Ecology and Conservation, Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy, University of Exeter, Penryn, UK.

We monitored leaf production in seedlings, trunkless juvenile, immature, and mature male and female plants of the dioecious palm, Lodoicea maldivica, and studied how internode length changed with trunk height. The fieldwork was conducted in closed forest on Praslin Island and degraded forest on Curieuse Island. Data on numbers of leaves produced and rates of leaf production were used to estimate plant age.

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Urban populations of herring gulls () are increasing and causing human-wildlife conflict by exploiting anthropogenic resources. Gulls that breed in urban areas rely on varying amounts of terrestrial anthropogenic foods (., domestic refuse, agricultural and commercial waste) to feed themselves.

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