6 results match your criteria: "Department of Zoology Faculty of Science Charles University Prague Czech Republic.[Affiliation]"

Temporary pools are seasonal wetland habitats with specifically adapted biota, including annual killifishes that survive habitat desiccation as diapausing eggs encased in dry sediment. To understand the patterns in the structure of assemblages and their potential in wetland conservation, we compared biodiversity components (alpha, beta, and gamma) between regions and estimated the role and sources of nestedness and turnover on their diversity. We sampled assemblages from 127 pools across seven local regions in lowland Eastern Tanzania over 2 years, using dip net and seine nets.

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Article Synopsis
  • Haemosporidians are common bird parasites that affect host fitness, and their impact varies across different spatial scales (local to global).
  • The study investigates how both abiotic factors (like temperature and forest structure) and the ecological context (canopy vs. understory) influence haemosporidian prevalence in birds in Papua New Guinea's fragmented and continuous forests.
  • The findings indicate that infection levels are higher in specific bird habitats (canopy), and suggest that different bird species experience varying parasite pressures based on their environment and community interactions.
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Species-level environmental niche modeling has been crucial in efforts to understand how species respond to climate variation and change. However, species often exhibit local adaptation and intraspecific niche differences that may be important to consider in predicting responses to climate. Here, we explore whether phylogeographic lineages of the bank vole originating from different glacial refugia (Carpathian, Western, Eastern, and Southern) show niche differentiation, which would suggest a role for local adaptation in biogeography of this widespread Eurasian small mammal.

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Coevolutionary processes that drive the patterns of host-parasite associations can be deduced through congruence analysis of their phylogenies. Feather lice and their avian hosts have previously been used as typical model systems for congruence analysis; however, such analyses are strongly biased toward nonpasserine hosts in the temperate zone. Further, in the Afrotropical region especially, cospeciation studies of lice and birds are entirely missing.

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Variation in intensity and targets of sexual selection on multiple traits has been suggested to play a major role in promoting phenotypic differentiation between populations, although the divergence in selection may depend on year, local conditions or age. In this study, we quantified sexual selection for two putative sexual signals across two Central and East European barn swallow () populations from Czech Republic and Romania over multiple years. We then related these differences in selection to variation in sexual characters among barn swallow populations.

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The vertebrate gastrointestinal tract is inhabited by a diverse community of bacteria, the so-called gut microbiota (GM). Research on captive mammalian models has revealed tight mutual interactions between immune functions and GM. However, our knowledge of GM versus immune system interactions in wild populations and nonmammalian species remains poor.

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