100 results match your criteria: "Martin-Luther-University Halle-Wittenberg - Halle[Affiliation]"

Human-wildlife cooperation occurs when humans and free-living wild animals actively coordinate their behavior to achieve a mutually beneficial outcome. These interactions provide important benefits to both the human and wildlife communities involved, have wider impacts on the local ecosystem, and represent a unique intersection of human and animal cultures. The remaining active forms are human-honeyguide and human-dolphin cooperation, but these are at risk of joining several inactive forms (including human-wolf and human-orca cooperation).

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Functional rarity (FR) - a feature combining a species' rarity with the distinctiveness of its traits - is a promising tool to better understand the ecological importance of rare species and consequently to protect functional diversity more efficiently. However, we lack a systematic understanding of FR on both the species level (which species are functionally rare and why) and the community level (how is FR associated with biodiversity and environmental conditions). Here, we quantify FR for 218 plant species from German hay meadows on a local, regional, and national scale by combining data from 6500 vegetation relevés and 15 ecologically relevant traits.

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Patterns of biodiversity provide insights into the processes that shape biological communities around the world. Variation in species diversity along biogeographical or ecological gradients, such as latitude or precipitation, can be attributed to variation in different components of biodiversity: changes in the total abundance (i.e.

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Prairie dogs ( sp.) are considered keystone species and ecosystem engineers for their grazing and burrowing activities (summarized here as disturbances). As climate changes and its variability increases, the mechanisms underlying organisms' interactions with their habitat will likely shift.

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Lateral flow immunoassays (LFI) are valuable tools for point-of-care testing. However, their sensitivity is limited and can be further improved. Nanoparticles (NP) of conjugated polymers (CPNs), also known as Pdots, are reported to be highly sensitive fluorescent probes, but a direct comparison with conventional colloidal gold-based (Au-NP) LFI using the same antibody-antigen pair is missing to date.

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  • * Research involving citizen scientists revealed that increased impervious surfaces (like concrete) around pedunculate oaks led to a decrease in insect damage, while more forest cover increased herbivory from chewing insects.
  • * Local canopy cover can mitigate the negative effects of impervious surfaces on certain herbivores, indicating that urban habitat characteristics play a crucial role in shaping plant-insect interactions.
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  • Climate change is causing plant species in mountains worldwide to shift their elevational ranges, complicating efforts to monitor these changes due to varying sampling methods.
  • The Mountain Invasion Research Network (MIREN) developed a standardized protocol to assess native and non-native plant distributions along elevation gradients over time, using surveys conducted every five years at specific sites.
  • Initial results show unique elevational patterns for native plant richness and a global decline in non-native species, highlighting disturbed areas like road edges as hotspots for plant invasions, emphasizing the need for more global studies to guide conservation efforts.
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  • Climate change can impact plant reproduction by altering pollination services, with expected variations in seasonal precipitation influencing this dynamic.
  • A study at the Global Change Experiment Facility examined how two perennial plant species produced seeds in different climate and pollination treatments, highlighting increased seed production with supplemental pollen under future climate conditions.
  • The findings suggest that while plants may adapt to changing climates, the relationship between pollination, season, and climate isn't straightforward, indicating a need for further research to uncover the complexities of plant reproductive strategies in diverse environmental scenarios.
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In the face of global pollinator decline, extensively managed grasslands play an important role in supporting stable pollinator communities. However, different types of extensive management may promote particular plant species and thus particular functional traits. As the functional traits of flowering plant species (e.

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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.

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Population genetics is a field of research that predates the current generations of sequencing technology. Those approaches, that were established before massively parallel sequencing methods, have been adapted to these new marker systems (in some cases involving the development of new methods) that allow genome-wide estimates of the four major micro-evolutionary forces-mutation, gene flow, genetic drift, and selection. Nevertheless, classic population genetic markers are still commonly used and a plethora of analysis methods and programs is available for these and high-throughput sequencing (HTS) data.

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Objectives: T cells have an essential role in the antiviral defence. Public T-cell receptor (TCR) clonotypes are expanded in a substantial proportion of COVID-19 patients. We set out to exploit their potential use as read-out for COVID-19 T-cell immune responses.

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Background: Neurotrophic growth factors can stabilize the intestinal barrier by preventing the apoptosis of enteric glial cells (EGCs) and enterocytes. We reasoned that a selective 5-HT1A receptor agonist may have neuroprotective properties in the gut and that topical application of SR57746A might be an effective treatment strategy in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD).

Methods: The therapeutic potential of 5-HT1A receptor agonist SR57746A in IBD was evaluated in vitro (nontransformed NCM460 colonic epithelial cells, SW480 colorectal carcinoma cells) and in vivo (murine dextran sulfate sodium [DSS] colitis and CD4-T-cell transfer colitis).

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  • - The Pacific Region is a hotspot for naturalised plant species, prompting the need for research on biological invasions, but lacks a unified database for these species across different islands.
  • - The newly developed PacIFlora database offers a comprehensive, taxonomically standardized list of naturalised vascular plants in the Pacific, detailing their distribution, nativeness, cultivation, and invasive status.
  • - This resource is built upon two major existing databases and aims to support both research initiatives and conservation efforts in the Pacific by providing accessible and organized information on plant species.
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Fire is known to have dramatic consequences on forest ecosystems around the world and on the livelihoods of forest-dependent people. While the Eastern Ghats of India have high abundances of fire-prone dry tropical forests, little is known about how fire influences the diversity, composition, and structure of these communities. Our study aimed to fill this knowledge gap by examining the effects of the presence and the absence of recent fire on tropical dry forest communities within the Kadiri watershed, Eastern Ghats.

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Herbivorous insects acquire microorganisms from host plants or soil, but it remains unclear how the diversity and functional composition of host plants contribute to structuring herbivore microbiomes. Within a controlled tree diversity setting, we used DNA metabarcoding of 16S rRNA to assess the contribution of Lepidoptera species and their local environment (particularly, tree diversity, host tree species, and leaf traits) to the composition of associated bacterial communities. In total, we obtained 7,909 bacterial OTUs from 634 caterpillar individuals comprising 146 species.

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Recent studies found that the majority of shrub and tree species are associated with both arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) and ectomycorrhizal (EM) fungi. However, our knowledge on how different mycorrhizal types interact with each other is still limited. We asked whether the combination of hosts with a preferred association with either AM or EM fungi increases the host tree roots' mycorrhization rate and affects AM and EM fungal richness and community composition.

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Introduction: Determining potential risk factors of amyloid beta (Aβ) misfolding in blood, a risk marker for clinical Alzheimer's disease (AD), could have important implications for its utility in future research and clinical settings.

Methods: Participants aged 50 to 75 years attending a general health examination were recruited for a prospective community-based cohort study in Saarland, Germany, in 2000 to 2002. For these analyses, participants with available Aβ misfolding measurements and clinical AD information at 17-year follow-up were included ( = 444).

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Premise: New sequencing technologies facilitate the generation of large-scale molecular data sets for constructing the plant tree of life. We describe a new probe set for target enrichment sequencing to generate nuclear sequence data to build phylogenetic trees with any flagellate land plants, including hornworts, liverworts, mosses, lycophytes, ferns, and all gymnosperms.

Methods: We leveraged existing transcriptome and genome sequence data to design the GoFlag 451 probes, a set of 56,989 probes for target enrichment sequencing of 451 exons that are found in 248 single-copy or low-copy nuclear genes across flagellate plant lineages.

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The parasitic mite devastates honey bee () colonies around the world. Entering a brood cell shortly before capping, the mother feeds on the honey bee larvae. The hormones 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) and juvenile hormone (JH), acquired from the host, have been considered to play a key role in initiating reproductive cycle.

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Urbanization is a global phenomenon with major effects on species, the structure of community functional traits and ecological interactions. Body size is a key species trait linked to metabolism, life-history and dispersal as well as a major determinant of ecological networks. Here, using a well-replicated urban-rural sampling design in Central Europe, we investigate the direction of change of body size in response to urbanization in three common bumblebee species, , and , and potential knock-on effects on pollination service provision.

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We analyzed the global genetic variation pattern of (Brassicaceae) as expressed in allozymic (within-locus) diversity and isozymic (between-locus) diversity. Results are based on a global sampling of more than 20,000 individuals randomly taken from 1,469 natural provenances in the native and introduced range, covering a broad spectrum of the species' geographic distribution. We evaluated data for population genetic parameters and -statistics, and Mantel tests and AMOVA were performed.

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Effective interactions between plants and pollinators are essential for the reproduction of plant species. Pollinator exclusion experiments and pollen supplementation experiments quantify the degree to which plants depend on animal pollinators and the degree to which plant reproduction is pollen limited. Pollen supplementation experiments have been conducted across the globe, but are rare in high latitude regions.

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Exotic plant species can evolve adaptations to environmental conditions in the exotic range. Furthermore, soil biota can foster exotic spread in the absence of negative soil pathogen-plant interactions or because of increased positive soil biota-plant feedbacks in the exotic range. Little is known, however, about the evolutionary dimension of plant-soil biota interactions when comparing native and introduced ranges.

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