9 results match your criteria: "School of Life and Environmental Sciences University of Sydney Sydney NSW Australia.[Affiliation]"

Article Synopsis
  • The vitamin D hormone 1,25(OH)D and related compounds protect human skin cells from UV-induced DNA damage when applied before or after UV exposure by reducing specific types of damage.
  • Knockdown of the vitamin D receptor or ERp57 protein eliminates the protective effects of vitamin D-related treatments, indicating the importance of these components in skin protection.
  • Treatment with 1,25(OH)D not only decreases oxygen consumption in skin cells but also inhibits processes that promote skin cancer risk from chronic UV exposure, highlighting its potential anti-cancer properties.
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Food availability and temperature influence energetics of animals and can alter behavioral responses such as foraging and spontaneous activity. Food availability, however, is not necessarily a good indicator of energy (ATP) available for cellular processes. The efficiency of energy transduction from food-derived substrate to ATP in mitochondria can change with environmental context.

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Anthropogenic activities often create distinctive but discontinuously distributed habitat patches with abundant food but high risk of predation. Such sites can be most effectively utilized by individuals with specific behaviors and morphologies. Thus, a widespread species that contains a diversity of sizes and behavioral types may be pre-adapted to exploiting such hotspots.

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The water-permeable skin of amphibians renders them highly sensitive to climatic conditions, and interspecific correlations between environmental moisture levels and rates of water exchange across the skin suggest that natural selection adapts hydroregulatory mechanisms to local challenges. How quickly can such mechanisms shift when a species encounters novel moisture regimes? Cutaneous resistance to water loss and gain in wild-caught cane toads () from Brazil, USA (Hawai'i) and Australia exhibited strong geographic variation. Cutaneous resistance was low in native-range (Brazilian) toads and in Hawai'ian populations (where toads were introduced in 1932) but significantly higher in toads from eastern Australia (where toads were introduced in 1935).

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Laboratory experiments have shown that the viability of embryos of the invasive cane toad () can be reduced by exposure to chemical cues from older conspecific larvae. These effects (very strong in laboratory trials) may offer an exciting new approach to controlling this problematic invasive species in Australia. However, the degree to which the method works in natural environments has yet to be assessed.

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A common goal of population genomics and molecular ecology is to reconstruct the demographic history of a species of interest. A pair of powerful tools based on the sequentially Markovian coalescent have been developed to infer past population sizes using genome sequences. These methods are most useful when sequences are available for only a limited number of genomes and when the aim is to study ancient demographic events.

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Most oviparous squamate reptiles lay their eggs when embryos have completed less than one-third of development, with the remaining two-thirds spent in an external nest. Even when females facultatively retain eggs in dry or cold conditions, such retention generally causes only a minor (<10%) decrease in subsequent incubation periods. In contrast, we found that female sand lizards () from an experimentally founded field population (established ca.

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Parasites can enhance their fitness by modifying the behavior of their hosts in ways that increase rates of production and transmission of parasite larvae. We used an antihelminthic drug to experimentally alter infections of lungworms () in cane toads (). We then compared subsequent behaviors of dewormed toads versus toads that retained infections.

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Bioclimatic transect networks: Powerful observatories of ecological change.

Ecol Evol

July 2017

Australian Transect Network Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network (TERN) Adelaide SA Australia.

Transects that traverse substantial climate gradients are important tools for climate change research and allow questions on the extent to which phenotypic variation associates with climate, the link between climate and species distributions, and variation in sensitivity to climate change among biomes to be addressed. However, the potential limitations of individual transect studies have recently been highlighted. Here, we argue that replicating and networking transects, along with the introduction of experimental treatments, addresses these concerns.

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