169 results match your criteria: "University of Exeter Penryn[Affiliation]"

Stibbard-Hawkes' taphonomic findings are valuable, and his call for caution warranted, but the hazards he raises are being mitigated by a multi-pronged approach; current research on behavioural/cognitive modernity is not based solely on material chronology. Theories synthesize data from archaeology, anthropology, psychology, neuroscience, and genetics, and predictions arising from these theories are tested with mathematical and agent-based models.

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Animal movements are typically influenced by multiple environmental factors simultaneously, and individuals vary in their response to this environmental heterogeneity. Therefore, understanding how environmental aspects, including biotic, abiotic, and anthropogenic factors, influence the movements of wild animals is an important focus of wildlife research and conservation. We apply Exponential Random Graph Models (ERGMs) to analyze movement networks of a bull shark population in a network of acoustic receivers and identify the effects of environmental, social, or other types of covariates on their movements.

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  • UNESCO biosphere reserves aim to promote sustainable development by balancing biodiversity conservation and socio-economic growth, yet there's a need for deeper insight into their actual impacts on local economies.
  • A systematic review analyzed 16 studies on biosphere reserves after screening 10,053 titles; findings indicate mixed effects on economic living standards and varying validity among studies.
  • Most high-validity studies suggest positive relationships between local communities and governance after interventions, although some studies highlight potential for both conflict and benefits in socio-economic outcomes.
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  • 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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Multiple studies across a variety of scientific disciplines have shown that the number of times that a paper is shared on Twitter (now called X) is correlated with the number of citations that paper receives. However, these studies were not designed to answer whether tweeting about scientific papers causes an increase in citations, or whether they were simply highlighting that some papers have higher relevance, importance or quality and are therefore both tweeted about more and cited more. The authors of this study are leading science communicators on Twitter from several life science disciplines, with substantially higher follower counts than the average scientist, making us uniquely placed to address this question.

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Scoring the penetrance of heterozygotes in complex phenotypes, like colour pattern, is difficult and complicates the analysis of systems in which dominance is incomplete or evolving. The African Monarch () represents an example where colour pattern heterozygotes, formed in the contact zone between the different subspecies, show such intermediate dominance. Colour pattern in this aposematic butterfly is controlled by three loci , and .

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Ectotherms make up the majority of terrestrial biodiversity, so it is important to understand their potential responses to climate change. Often, models aiming to achieve this understanding correlate species distributions with ambient air temperature. However, this assumes a constant relationship between the air temperature and body temperature, which determines an ectotherm's thermal performance.

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  • Many bee species possess specific cytochrome P450 enzymes (P450s) that help detoxify certain insecticides, but the alfalfa leafcutter bee lacks these enzymes and is significantly more sensitive to insecticides.
  • Research investigated the P450 genes in various Megachilidae bee species, revealing that many lack the CYP9Q-related genes and instead have evolved distinct P450s that cannot metabolize common neonicotinoid insecticides.
  • Conversely, some tribes within the Megachilidae, like Osmiini and Dioxyini, do have protective P450s that can detoxify these harmful chemicals, highlighting the need for better pesticide risk assessments based on these evolutionary patterns.
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Pristine ZnO and Co-doped ZnO photocatalyst thin films were fabricated on a ceramic substrate by spray pyrolysis. The optical, morphological and structural properties of the fabricated nanophotocatalyst thin films were analyzed using X-ray diffraction (XRD), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), energy-dispersive X-ray (EDX) spectroscopy and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy. Operational parameters, including dye concentration, oxidant concentration, irradiation time and pH for dye degradation, were optimized by response surface methodology (RSM).

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Herein, a ZrO added α-FeO photoanode that can split water at low applied potential is reported. First, the pristine hematite α-FeO photoanode was synthesized using an aerosol-assisted chemical vapour deposition (AACVD) method followed by modification with various amounts of ZrO (2 to 40%) in the form of thin films on conducting glass substrate. The XRD, Raman spectroscopy and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) analyses confirmed the presence of the monoclinic phase of ZrO in the composites with multifaceted particles of compact morphology.

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  • * A study analyzed liver samples from 360 euthanized kingsnakes to detect 10 different ARs, finding that 90% tested positive, primarily for brodifacoum, and showed a correlation between the snakes' size and geographic location with AR concentration.
  • * The study suggests that California kingsnakes could serve as sentinel species for monitoring ARs in the ecosystem due to similarities in AR types and prevalence with local raptors, although more
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Evolutionary adaptation through genetic change requires genetic variation and is a key mechanism enabling species to persist in changing environments. Although a substantial body of work has focused on understanding how and why additive genetic variance ( ) differs among traits species, we still know little about how they vary species. Here we make a first attempt at testing for interspecific variation in two complementary measures of and the role of phylogeny in shaping this variation.

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The nests of ground-nesting birds rely heavily on camouflage for their survival, and predation risk, often linked to ecological changes from human activity, is a major source of mortality. Numerous ground-nesting bird populations are in decline, so understanding the effects of camouflage on their nesting behavior is relevant to their conservation concerns. Habitat three-dimensional (3D) geometry, together with predator visual abilities, viewing distance, and viewing angle, determine whether a nest is either visible, occluded, or too far away to detect.

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Anthropogenic metal pollution can result in co-selection for antibiotic resistance and potentially select for increased virulence in bacterial pathogens. Metal-polluted environments can select for the increased production of siderophore molecules to detoxify non-ferrous metals. However, these same molecules also aid the uptake of ferric iron, a limiting factor for within-host pathogen growth, and are consequently a virulence factor.

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Researchers generally ascribe demographic drivers in a single sub-population and presume they are representative. With this information, practitioners implement blanket conservation measures across metapopulations to reverse declines. However, such approaches may not be appropriate in circumstances where sub-populations are spatiotemporally segregated and exposed to different environmental variation.

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In the UK, tree, hedgerow, and woodland (THaW) habitats are key havens for biodiversity and support many related ecosystem services. The UK is entering a period of agricultural policy realignment with respect to natural capital and climate change, meaning that now is a critical time to evaluate the distribution, resilience, and dynamics of THaW habitats. The fine-grained nature of habitats like hedgerows necessitates mapping of these features at relatively fine spatial resolution-and freely available public archives of airborne laser scanning (LiDAR) data at <2 m spatial resolution offer a means of doing so within UK settings.

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Several studies over recent decades have reported a lack of contemporary improvement in thoroughbred racehorse speed, despite apparent additive genetic variance and putatively strong selection. More recently, it has been shown that some phenotypic improvement is ongoing, but rates are low in general and particularly so over longer distances. Here we used pedigree-based analysis of 692,534 records from 76,960 animals to determine whether these phenotypic trends are underpinned by genetic selection responses, and to evaluate the potential for more rapid improvement.

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Eurasian otters are apex predators of freshwater ecosystems and a recovering species across much of their European range; investigating the dietary variation of this predator over time and space, therefore, provides opportunities to identify changes in freshwater trophic interactions and factors influencing the conservation of otter populations. Here we sampled feces from 300 dead otters across England and Wales between 2007 and 2016, conducting both morphological analyses of prey remains and dietary DNA metabarcoding. Comparison of these methods showed that greater taxonomic resolution and breadth could be achieved using DNA metabarcoding but combining data from both methodologies gave the most comprehensive dietary description.

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In butterflies and moths, male-killing endosymbionts are transmitted from infected females via their eggs, and the male progeny then perish. This means that successful transmission of the parasite relies on the successful mating of the host. Paradoxically, at the population level, parasite transmission also reduces the number of adult males present in the final population for infected females to mate with.

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Automated 3D image-based tracking systems are new and promising devices to investigate the foraging behavior of flying animals with great accuracy and precision. 3D analyses can provide accurate assessments of flight performance in regard to speed, curvature, and hovering. However, there have been few applications of this technology in ecology, particularly for insects.

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Passage experiments that sequentially infect hosts with parasites have long been used to manipulate virulence. However, for many invertebrate pathogens, passage has been applied naively without a full theoretical understanding of how best to select for increased virulence and this has led to very mixed results. Understanding the evolution of virulence is complex because selection on parasites occurs across multiple spatial scales with potentially different conflicts operating on parasites with different life histories.

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Invasive species science has focused heavily on the invasive agent. However, management to protect native species also requires a proactive approach focused on resident communities and the features affecting their vulnerability to invasion impacts. Vulnerability is likely the result of factors acting across spatial scales, from local to regional, and it is the combined effects of these factors that will determine the magnitude of vulnerability.

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Studies of parasites in wild animal populations often rely on molecular methods to both detect and quantify infections. However, method accuracy is likely to be influenced by the sampling approach taken prior to nucleic acid extraction. Avian Haemosporidia are studied primarily through the screening of host blood, and a range of storage mediums are available for the short- to long-term preservation of samples.

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  • The Arctic is experiencing the fastest warming on Earth, leading to increased extreme weather events that disturb its ecosystems.
  • A new dataset called ARCLIM has been created to study these changes, providing various bioclimatic indices for northern high-latitude regions (>45°N).
  • ARCLIM includes data from 1950-2021 in three subsets: annual values, average conditions from 1991-2020, and temporal trends from 1951-2021, offering insights into climate variability and extreme weather in the Arctic.
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