keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37658819/neuronal-scaling-in-the-olfactory-system-of-bats
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Thomas P Eiting, Timothy D Smith, Nancy G Forger, Elizabeth R Dumont
Comparative studies are a common way to address large-scale questions in sensory biology. For studies that investigate olfactory abilities, the most commonly used metric is olfactory bulb size. However, recent work has called into question the broad-scale use of olfactory bulb size. In this paper, we use three neuroanatomical measures with a more mechanistic link to olfactory function (number of olfactory sensory neurons (OSNs), number of mitral cells (MCs), and number of glomeruli) to ask how species with different diets may differ with respect to olfactory ability...
September 2, 2023: Anatomical Record: Advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37524257/sexual-maturation-and-allometry-of-reproductive-traits-in-large-and-small-sized-male-honeybees
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shinya Hayashi, Hiwatashi Kenta, Tsunao Itoh
The body size of male honeybees (Apis mellifera L.) is a cause of skewed reproductive success. Large males are usually produced in colonies and have advantages in competition for mating and fertilisation. However, distinct small-sized males were produced depending on the colony conditions, particularly under queen-less conditions. Understanding the reproductive traits of small-sized males is currently limited, but it may provide insight into the developmental patterns and reproductive strategies that maximise reproductive success depending on body size and colony conditions...
July 29, 2023: Journal of Insect Physiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37479023/body-mass-dependence-of-oxidative-phosphorylation-efficiency-in-liver-mitochondria-from-mammals
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Boël Mélanie, Voituron Yann, Roussel Damien
In eukaryotes, the performances of an organism are dependent on body mass and chemically supported by the mitochondrial production of ATP. Although the relationship between body mass and mitochondrial oxygen consumption is well described, the allometry of the transduction efficiency from oxygen to ATP production (ATP/O) is still poorly understood. Using a comparative approach, we investigated the oxygen consumption and ATP production of liver mitochondria from twelve species of mammals ranging from 5 g to 600 kg...
July 19, 2023: Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology. Part A, Molecular & Integrative Physiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37459470/variation-in-fruit-and-seed-dimensions-is-better-explained-by-dispersal-system-than-by-leaf-size-in-a-tropical-rainforest
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Pablo R Stevenson, Diana C Acosta-Rojas, Sasha Cárdenas, L Francisco Henao-Díaz
PREMISE: Variation in fruit and seed traits could be originated from the selection pressures exerted by frugivores or other ecological factors (adaptive hypotheses), as well as from developmental constraints (by-product hypotheses) or chance. METHODS: We evaluated fruit and leaf traits for nearly 850 plant species from a rainforest in Tinigua Park, Colombia. Through a series of linear regressions controlling for the phylogenetic signal of the traits (minimum n = 542), we tested (1) whether the allometry between seed width and length depends on seed dispersal system (Mazer & Wheelwright's adaptive hypothesis of allometry for species dispersed in the guts of animals = endozoochory), and (2) whether fruit length is associated with leaf length (i...
July 17, 2023: American Journal of Botany
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37426892/flow-similarity-model-predicts-the-allometry-and-allometric-covariation-of-petiole-dimensions
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Charles A Price
Allometric relationships for plants, plant organs and plant parts, have long generated interest among biologists. Several prominent theoretical models based on biomechanical and/or hydraulic arguments have been introduced with mixed support. Here, I test a more recent offering, flow similarity, which is based on the conservation of volumetric flow rate and velocity. Using dimensional data for 935 petioles from 43 angiosperm species, I show that both the intraspecific and interspecific petiole allometries are more closely aligned with the predictions of the flow similarity model than that of elastic or geometric similarity...
July 2023: Plant Direct
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37395491/selection-on-weapon-allometry-in-the-wild
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Zachary Emberts, Ummat Somjee, John J Wiens
Allometry is the scaling relationship between a trait and body size. This relationship can often explain considerable morphological variation within and among species. Nevertheless, much remains unknown about the factors that underlie allometric patterns. For example, when different allometric relationships are observed amongst closely related species, these differences are regularly considered to be products of selection. However, directional selection on allometry (particularly the slope) has rarely been tested and observed in natural populations...
July 3, 2023: Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37381089/inner-bark-vs-sapwood-is-the-main-driver-of-nitrogen-and-phosphorus-allocation-in-stems-and-roots-across-three-tropical-woody-plant-communities
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Julieta A Rosell, Carmen R Marcati, Mark E Olson, Xanath Lagunes, Paula C B Vergilio, Cipatli Jiménez-Vera, Julio Campo
Nutrient allocation is central to understanding plant ecological strategies and forest roles in biogeochemical cycles. Thought to be mainly driven by environmental conditions, nutrient allocation to woody organs, especially to living tissues, is poorly understood. To examine the role of differences in living tissues (sapwood, SW, vs inner bark, IB), organs, ecological strategies, and environmental conditions in driving nutrient allocation and scaling in woody plants, we quantified nitrogen and phosphorus in main stems and coarse roots of 45 species from three tropical ecosystems with contrasting precipitation, fire regime, and soil nutrients...
June 28, 2023: New Phytologist
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37305986/a-herb-is-not-just-a-small-plant-what-biomass-allocation-to-rhizomes-tells-us-about-differences-between-trees-and-herbs
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Timothy Harris, Adam Klimeš, Jana Martínková, Jitka Klimešová
PREMISE: Biomass accumulation over years in vertical stems of trees leads to hypoallometric scaling between stem and leaf biomass within this growth form, while for herbaceous species, biomass allocation between these organ types typically exhibits isometry. However, biomass accumulation in herbs can occur in belowground perennating organs (e.g. rhizomes) that are, contrary to aboveground parts of herbs, long-lived. Although ecologically important, biomass allocation and accumulation in rhizomes (and similar organs) is mostly unknown...
June 12, 2023: American Journal of Botany
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37259250/testing-heterochrony-connecting-skull-shape-ontogeny-and-evolution-of-feeding-adaptations-in-baleen-whales
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Agnese Lanzetti, Roberto Portela-Miguez, Vincent Fernandez, Anjali Goswami
Ontogeny plays a key role in the evolution of organisms, as changes during the complex processes of development can allow for new traits to arise. Identifying changes in ontogenetic allometry-the relationship between skull shape and size during growth-can reveal the processes underlying major evolutionary transformations. Baleen whales (Mysticeti, Cetacea) underwent major morphological changes in transitioning from their ancestral raptorial feeding mode to the three specialized filter-feeding modes observed in extant taxa...
May 31, 2023: Evolution & Development
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37251774/seasonal-variations-in-carbon-nitrogen-and-phosphorus-of-pinus-yunnanenis-at-different-stand-ages
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Siyi Liang, Tian Tan, Danzi Wu, Chaojun Li, Huiqing Jing, Junwen Wu
The seasonal variations in carbon (C), nitrogen (N), and phosphorus (P) at the organ level of Pinus yunnanenis during different season are poorly understood. In this study, the C, N, P, and their stoichiometric ratios in various organs of P. yunnanensis during the four seasons are discussed. The middle and young aged P. yunnanensis forests in central Yunnan province, China were chosen, and the contents of C, N, and P in fine roots (<2 mm), stems, needles, and branches were analyzed. The results showed that the C, N, P contents and their ratios in P...
2023: Frontiers in Plant Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37122592/morphological-covariance-and-onset-of-foot-prehensility-as-indicators-of-integrated-evolutionary-dynamics-in-the-herons-ardeidae
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
M F Riegner, R D Bassar
The ultimate form an organism attains is based, in part, on the rate and timing of developmental trajectories and on compensatory relationships between morphological traits. For example, there is often an inverse correlation between the relative size of an organism's head and the length of its legs. Avian examples with a disproportionately small head and long legs include ostriches (Struthionidae), flamingos (Phoenicopteridae), cranes (Gruidae), and stilts (Recurvirostridae). To determine whether a possible compensatory relationship exists between relative head size and hind-limb length in a typically long-legged family of birds-the Ardeidae-we measured and analyzed skull dimensions (length, width, and height of cranium, and bill length) and skeletal hind-limb dimensions (femur, tibiotarsus, and tarsometatarsus) of the 12 North American species (north of Mexico) and of 12 additional taxa, including the morphologically divergent Agamia and Cochlearius ...
2023: Integrative organismal biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37078652/a-cis-regulatory-sequence-of-the-selector-gene-vestigial-drives-the-evolution-of-wing-scaling-in-drosophila-species
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Keity J Farfán-Pira, Teresa I Martínez-Cuevas, Timothy A Evans, Marcos Nahmad
Scaling between specific organs and overall body size has long fascinated biologists, being a primary mechanism by which organ shapes evolve. Yet, the genetic mechanisms that underlie the evolution of scaling relationships remain elusive. Here we compare wing and fore tibia lengths (the latter as a proxy of body size) in Drosophila melanogaster, Drosophila simulans, Drosophila ananassae, and Drosophila virilis, and show that the first three of these species have roughly a similar wing-to-tibia scaling behavior...
April 20, 2023: Journal of Experimental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37071597/evolution-of-relative-brain-size-in-dogs-no-effects-of-selection-for-breed-function-litter-size-or-longevity
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
László Zsolt Garamszegi, Enikő Kubinyi, Kálmán Czeibert, Gergely Nagy, Tibor Csörgő, Niclas Kolm
Domestication is a well-known example of the relaxation of environmentally-based cognitive selection that leads to reductions in brain size. However, little is known about how brain size evolves after domestication and whether subsequent directional/artificial selection can compensate for domestication effects. The first animal to be domesticated was the dog, and recent directional breeding generated the extensive phenotypic variation among breeds we observe today. Here we use a novel endocranial dataset based on high-resolution CT scans to estimate brain size in 159 dog breeds and analyze how relative brain size varies across breeds in relation to functional selection, longevity, and litter size...
April 18, 2023: Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37021320/responses-of-dry-matter-accumulation-and-partitioning-to-drought-and-subsequent-rewatering-at-different-growth-stages-of-maize-in-northeast-china
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Fu Cai, Na Mi, Huiqing Ming, Yushu Zhang, Hui Zhang, Shujie Zhang, Xianli Zhao, Bingbing Zhang
INTRODUCTION: Dry matter accumulation (DMA) and dry matter partitioning (DMP) are important physiological processes determining crop yield formation. Deep understanding of the DMA and DMP processes and their responses to drought are limited by difficulty in acquiring total root biomass. METHODS: Pot experiments with treatments quitting and ceasing ear growth (QC) and controlling soil water (WC) during vegetative (VP) and reproductive (RP) growth stages of maize (Zea mays) were conducted in Jinzhou in 2019 and 2020 to investigate the effects of drought and rewatering on DMW and DMP of different organs...
2023: Frontiers in Plant Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36847544/the-mixoplankton-database-diversity-of-photo-phago-trophic-plankton-in-form-function-and-distribution-across-the-global-ocean
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Aditee Mitra, David A Caron, Emile Faure, Kevin J Flynn, Suzana Gonçalves Leles, Per J Hansen, George B McManus, Fabrice Not, Helga do Rosario Gomes, Luciana Santoferrara, Diane K Stoecker, Urban Tillmann
Protist plankton are major members of open-water marine food webs. Traditionally divided between phototrophic phytoplankton and phagotrophic zooplankton, recent research shows many actually combine phototrophy and phagotrophy in the one cell; these protists are the 'mixoplankton'. Under the mixoplankton paradigm, 'phytoplankton' are incapable of phagotrophy (diatoms being exemplars), while 'zooplankton' are incapable of phototrophy. This revision restructures marine food webs, from regional to global levels...
February 27, 2023: Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36626800/allometric-plasticity-and-the-evolution-of-environment-by-environment-e%C3%A3-e-interactions-during-a-rapid-range-expansion-of-a-dung-beetle
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Patrick T Rohner, Armin P Moczek
Plastic responses to environmental conditions may themselves depend on other environmental conditions, but how such environment-by-environment (E×E) interactions may impact evolution remains unclear. We investigate how temperature shapes the nutritional polyphenism in horn length in a beetle and test whether 'allometric plasticity' (a form of E×E) predicts latitudinal differentiation during a rapid range expansion. Rearing populations under common garden conditions demonstrates that increased temperatures reduce the body size threshold separating two male morphs in all populations, but also that the magnitude of temperature-dependent changes in allometry diverged across recently established populations...
December 30, 2022: Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36522507/the-relative-sizes-of-nuclei-in-the-oculomotor-complex-vary-by-order-and-behaviour-in-birds
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Felipe Cunha, Cristián Gutiérrez-Ibáñez, Benjamin Brinkman, Douglas R Wylie, Andrew N Iwaniuk
Eye movements are a critical component of visually guided behaviours, allowing organisms to scan the environment and bring stimuli of interest to regions of acuity in the retina. Although the control and modulation of eye movements by cranial nerve nuclei are highly conserved across vertebrates, species variation in visually guided behaviour and eye morphology could lead to variation in the size of oculomotor nuclei. Here, we test for differences in the size and neuron numbers of the oculomotor nuclei among birds that vary in behaviour and eye morphology...
December 15, 2022: Journal of Comparative Physiology. A, Neuroethology, Sensory, Neural, and Behavioral Physiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36418861/natural-selection-under-conventional-and-organic-cropping-systems-affect-root-architecture-in-spring-barley
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Md Nurealam Siddiqui, Michael Schneider, Marissa B Barbosa, Jens Léon, Agim Ballvora
A beneficial root system is crucial for efficient nutrient uptake and stress tolerance. Therefore, evaluating the root system variation for breeding crop plants towards stress adaptation is critically important. Here, we phenotyped root architectural traits of naturally adapted populations from organic and conventional cropping systems under hydroponic and field trails. Long-term natural selection under these two cropping systems resulted in a microevolution of root morphological and anatomical traits. Barley lines developed under an organic system possessed longer roots with narrow root angle, larger surface area, increased root mass density, and a thinner root diameter with an increased number of metaxylem vessels...
November 22, 2022: Scientific Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36356573/cephalopod-retinal-development-shows-vertebrate-like-mechanisms-of-neurogenesis
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Francesca R Napoli, Christina M Daly, Stephanie Neal, Kyle J McCulloch, Alexandra R Zaloga, Alicia Liu, Kristen M Koenig
Coleoid cephalopods, including squid, cuttlefish, and octopus, have large and complex nervous systems and high-acuity, camera-type eyes. These traits are comparable only to features that are independently evolved in the vertebrate lineage. The size of animal nervous systems and the diversity of their constituent cell types is a result of the tight regulation of cellular proliferation and differentiation in development. Changes in the process of development during evolution that result in a diversity of neural cell types and variable nervous system size are not well understood...
November 3, 2022: Current Biology: CB
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36300714/unraveling-the-morphological-patterns-of-a-subantarctic-eelpout-a-geometric-morphometric-approach
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Fernanda S Orrego, Mathias Hüne, Hugo A Benítez, Mauricio F Landaeta
Phenotypic variation in organisms depends on the genotype and the environmental constraints of the habitat that they exploit. Therefore, for marine species inhabiting contrasting aquatic conditions, it is expected to find covariation between the shape and its spatial distribution. We studied the morphology of the head and cephalic sensory canals of the eelpout Austrolycus depressiceps (4.5-22.5 cm TL) across its latitudinal distribution in South Pacific (45°S-55°S). Geometric morphometric analyses show that shape varied from individuals with larger snout and an extended suborbital canal to individuals with shorter snouts and frontally compressed suborbital canal...
October 27, 2022: Integrative Zoology
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