157 research outputs found
Middleborns disadvantaged? testing birth-order effects on fitness in pre-industrial finns
Parental investment is a limited resource for which offspring compete in order to increase their own survival and reproductive success. However, parents might be selected to influence the outcome of sibling competition through differential investment. While evidence for this is widespread in egg-laying species, whether or not this may also be the case in viviparous species is more difficult to determine. We use pre-industrial Finns as our model system and an equal investment model as our null hypothesis, which predicts that (all else being equal) middleborns should be disadvantaged through competition. We found no overall evidence to suggest that middleborns in a family are disadvantaged in terms of their survival, age at first reproduction or lifetime reproductive success. However, when considering birth-order only among same-sexed siblings, first-, middle-and lastborn sons significantly differed in the number of offspring they were able to rear to adulthood, although there was no similar effect among females. Middleborn sons appeared to produce significantly less offspring than first-or lastborn sons, but they did not significantly differ from lastborn sons in the number of offspring reared to adulthood. Our results thus show that taking sex differences into account is important when modelling birth-order effects. We found clear evidence of firstborn sons being advantaged over other sons in the family, and over firstborn daughters. Therefore, our results suggest that parents invest differentially in their offspring in order to both preferentially favour particular offspring or reduce offspring inequalities arising from sibling competition
B. F. Skinner's contributions to applied behavior analysis
Our paper reviews and analyzes B. F. Skinner's contributions to applied behavior analysis in order to assess his role as the field's originator and founder. We found, first, that his contributions fall into five categorizes: the style and content of his science, his interpretations of typical and atypical human behavior, the implications he drew from his science for application, his descriptions of possible applications, and his own applications to nonhuman and human behavior. Second, we found that he explicitly or implicitly addressed all seven dimensions of applied behavior analysis. These contributions and the dimensions notwithstanding, he neither incorporated the field's scientific (e.g., analytic) and social dimensions (e.g., applied) into any program of published research such that he
was its originator, nor did he systematically integrate, advance, and promote the dimensions so to have been its founder. As the founder of behavior analysis, however, he was the father of applied
behavior analysis
Tolerance to fusarium verticillioides infection and fumonisin accumulation in maize F1 hybrids and subsequent F2 populations
CITATION: Ouko, Abigael et al. 2020. Tolerance to fusarium verticillioides infection and fumonisin accumulation in maize F 1 hybrids and subsequent F 2 populations. Agronomy Journal, 112:2432–2444, doi.org/10.1002/agj2.20145.The original publication is available at: https://www.researchgate.netFusarium verticillioides causes Fusarium ear rot (FER) in maize (Zea mays L.), thus
reducing grain quality, yield, and contaminates grains with fumonisins. Grain infection
by these fungi occurs before harvest and selection of parental lines resistant to
fumonisin accumulation for breeding purposes is the most effective and environmentally
friendly control strategy for F. verticillioides. This study intended to evaluate F1
hybrids and F2 breeding populations in Kenya for improved resistance to FER and
fumonisin contamination. Trials were artificially inoculated and FER severity, F. verticillioides
accumulation, and fumonisin contamination were determined. Inheritance
of resistance was also determined in the F1 hybrids. CML444 × MIRTC5, R119W ×
CKL05015, and CML444 × CKL05015 exhibited little to no FER and had the least
fungal and fumonisin contamination, respectively. Inbred lines CML495, CKL05015,
and P502 had negative, significant general combining ability (GCA) estimates for
F. verticillioides colonization and fumonisin contamination, but positive, significant
GCA estimates for 1,000-kernel weight, respectively. The genotype × environment
interaction was the main source of variation observed in the F2 populations with
R119W × CKL05015 and CML444 × CKL05015 being the most tolerant to fungal
and fumonisin contamination in Kiboko and MIRTC5 × CML495 the most tolerant
in Katumani.Publisher's versio
Chatter resistance of non-uniform turning bars with attached dynamic absorbers—Analytical approach
Functional gradient as a tool for semi-analytical optimization for structural buckling
- …
