50 research outputs found
Elysia timida (Risso, 1818) three decades of research
Elysia timida (Risso, 1818) three decades of research.— During the last 30 years, studies on Elysia timida (Risso,
1818) have addressed various aspects related to food sources, photosynthetic efficiency of kleptoplasts, population
genetics, chemical ecology and reproductive biology, both in the Mediterranean Sea and in the Mar Menor
coastal lagoon. E. timida shows a strong specific interaction with Acetabularia acetabulum, retaining functional
chloroplasts for at least 45 days and obtaining extra energy in periods when food resources are scarce. It shows
control of parapodia, avoiding pigment photodestruction under oversaturated light conditions. The chemical ecological
relationships established between E. timida and its potential predator fish, Thalassoma pavo, have also
been evaluated, and it has been found that that the extracts of the mollusc contain repellent and unpalatable
polypropionate compounds. Population genetics has demonstrated the genetic divergence between populations
showing high and significant values of FST and genetic distances, and at least six privative alleles that are not
shared with Mediterranean populations have been detected in lagoon populations. This sacoglossan is a poecilogonic
species, and its lagoon populations show a greater reproductive output than Mediterranean populations; they
produce a greater number of egg masses and embyros per individual, and the capsules have a wider diameter
Quantum Gravity Hamiltonian for Manifolds with Boundary
In canonical quantum gravity, when space is a compact manifold with boundary
there is a Hamiltonian given by an integral over the boundary. Here we compute
the action of this `boundary Hamiltonian' on observables corresponding to open
Wilson lines in the new variables formulation of quantum gravity. In cases
where the boundary conditions fix the metric on the boundary (e.g., in the
asymptotically Minkowskian case) one can obtain a finite result, given by a
`shift operator' generating translations of the Wilson line in the direction of
its tangent vector. A similar shift operator serves as the Hamiltonian
constraint in Morales-T\'ecotl and Rovelli's work on quantum gravity coupled to
Weyl spinors. This suggests the appearance of an induced field theory of Weyl
spinors on the boundary, analogous to that considered in Carlip's work on the
statistical mechanics of the 2+1-dimensional black hole.Comment: 17 pages in LaTeX format, vastly improved versio
Critical Behavior of Dimensionally Continued Black Holes
The critical behavior of black holes in even and odd dimensional spacetimes
is studied based on Ba\~nados-Teitelboim-Zanelli (BTZ) dimensionally continued
black holes. In even dimensions it is found that asymptotically flat and anti
de-Sitter Reissner-Nordstr\"om black holes present up to two second order phase
transitions. The case of asymptotically anti-de-Sitter Schwarzschild black
holes present only one critical transition and a minimum of temperature, which
occurs at the transition. Finally, it is shown that phase transitions are
absent in odd dimensions.Comment: 21 pages in Latex format, no figures, vastly improved version to
appear in Phys. Rev.
Black Hole Scan
Gravitation theories selected by requiring that they have a unique anti-de
Sitter vacuum with a fixed cosmological constant are studied. For a given
dimension d, the Lagrangians under consideration are labeled by an integer
k=1,2,...,[(d-1)/2]. Black holes for each d and k are found and are used to
rank these theories. A minimum possible size for a localized electrically
charged source is predicted in the whole set of theories, except General
Relativity. It is found that the thermodynamic behavior falls into two classes:
If d-2k=1, these solutions resemble the three dimensional black hole,
otherwise, their behavior is similar to the Schwarzschild-AdS_4 geometry.Comment: Two columns, revtex, 15 pages, 5 figures, minor typos corrected,
final version for Journa
Critical behavior in 2+1 dimensional black holes
The critical behavior and phase transition in the 2+1 dimensional Ba\~nados,
Teitelboim, and Zanelli (BTZ) black holes are discussed. By calculating the
equilibrium thermodynamic fluctuations in the microcanonical ensemble,
canonical ensemble, and grand canonical ensemble, respectively, we find that
the extremal spinning BTZ black hole is a critical point, some critical
exponents satisfy the scaling laws of the ``first kind'', and the scaling laws
related to the correlation length suggest that the effective spatial dimension
of extremal black holes is one, which is in agreement with the argument that
the extremal black holes are the Bogomol'nyi saturated string states. In
addition, we find that the massless BTZ black hole is a critical point of
spinless BTZ black holes.Comment: RevTex, 9 pages, nofigur
Traditional Taxonomic Groupings Mask Evolutionary History: A Molecular Phylogeny and New Classification of the Chromodorid Nudibranchs
Chromodorid nudibranchs (16 genera, 300+ species) are beautiful, brightly colored sea slugs found primarily in tropical coral reef habitats and subtropical coastal waters. The chromodorids are the most speciose family of opisthobranchs and one of the most diverse heterobranch clades. Chromodorids have the potential to be a model group with which to study diversification, color pattern evolution, are important source organisms in natural products chemistry and represent a stunning and widely compelling example of marine biodiversity. Here, we present the most complete molecular phylogeny of the chromodorid nudibranchs to date, with a broad sample of 244 specimens (142 new), representing 157 (106 new) chromodorid species, four actinocylcid species and four additional dorid species utilizing two mitochondrial markers (16s and COI). We confirmed the monophyly of the Chromodorididae and its sister group relationship with the Actinocyclidae. We were also able to, for the first time, test generic monophyly by including more than one member of all 14 of the non-monotypic chromodorid genera. Every one of these 14 traditional chromodorid genera are either non-monophyletic, or render another genus paraphyletic. Additionally, both the monotypic genera Verconia and Diversidoris are nested within clades. Based on data shown here, there are three individual species and five clades limited to the eastern Pacific and Atlantic Oceans (or just one of these ocean regions), while the majority of chromodorid clades and species are strictly Indo-Pacific in distribution. We present a new classification of the chromodorid nudibranchs. We use molecular data to untangle evolutionary relationships and retain a historical connection to traditional systematics by using generic names attached to type species as clade names
First Chemical Study of Patagonian Nudibranchs: a New Seco-11,12-Spongiane, Tyrinnal, from the Defensive Organs of Tyrinna nobilis
The Patagonian nudibranch Tyrinna nobilis contains a number of terpenoids, the novel seco-
11,12-spongiane tyrinnal (1) and the known sesquiterpenoids dendrolasin (2), pallescensin A
(3), and dehydropallescensin-2 (4). The metabolites probably derive from dietary sponges, thus
suggesting a parallelism between the ecological relationships of T. nobilis and those of mollusks
of genus Cadlina. The structure of 1 was determined by spectroscopic methods
Genotypic identification of an undescribed spotted fever group Rickettsia in Ixodes ricinus from southwestern Spain
An undescribed rickettsia was directly analyzed with specific rickettsial molecular biology tools on Ixodes ricinus L. collected in different localities of the province of Cadiz (southwestern Spain). On the basis of the results of the citrate synthase (glta) gene, 190 kD-outer membrane protein (rOmpA) gene, and 16S ribosomal RNA (16S rRNA) gene partial sequence data, it was found that this rickettsia is sufficiently genetically distinct from other Rickettsia to be considered a distinct taxonomic entity. The isolation and culture of this organism, as well as comparative antigenic analysis, are required to ensure its conclusive taxonomic placement among spotted fever rickettsiae. The epidemiologic role of this new rickettsial agent and its possible pathogenicity to wild and domestic animals or humans is still unknown and needs to be investigated.Peer Reviewe