11 research outputs found
Behavior of microbial communities developed in the presence/reduced level of soluble microbial products
Linking the Classroom and the Clinic: A Model of Integrated Clinical Education for First-Year Physical Therapist Students
Use of Health Information Technology to Advance Evidence-Based Care: Lessons from the VA QUERI Program
Bioremediation of heavy metal-contaminated effluent using optimized activated sludge bacteria
The cost of diagnostic uncertainty: a prospective economic analysis of febrile children attending an NHS emergency department
Inbred decorated crickets exhibit higher measures of macroparasitic immunity than outbred individuals
Inbreeding is assumed to have negative effects on fitness, including the reduced ability to withstand immune challenges. We examined the immunological consequences of inbreeding in decorated crickets, Gryllodes sigillatus, by comparing lytic activity, phenoloxidase (PO) activity, and encapsulation ability of crickets from eight inbred lines with that of crickets from the outbred founder population. Surprisingly, crickets from inbred lines had a greater encapsulation ability compared with crickets from the outbred population. We suggest that because inbred crickets have reduced reproductive effort, they may, therefore, have the option of devoting more resources to this form of immunity than outbred individuals. We also found that both inbred and outbred females had higher immunity than males in PO activity and implant darkness. This result supports the hypothesis that females should devote more effort to somatic maintenance and immunity than males. PO activity and implant darkness were heritable in both males and females, but lytic activity was only heritable in females. Males and females differed in the heritability of, and genetic correlations among, immune traits, suggesting that differences in selective pressures on males and females may have resulted in a sexual conflict over optimal immune trait values
