388 research outputs found
Self-organization, scaling and collapse in a coupled automaton model of foragers and vegetation resources with seed dispersal
We introduce a model of traveling agents ({\it e.g.} frugivorous animals) who
feed on randomly located vegetation patches and disperse their seeds, thus
modifying the spatial distribution of resources in the long term. It is assumed
that the survival probability of a seed increases with the distance to the
parent patch and decreases with the size of the colonized patch. In turn, the
foraging agents use a deterministic strategy with memory, that makes them visit
the largest possible patches accessible within minimal travelling distances.
The combination of these interactions produce complex spatio-temporal patterns.
If the patches have a small initial size, the vegetation total mass (biomass)
increases with time and reaches a maximum corresponding to a self-organized
critical state with power-law distributed patch sizes and L\'evy-like movement
patterns for the foragers. However, this state collapses as the biomass sharply
decreases to reach a noisy stationary regime characterized by corrections to
scaling. In systems with low plant competition, the efficiency of the foraging
rules leads to the formation of heterogeneous vegetation patterns with
frequency spectra, and contributes, rather counter-intuitively,
to lower the biomass levels.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
Gomphocarpus R. Br. (Apocynaceae sufma. Asclepiadoideae) en Andalucía Occidental
Se da a conocer la presencia en Andalucía Occidental de Gomphocarpus physocarpus E. Mey., un neófi to originario del E y S de África. Se comenta la fenología de la fl oración y fructifi cación, así como la capacidad de dispersión de las plantas en las poblaciones naturalizadas, y se comparan con las de G. fruticosus (L.) T.W. Aiton, también presente en el territorio. Se discute el carácter invasor de las tres especies de Asclepiadaceae citadas en el texto.In this article the neophyte Gomphocarpus physocarpus E.Mey., widely distributed in SE Africa, is fi rst cited in western Andalucía (southern Spain). The flowering and fruit ripening phenology and dispersal potential of plants in different naturalized populations are described and compared with that of G. fruticosus (L.) T.W. Aiton also present in this territory. The invasive potential of the three Asclepiadaceae species here considered is also discussed.Fundación MIGRE
Hahb-4, a homeobox-leucine zipper gene potentially involved in abscisic acid-dependent responses to water stress in sunflower
The nucleotide sequence data reported will appear in the EMBL, GenBank and DDBJ Nucleotide Sequence Databases under the accession numbers AF339748 and AF339749.Homeodomain-leucine zipper proteins constitute a family of transcription factors found only in plants. We have characterized
a full-length cDNA encoding the sunflower
homeobox-leucine zipper protein Hahb-4
(Helianthus annuus homeo box-4). The complete cDNA is 674 base pairs long and contains an open reading frame of 177 amino
acids that belongs to the Hd-Zip I subfamily. Northern blot and RNAse A protection analysis show that the expression
of Hahb-4 is rapidly, strongly and reversibly induced by water deficit in whole seedlings, roots, stems and leaves. A
similar fast induction of Hahb-4
expression is observed when seedlings are subjected to a treatment with the hormone
abscisic acid (ABA). Nuclei prepared from seedlings treated with ABA or subjected to water stress show a significant increase of protein(s) that specifically bind the
sequence 5′-CAAT(A/T)ATTG-3′, recognized
in vitro by Hahb-4, suggesting that an active protein is synthesized in response to these treatments. The promoter region of the
Hahb-4 gene contains sequences that fit the consensus for a G-box present in some ABA responsive elements (ABREs). We propose that Hahb-4 may function in signalling cascade(s) that control(s) a subset of the ABAmediated
responses of sunflower to water stress.This work was supported by grants from CONICET, ANPCyT, Fundación Antorchas (Argentina) and Universidad Nacional del Litoral. R.L.C. and D.H.G. are members of CONICET; G.M.G. is a fellow of the same
Institution. The laboratory work of J.J. and C.A. was also supported by grants BIO99-794 (from the Spanish Comisión Interministerial de Ciencia y Tecnología) and CVI 148 (from Plan Andaluz de Investigación).Peer reviewe
Parasitoid and ant interactions of some Iberian butterflies (Insecta: Lepidoptera)
As a result of recent field studies in the Iberian Peninsula, interactions between 17 parasitoid taxa and 17 butterfly species, and 9 species of Lycaenidae and 15 species of Formicidae are detailed and discussed. Several of these, which are presented quantitatively, are otherwise unrecorded in the literature, while others confirm previous records. Attention is drawn to the need for the deposition of voucher material and both carefully and prolonged quantitative recording in order to understand and conserve these vulnerable aspects of biodiversit
Dispersal of the monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus) over southern Spain from its breeding grounds
Dispersión de la mariposa monarca (Danaus plexippus) en el sur de España desde las zonas de apareamiento Durante el período comprendido entre los años 2000 y 2016, se detectaron mariposas monarca en 127 lugares fuera de las zonas costeras donde se reproducen habitualmente en el sur de la península ibérica. Estos datos se obtuvieron en verano e invierno, coincidiendo con la máxima abundancia de individuos y la mayor proporción de sitios ocupados en sus zonas de reproducción cercanas al estrecho de Gibraltar. Los individuos que se dispersan no tienen ninguna posibilidad de establecer nuevas colonias en estos sitios porque las plantas en las que ponen los huevos no crecen en las localidades en las que fueron detectados. Sin embargo, estos movimientos de dispersión podrían ser la causa de la colonización de plantas alimentarias que crecen en otras zonas de la península ibérica y en otros países del Mediterráneo.From 2000–2016, monarch butterflies were detected at 127 locations away from their usual coastal breeding areas in the south of the Iberian peninsula. These findings were recorded in the summer–autumn period, coinciding with the highest abundance of individuals and the highest proportion of patches occupied in their reproduction areas near the Strait of Gibraltar. These dispersing individuals have no chance of successfully establishing new colonies at these sites because the food plants for egg laying do not grow in the localities where they were detected. However, these dispersive movements could be the source of their successful colonisation on food plants growing in other areas of the Iberian peninsula and in other Mediterranean countries.Dispersión de la mariposa monarca (Danaus plexippus) en el sur de España desde las zonas de apareamiento Durante el período comprendido entre los años 2000 y 2016, se detectaron mariposas monarca en 127 lugares fuera de las zonas costeras donde se reproducen habitualmente en el sur de la península ibérica. Estos datos se obtuvieron en verano e invierno, coincidiendo con la máxima abundancia de individuos y la mayor proporción de sitios ocupados en sus zonas de reproducción cercanas al estrecho de Gibraltar. Los individuos que se dispersan no tienen ninguna posibilidad de establecer nuevas colonias en estos sitios porque las plantas en las que ponen los huevos no crecen en las localidades en las que fueron detectados. Sin embargo, estos movimientos de dispersión podrían ser la causa de la colonización de plantas alimentarias que crecen en otras zonas de la península ibérica y en otros países del Mediterráneo
Procesos de limitación demográfica
Este capítulo ofrece una revisión de los factores que afectan a la regeneración natural de la vegetación, considerando la serie de etapas demográficas que determinan la dinámica de una población. Son muy escasos los estudios disponibles que analizan toda la serie de eventos concatenados entre la producción de flores y frutos y el establecimiento exitoso de una planta adulta reproductiva. También son escasos los trabajos que permiten establecer los efectos aplazados que tienen las interacciones con animales a lo largo del ciclo de regeneración. La aproximación que proponemos cuantifica las pérdidas de propágulos en cada etapa demográfica e identifica “cuellos de botella” del reclutamiento que pueden colapsar la regeneración natural de una especie. Revisamos una serie de casos de estudio que ilustran diversos procesos de limitación demográfica. El uso de técnicas explícitamente demográficas es fundamental para comprender la evolución de las especies forestales Mediterráneas y para diseñar actuaciones de preservación de sus poblaciones y de su extraordinaria diversidad.We review the main factors influencing recruitment limitation in Mediterranean woody species by considering the sequential stages that determine the demographic cycle. Very few studies examine the whole set of demographic stages, from flower production to the successful establishment of adult reproductive plants, and their influence on recruitment. There are also few studies exploring the delayed effects of animal interactions throughout the regeneration cycle, but the information on stage-specific effects is more detailed. We propose an approach that quantifies the propagule losses at each sequential demographic stage and identifies demographic bottlenecks that might collapse population growth. We review a series of case studies illustrating different limitation processes. The use of explicit demographic techniques is central to understand the evolution of Mediterranean woody species and to design sound, ecologically-based, conservation plans to preserve their extraordinary diversity
Plant ecology meets animal cognition: impacts of animal memory on seed dispersal
We propose that an understanding of animal learning and memory is critical to predicting the impacts of animals on plant populations through
processes such as seed dispersal, pollination and herbivory. Focussing on endozoochory, we review the evidence that animal memory plays a role in seed
dispersal, and present a model which allows us to explore the fundamental consequences of memory for this process. We demonstrate that decision-making by animals based on their previous experiences has the potential to determine which plants are visited, which fruits are selected to be eaten from the plant and where seeds are subsequently deposited, as well as being an important determinant of animal survival. Collectively, these results suggest that the impact of animal learning and memory on seed dispersal is likely to be extremely important, although to date our understanding of these processes suffers from a conspicuous lack of empirical support. This is partly because of the difficulty of conducting appropriate experiments but is
also the result of limited interaction between plant ecologists and those who work on animal cognition
Isolation of 91 polymorphic microsatellite loci in the western mediterranean endemic carex helodes (Cyperaceae)
Premise of the study: Microsatellite primers were developed for Carex helodes (Cyperaceae), a western Mediterranean endemic that is locally distributed in southern Portugal and southwestern Spain and rare in northern Morocco. Methods and Results: One hundred nine nuclear microsatellite markers were developed using a shotgun pyrosequencing method, resulting in 91 polymorphic and 18 monomorphic loci when tested using 19 individuals sampled from five populations from Portugal, Spain, and Morocco. Loci averaged 3.23 alleles per locus (SD = 1.15). In a single population (Cortelha population, Portugal), the 34 most polymorphic loci showed a mean observed heterozygosity of 0.357 (SD = 0.292) and mean expected heterozygosity of 0.384 (SD = 0.255). Conclusions: Next-generation sequencing allowed us to develop a high number of genetic markers with levels of polymorphism adequate to study gene flow among populations. However, when genotyping the individuals within a population, we found low levels of variation
Effect of invader removal: pollinators stay but some native plants miss their new friend
Removal of invasive species often benefits
biological diversity allowing ecosystems’ recovery.
However, it is important to assess the functional roles
that invaders may have established in their new areas
to avoid unexpected results from species elimination.
Invasive animal-pollinated plants may affect the
plant–pollination interactions by changing pollinator
availability and/or behaviour in the community. Thus,
removal of an invasive plant may have important
effects on pollinator community that may then be
reflected positive or negatively on the reproductive
success of native plants. The objective of this study
was to assess the effect of removing Oxalis pescaprae,
an invasive weed widely spread in the
Mediterranean basin, on plant–pollinator interactions
and on the reproductive success of co-flowering native
plants. For this, a disturbed area in central Portugal,
where this species is highly abundant, was selected.
Visitation rates, natural pollen loads, pollen tube
growth and natural fruit set of native plants were
compared in the presence of O. pes-caprae and after
manual removal of their flowers. Our results showed a
highly resilient pollination network but also revealed
some facilitative effects of O. pes-caprae on the
reproductive success of co-flowering native plants.
Reproductive success of the native plants seems to
depend not only on the number and diversity of floral
visitors, but also on their efficiency as pollinators. The
information provided on the effects of invasive species
on the sexual reproductive success of natives is
essential for adequate management of invaded areas.This work is financed by FEDER funds through the
COMPETE Program and by Portuguese Foundation for Science
and Technology (FCT) funds in the ambit of the project PTDC/
BIA-BIC/110824/2009, by CRUP Acc¸o˜es Integradas Luso-
Espanholas 2010 with the project E10/10, by MCI-Programa de
Internacionalizacio´n de la I ? D (PT2009-0068) and by the
Spanish DGICYT (CGL2009-10466), FEDER funds from the
European Union, and the Xunta de Galicia (INCITE09-
3103009PR). FCT also supported the work of S. Castro (FCT/
BPD/41200/2007) and J. Costa (CB/C05/2009/209; PTDC/
BIA-BIC/110824/2009). The work of V. Ferrero was supported
by the Fundacio´n Ramo´n Areces
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