63 research outputs found
Genetic admixture despite ecological segregation in a North African sparrow hybrid zone (Aves, Passeriformes, Passer domesticus Ă Passer hispaniolensis)
Under different environmental conditions, hybridization between the same species might result in different patterns of genetic admixture. Particularly, species pairs with large distribution ranges and long evolutionary history may have experienced several independent hybridization events over time in different zones of overlap. In birds, the diverse hybrid populations of the house sparrow (Passer domesticus) and the Spanish sparrow (Passer hispaniolensis) provide a striking example. Throughout their range of sympatry, these two species do not regularly interbreed; however, a stabilized hybrid form (Passer italiae) exists on the Italian Peninsula and on several Mediterranean isâ lands. The spatial distribution pattern on the Eurasian continent strongly contrasts the situation in North Africa, where house sparrows and Spanish sparrows occur in close vicinity of phenotypically intermediate populations across a broad mosaic hyâ brid zone. In this study, we investigate patterns of divergence and admixture among the two parental species, stabilized and nonstabilized hybrid populations in Italy and Algeria based on a mitochondrial marker, a sex chromosomal marker, and 12 microsâ atellite loci. In Algeria, despite strong spatial and temporal separation of urban earlyâ breeding house sparrows and hybrids and rural lateâbreeding Spanish sparrows, we found strong genetic admixture of mitochondrial and nuclear markers across all study populations and phenotypes. That pattern of admixture in the North African hybrid zone is strikingly different from i) the Iberian area of sympatry where we observed only weak asymmetrical introgression of Spanish sparrow nuclear alleles into local house sparrow populations and ii) the very homogenous Italian sparrow population where the mitogenome of one parent (P. domesticus) and the Zâchromosomal marker of the other parent (P. hispaniolensis) are fixed. The North African sparrow hybrids provide a further example of enhanced hybridization along with recent urbanization and anthropogenic landâuse changes in a mosaic landscape.Fil: PĂ€ckert, Martin. Leibniz Institution for Biodiversity and Earth System Research, Dresden; AlemaniaFil: Ait Belkacem, Abdelkrim. UniversitĂ© de Djelfa; ArgeliaFil: Wolfgramm, Hannes. Leibniz Institution for Biodiversity and Earth System Research, Dresden; AlemaniaFil: Gast, Oliver. Institute of Vertebrate Biology Brno y Masaryk University ; RepĂșblica ChecaFil: Canal Piña, David. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas. Instituto de Ciencias de la Tierra y Ambientales de La Pampa. Universidad Nacional de La Pampa. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales. Instituto de Ciencias de la Tierra y Ambientales de La Pampa; ArgentinaFil: Giacalone, Gabriele. Cooperativa Silene; ItaliaFil: Lo Valvo, Mario. Universita Degli Studi Di Palermo.; ItaliaFil: Vamberger, Melita. Leibniz Institution for Biodiversity and Earth System Research, Dresden; AlemaniaFil: Wink, Michael. Ruprecht Karls Universitat Heidelberg.; AlemaniaFil: Martens, Jochen. Johannes Gutenberg Universitat Mainz; AlemaniaFil: Stuckas, Heiko. Leibniz Institution for Biodiversity and Earth System Research, Dresden; Alemani
Franco-Japanese and other collaborative contributions to understanding chimpanzee culture at Bossou and the Nimba Mountains
The Japanese approach to science has permitted theoretical leaps in our understanding of culture in non-human animals and challenged human uniqueness, as it is not embedded in the Western traditional dualisms of human/animal and nature/culture. This paper highlights the value of an interdisciplinary approach and combining methodological approaches in exploring putative cultural variation among chimpanzees. I focus particularly on driver ants (Dorylus sp.) and oil palm (Elaeis guineensis) consumption among the Bossou and Nimba chimpanzees, in south-eastern Guinea at the border with CĂŽte dâIvoire and Liberia, and hand use across different tool use tasks commonly witnessed at Bossou, i.e. ant-dipping, nut-cracking, pestle-pounding, and algae-scooping. Observed variation in resource use was addressed across differing scales exploring both within- and between-community differences. Our findings have highlighted a tight interplay between ecology, social dynamics and culture, and between social and individual learning and maternal contribution to tool-use acquisition. Exploration of hand use by chimpanzees revealed no evidence for individual-level hand or community-level task specialisation. However, more complex types of tool use such as nut-cracking showed distinct lateralization, while the equivalent of a haptic manual action revealed a strong right hand bias. The data also suggest an overall population tendency for a right hand preference. As well as describing these sitesâ key contributions to our understanding of chimpanzees and to challenging our perceptions of human uniqueness, this paper also highlights the critical condition and high levels of threats facing this emblematic chimpanzee population, and several questions that remain to be addressed. In the spirit of the Japanese approach to science, I recommend that an interdisciplinary and collaborative research approach can best help us to challenge perceptions of human uniqueness and to further our understanding of chimpanzee behavioural and social flexibility in the face of local social, ecological and anthropogenic changes and threats to their survival
L\u27unit\ue9 sp\ue9cifique entre Crocidura giffardi de Winton et C. goliath Th. se trouve d\ue9montr\ue9e gr\ue2ce aux plus r\ue9centes effectuees au Cameroun
Volume: 21Start Page: 83End Page: 8
Les Soricidae dans le milieu d\ue9sertique saharien
Volume: 19Start Page: 181End Page: 18
Nouvelle Contribution \ue0 l`\uc9tude des Insectivores Soricidae du Mont Cameroun (Ergebnisse der Reise Eisentrauts 1957/58)
Volume: 10Start Page: 198End Page: 21
Nouvelles donn\ue9es sur la faune soricidienne du Cameroun
Volume: 26Start Page: 94End Page: 9
Les Soricidae (Mammif\ue8res Insectivores) des iles du Golfe de Guin\ue9e: faits nouveaux et probl\ue8mes biog\ue9ographiques
Volume: 33Start Page: 133End Page: 15
Les Muridae de basse C\uf4te d\u27Ivoire
Volume: 72Start Page: 695End Page: 75
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