237 research outputs found
Being Seen: An Art Historical and Statistical Analysis of Feminized Worship in Early Modern Rome
Female saints in early Christianity found their place in public veneration often through violent means, martyrdom. These saints, while publicly suffering in the imitation of Christ, were the original agents to navigate the gendered hierarchy within the religion. Female saints created an avenue for later female worshippers to understand Christianity on a strictly feminine level. Through the frescoed depictions of these female saints in 18 churches throughout Rome, this paper historically and statistically analyzes how the artistic representations of female saints added to or created a space for feminized worship
Comportamento reprodutivo do peixe anual brasileiro Cynolebias albipunctatus Costa & Brasil, 1991 (Teleostei, Cyprinodontiformes, Rivulidae): um novo relato de produção de som em peixes
The reproductive behavior of Cynolebias albipunctatus is described based on aquarium observations. The sequence of five distinct stages of reproductive behaviors defined for other rivulids was observed: 1) courtship displays; 2) invitation to dive; 3) submerging; 4) spawning/fertilization; 5) emerging. Some patterns are shared with several species of cynolebiatine annual fishes, such as courtship displays with lateral waving movements of male body and unpaired fins of male expanded during waving movements. Some unique behavioral patterns were also identified, such as distinctive movements of male head, producing a crack-like sound to attract the female, determination of a dominant female with exclusion of other female by the couple, dominant exhibiting of female that scrubs its snout in the urogenital region of male and exhibits brief courtship-like movements.O comportamento reprodutivo de Cynolebias albipunctatus é descrito baseado em observações em aquário. A seqüência de cinco estágios distintos de comportamento reprodutivo definidos para outros rivulídeos foi observada: 1) exibições de corte; 2) convite para submergir; 3) submersão; 4) desova/fertilização; 5) emersão. Alguns padrões são compartilhados com várias espécies de peixes anuais, como corte com movimentos ondulantes laterais do corpo do macho e nadadeiras ímpares expandidas durante os movimentos ondulantes. Alguns comportamentos únicos foram observados, como os movimentos distintivos da cabeça do macho, produzindo um som semelhante a um estalo para atrair a fêmea, escolha de uma fêmea dominante com exclusão da outra fêmea pelo casal e algumas exibições dominantes da fêmea que esfrega o focinho na região urogenital do macho e exibe breves movimentos parecidos com os de corte
Latent Resilience in Ponderosa Pine Forest: Effects of Resumed Frequent Fire
Ecological systems often exhibit resilient states that are maintained through negative feedbacks. In ponderosa pine forests, fire historically represented the negative feedback mechanism that maintained ecosystem resilience; fire exclusion reduced that resilience, predisposing the transition to an alternative ecosystem state upon reintroduction of fire. We evaluated the effects of reintroduced frequent wildfire in unlogged, fire-excluded, ponderosa pine forest in the Bob Marshall Wilderness, Montana, USA. Initial reintroduction of fire in 2003 reduced tree density and consumed surface fuels, but also stimulated establishment of a dense cohort of lodgepole pine, maintaining a trajectory toward an alternative state. Resumption of a frequent fire regime by a second fire in 2011 restored a low-density forest dominated by large-diameter ponderosa pine by eliminating many regenerating lodgepole pines and by continuing to remove surface fuels and small-diameter lodgepole pine and Douglas-fir that established during the fire suppression era. Our data demonstrate that some unlogged, fire-excluded, ponderosa pine forests possess latent resilience to reintroduced fire. A passive model of simply allowing lightning-ignited fires to burn appears to be a viable approach to restoration of such forests
Mammal species composition reveals new insights into Earth’s remaining wilderness
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156493/8/fee2192-sup-0004-FigS4.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156493/7/fee2192-sup-0005-FigS5.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156493/6/fee2192-sup-0006-FigS6.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156493/5/fee2192.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156493/4/fee2192-sup-0003-FigS3.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156493/3/fee2192-sup-0002-FigS2.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156493/2/fee2192-sup-0001-FigS1.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156493/1/fee2192_am.pd
The species diversity × fire severity relationship is hump-shaped in semiarid yellow pine and mixed conifer forests
The combination of direct human influences and the effects of climate change are resulting in altered ecological disturbance regimes, and this is especially the case for wildfires. Many regions that historically experienced low–moderate severity fire regimes are seeing increased area burned at high severity as a result of interactions between high fuel loads and climate warming with a number of negative ecological effects. While ecosystem impacts of altered fire regimes have been examined in the literature, little is known of the effects of changing fire regimes on forest understory plant diversity even though understory taxa comprise the vast majority of forest plant species and play vital roles in overall ecosystem function. We examined understory plant diversity across gradients of wildfire severity in eight large wildfires in yellow pine and mixed conifer temperate forests of the Sierra Nevada, California, USA. We found a generally unimodal hump-shaped relationship between local (alpha) plant diversity and fire severity. High-severity burning resulted in lower local diversity as well as some homogenization of the flora at the regional scale. Fire severity class, post-fire litter cover, and annual precipitation were the best predictors of understory species diversity. Our research suggests that increases in fire severity in systems historically characterized by low and moderate severity fire may lead to plant diversity losses. These findings indicate that global patterns of increasing fire size and severity may have important implications for biodiversity
Expression in Aneuploid Drosophila S2 Cells
Analysis of the relationship between gene copy number and gene expression in aneuploid male Drosophila cells reveals a global compensation mechanism in addition to X chromosome-specific dosage compensation
Sex and the Single Cell. II. There Is a Time and Place for Sex
In both male and female Drosophila, only a subset of cells have the potential to sexually differentiate, making both males and females mosaics of sexually differentiated and sexually undifferentiated cells
Requirement of Male-Specific Dosage Compensation in Drosophila Females—Implications of Early X Chromosome Gene Expression
Dosage compensation equates between the sexes the gene dose of sex chromosomes that carry substantially different gene content. In Drosophila, the single male X chromosome is hypertranscribed by approximately two-fold to effect this correction. The key genes are male lethal and appear not to be required in females, or affect their viability. Here, we show these male lethals do in fact have a role in females, and they participate in the very process which will eventually shut down their function—female determination. We find the male dosage compensation complex is required for upregulating transcription of the sex determination master switch, Sex-lethal, an X-linked gene which is specifically activated in females in response to their two X chromosomes. The levels of some X-linked genes are also affected, and some of these genes are used in the process of counting the number of X chromosomes early in development. Our data suggest that before the female state is set, the ground state is male and female X chromosome expression is elevated. Females thus utilize the male dosage compensation process to amplify the signal which determines their fate
Facilitation and Competition among Invasive Plants: A Field Experiment with Alligatorweed and Water Hyacinth
Ecosystems that are heavily invaded by an exotic species often contain abundant populations of other invasive species. This may reflect shared responses to a common factor, but may also reflect positive interactions among these exotic species. Armand Bayou (Pasadena, TX) is one such ecosystem where multiple species of invasive aquatic plants are common. We used this system to investigate whether presence of one exotic species made subsequent invasions by other exotic species more likely, less likely, or if it had no effect. We performed an experiment in which we selectively removed exotic rooted and/or floating aquatic plant species and tracked subsequent colonization and growth of native and invasive species. This allowed us to quantify how presence or absence of one plant functional group influenced the likelihood of successful invasion by members of the other functional group. We found that presence of alligatorweed (rooted plant) decreased establishment of new water hyacinth (free-floating plant) patches but increased growth of hyacinth in established patches, with an overall net positive effect on success of water hyacinth. Water hyacinth presence had no effect on establishment of alligatorweed but decreased growth of existing alligatorweed patches, with an overall net negative effect on success of alligatorweed. Moreover, observational data showed positive correlations between hyacinth and alligatorweed with hyacinth, on average, more abundant. The negative effect of hyacinth on alligatorweed growth implies competition, not strong mutual facilitation (invasional meltdown), is occurring in this system. Removal of hyacinth may increase alligatorweed invasion through release from competition. However, removal of alligatorweed may have more complex effects on hyacinth patch dynamics because there were strong opposing effects on establishment versus growth. The mix of positive and negative interactions between floating and rooted aquatic plants may influence local population dynamics of each group and thus overall invasion pressure in this watershed
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