41 research outputs found

    From speciation to introgressive hybridization: the phylogeographic structure of an island subspecies of termite, Reticulitermes lucifugus corsicus

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Although much research has been carried out into European <it>Reticulitermes </it>taxonomy in recent years, there is still much discussion about phylogenetic relationships. This study investigated the evolution from intra- to interspecific phylogeny in the island subspecies <it>Reticulitermes lucifugus corsicus </it>and threw new light on this phenomenon. An integrative approach based on microsatellites and mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequences was used to analyze samples taken from a wide area around the Tyrrhenian sea and showed how the subspecies evolved from its origins to its most recent form on continental coasts.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>According to mitochondrial phylogeny and molecular clock calculations, island and continental taxa diverged significantly by vicariance in the Pleistocene glacial period. However, more recently, numerous migrations, certainly human-mediated, affected the structure of the populations. This study provided evidence of direct hybridization and multiple introgressions which occurred in several hybrid areas. Analysis using STRUCTURE based on microsatellite data identified a population in Provence (France) which differed considerably (Fst = 0.477) from populations on the island of Corsica and in Tuscany in the Italian peninsula. This new population, principally distributed in urban areas, is highly heterogeneous especially within the ITS2 regions where homogenization by concerted evolution does not appear to have been completed.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>This study provides an unusual picture of genetic interaction between termite populations in the Tyrrhenian area and suggests that more attention should be paid to the role of introgression and human impact on the recent evolution of European termites.</p

    Compton Large Area Silicon Timing Tracker for Cosmic Vision M3

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    International audienceProposed in response to the ESA call for the third Medium size mission (M3), CAPSiTT is a small mission designed for a 3-year survey of the non-thermal high energy sky from an equatorial LEO orbit. With a large effective area and a very wide field of view, its single instrument, a silicon tracker, provides good imaging, spectroscopic and polarimetric capabilities with a sensitivity 10-100 times better than COMPTEL. Nucleosynthesis and particle acceleration mechanisms in various sites are the main scientific topics addressed by CAPSiTT

    Author Correction: The FLUXNET2015 dataset and the ONEFlux processing pipeline for eddy covariance data

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    The FLUXNET2015 dataset and the ONEFlux processing pipeline for eddy covariance data

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    The FLUXNET2015 dataset provides ecosystem-scale data on CO2, water, and energy exchange between the biosphere and the atmosphere, and other meteorological and biological measurements, from 212 sites around the globe (over 1500 site-years, up to and including year 2014). These sites, independently managed and operated, voluntarily contributed their data to create global datasets. Data were quality controlled and processed using uniform methods, to improve consistency and intercomparability across sites. The dataset is already being used in a number of applications, including ecophysiology studies, remote sensing studies, and development of ecosystem and Earth system models. FLUXNET2015 includes derived-data products, such as gap-filled time series, ecosystem respiration and photosynthetic uptake estimates, estimation of uncertainties, and metadata about the measurements, presented for the first time in this paper. In addition, 206 of these sites are for the first time distributed under a Creative Commons (CC-BY 4.0) license. This paper details this enhanced dataset and the processing methods, now made available as open-source codes, making the dataset more accessible, transparent, and reproducible.Peer reviewe

    Sexual selection in an acoustic moth : evolutionary study of male signal and female preference

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    Le processus de sĂ©lection intersexuelle peut impliquer plusieurs mĂ©canismes diffĂ©rents dans le choix du partenaire. Chez la pyrale Achroia grisella, les femelles choisissent les mĂąles en se basant sur des caractĂšres de leur chant d'avertissement ultrasonique, et de prĂ©cĂ©dentes Ă©tudes ont montrĂ© que ce choix peut procurer, Ă  une femelle discriminante, certains bĂ©nĂ©fices gĂ©nĂ©tiques indirects. Dans cette thĂšse, j'ai continuĂ© Ă  explorer le mĂ©canisme de bĂ©nĂ©fices indirects chez cette espĂšce en 1) dĂ©terminant avec plus de prĂ©cision un paramĂštre acoustique, l‟amplitude du chant, qui influence le choix des femelles et en 2) examinant la covariance gĂ©nĂ©tique entre les traits du chant mĂąle et ceux de la prĂ©fĂ©rence femelle. J'ai constatĂ© qu'en plus de prĂ©fĂ©rer des chants mĂąles Ă©mis avec une plus grande amplitude et une plus grande puissance acoustique, les femelles font Ă©galement une discrimination en faveur des chants comprenant des forts « pics d'amplitude ». Cependant, mes analyses gĂ©nĂ©tiques molĂ©culaires de la relation entre les traits du signal mĂąle et ceux de la prĂ©fĂ©rence femelle, n'ont rĂ©vĂ©lĂ© aucune covariance significative, comme prĂ©dit par la thĂ©orie de la sĂ©lection sexuelle. Ces derniers rĂ©sultats fournissent un aperçu important concernant l‟existence d‟un tempo rĂ©duit de la sĂ©lection sexuelle, dans les populations naturelles.The process of inter-sexual selection may involve several different mechanisms of mate choice. In the pyralid moth Achroia grisella, females choose males based on characters of their ultrasonic advertisement song, and previous work has indicated that such choice may afford a discriminating female certain indirect genetic benefits. In this thesis I continued to probe the indirect benefits mechanism in this species by 1) determining with more precision one acoustic character, song amplitude, that influences female choice and by 2) examining the genetic covariance between the male song trait and the female preference trait. I found that in addition to preferring male songs delivered at greater amplitude and with greater acoustic power, females also discriminate in favor of songs including higher 'amplitude peaks'. However, my molecular genetic analyses of the relationships between the male signal and female preference traits did not reveal any significant covariance, as predicted by sexual selection theory. These latter findings provide important insight on the reduced tempo of sexual selection that may exist in natural populations

    The dilemma of Fisherian sexual selection: Mate choice for indirect benefits despite rarity and overall weakness of trait-preference genetic correlation

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    International audienceFisher's mechanism of sexual selection is a fundamental element of evolutionary theory. In it nonrandom mate choice causes a genetic covariance between a male trait and female preference for that trait and thereby generates a positive feedback process sustaining accelerated coevolution of the trait and preference. Numerous theoretical models of Fisher's mechanism have confirmed its mathematical underpinnings, yet biologists have often failed to find evidence for trait-preference genetic correlation in populations in which the mechanism was expected to function. We undertook a survey of the literature to conduct a formal meta-analysis probing the incidence and strength of trait-preference correlation among animal species. Our meta-analysis found significant positive genetic correlations in fewer than 20% of the species studied and an overall weighted correlation that is slightly positive. Importantly, a significant positive correlation was not found in any thorough study that included multiple subgroups. We discuss several ways in which the dynamic, multivariate nature of mate choice may reduce the trait-preference genetic correlation predicted by Fisher's mechanism. We then entertain the possibilities that Fisherian-like processes sometimes function without genetic correlation, and that mate choice may persist in a population as long as genetic correlation, and therefore Fisher's mechanism, occurs intermittently

    Genetic Architecture of Sexual Selection: QTL Mapping of Male Song and Female Receiver Traits in an Acoustic Moth

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    International audienceModels of indirect (genetic) benefits sexual selection predict linkage disequilibria between genes that influence male traits and female preferences, owing to non-random mate choice or physical linkage. Such linkage disequilibria can accelerate the evolution of traits and preferences to exaggerated levels. Both theory and recent empirical findings on species recognition suggest that such linkage disequilibria may result from physical linkage or pleiotropy, but very little work has addressed this possibility within the context of sexual selection. We studied the genetic architecture of sexually selected traits by analyzing signals and preferences in an acoustic moth, Achroia grisella, in which males attract females with a train of ultrasound pulses and females prefer loud songs and a fast pulse rhythm. Both male signal characters and female preferences are repeatable and heritable traits. Moreover, female choice is based largely on male song, while males do not appear to provide direct benefits at mating. Thus, some genetic correlation between song and preference traits is expected. We employed a standard crossing design between inbred lines and used AFLP markers to build a linkage map for this species and locate quantitative trait loci (QTL) that influence male song and female preference. Our analyses mostly revealed QTLs of moderate strength that influence various male signal and female receiver traits, but one QTL was found that exerts a major influence on the pulse-pair rate of male song, a critical trait in female attraction. However, we found no evidence of specific colocalization of QTLs influencing male signal and female receiver traits on the same linkage groups. This finding suggests that the sexual selection process would proceed at a modest rate in A. grisella and that evolution toward exaggerated character states may be tempered. We suggest that this equilibrium state may be more the norm than the exception among animal species

    Genetic Architecture of Sexual Selection: QTL Mapping of Male Song and Female Receiver Traits in an Acoustic Moth

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    National audienceModels of indirect (genetic) benefits sexual selection predict linkage disequilibria between genes that influence male traits and female preferences, owing to non-random mate choice or physical linkage. Such linkage disequilibria can accelerate the evolution of traits and preferences to exaggerated levels. Both theory and recent empirical findings on species recognition suggest that such linkage disequilibria may result from physical linkage or pleiotropy, but very little work has addressed this possibility within the context of sexual selection. We studied the genetic architecture of sexually selected traits by analyzing signals and preferences in an acoustic moth, Achroia grisella, in which males attract females with a train of ultrasound pulses and females prefer loud songs and a fast pulse rhythm. Both male signal characters and female preferences are repeatable and heritable traits. Moreover, female choice is based largely on male song, while males do not appear to provide direct benefits at mating. Thus, some genetic correlation between song and preference traits is expected. We employed a standard crossing design between inbred lines and used AFLP markers to build a linkage map for this species and locate quantitative trait loci (QTL) that influence male song and female preference. Our analyses mostly revealed QTLs of moderate strength that influence various male signal and female receiver traits, but one QTL was found that exerts a major influence on the pulse-pair rate of male song, a critical trait in female attraction. However, we found no evidence of specific co-localization of QTLs influencing male signal and female receiver traits on the same linkage groups. This finding suggests that the sexual selection process would proceed at a modest rate in A. grisella and that evolution toward exaggerated character states may be tempered. We suggest that this equilibrium state may be more the norm than the exception among animal species

    Data from: Genetic architecture of sensory exploitation: QTL mapping of female and male receiver traits in an acoustic moth

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    The evolution of extravagant sexual traits by sensory exploitation occurs if males incidentally evolve features that stimulate females owing to a pre-existing environmental response that arose in the context of natural selection. The sensory exploitation process is thus expected to leave a specific genetic imprint, a pleiotropic control of the original environmental response and the novel sexual response in females. However, females may be subsequently selected to improve their discrimination of environmental and sexual stimuli. Accordingly, responses may have diverged and the original genetic architecture may have been modified. These possibilities may be considered by studying the genetic architecture of responses to male signals and to the environmental stimuli that were purportedly ‘exploited’ by those signals. However, no previous study has addressed the genetic control of sensory exploitation. We investigated this question in an acoustic pyralid moth, Achroia grisella, in which a male ultrasonic song attracts females and perception of ultrasound likely arose in the context of detecting predatory bats. We examined the genetic architecture of female response to bat echolocation signals and to male song via a cartographic study of quantitative trait loci (QTL) influencing these receiver traits. We found several QTL for both traits, but none of them were colocalized on the same chromosomes. These results indicate that – to the extent to which male A. grisella song originated by the process of sensory exploitation – some modification of the female responses occurred since the origin of the male signal

    L'instruction au sosie pour la transformation du travail : la conduite du conseil de classe par des chefs d'Ă©tablissement

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    International audience“Instruction by the use of stand-ins” is a technique used to explore experience in the workplace. Taking the form of a dialogue between an instructor and a stand-in it does not rely on any documented record or trace of the activity discussed. The technique is tested here with a group: the principal of a secondary school gives instructions to his “stand-in” (the author of this paper) in front of an audience of 15 of his public service executive counterparts.The subject of the exercise is how to conduct a “conseil de classe” which in French schools is a meeting where teachers and class representatives discuss the results and marks of each pupil. The merits and limits of the technique are discussed from three different perspectives: the knowledge produced regarding the occupational activities of a school principal (a professional dilemma is revealed), the level of accessibility to his own respective workplace practices the method offers to each of the participants and how, as a result of the exercise, each of the school principals plans to self-regulate the way he works in the future.L’instruction au sosie est une mĂ©thode permettant d’approcher l’expĂ©rience vĂ©cue dans le travail. Sous forme de dialogue entre un instructeur et un sosie, elle ne nĂ©cessite pas de recours aux traces de l’activitĂ©. Elle est ici expĂ©rimentĂ©e dans un usage collectif : un chef d’établissement d’enseignement secondaire donne des instructions Ă  son « sosie » (l’auteur de cette communication), Ă©coutĂ© par 15 de ses homologues cadres de la fonction publique. Elle porte sur la conduite de rĂ©union de type « conseil de classe ». L’intĂ©rĂȘt et les limites de la mĂ©thode sont discutĂ©s sous trois angles : celui de la production de connaissances sur le travail des cadres (un dilemme professionnel est mis en Ă©vidence), celui de l’accessibilitĂ© Ă  des Ă©lĂ©ments de l’activitĂ© et celui des rĂ©gulations de l’activitĂ© envisagĂ©es par chacun des chefs d’établissement
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