162 research outputs found
EEG ERP preregistration template
This preregistration template guides researchers who wish to preregister their EEG projects, more specifically studies investigating event-related potentials (ERPs) in the sensor space
Metabolomics Unravel Contrasting Effects of Biodiversity on the Performance of Individual Plant Species
In spite of evidence for positive diversity-productivity relationships increasing plant diversity has highly variable effects on the performance of individual plant species, but the mechanisms behind these differential responses are far from being understood. To gain deeper insights into the physiological responses of individual plant species to increasing plant diversity we performed systematic untargeted metabolite profiling on a number of herbs derived from a grassland biodiversity experiment (Jena Experiment). The Jena Experiment comprises plots of varying species number (1, 2, 4, 8, 16 and 60) and number and composition of functional groups (1 to 4; grasses, legumes, tall herbs, small herbs). In this study the metabolomes of two tall-growing herbs (legume: Medicago x varia; non-legume: Knautia arvensis) and three small-growing herbs (legume: Lotus corniculatus; non-legumes: Bellis perennis, Leontodon autumnalis) in plant communities of increasing diversity were analyzed. For metabolite profiling we combined gas chromatography coupled to time-of-flight mass spectrometry (GC-TOF-MS) and UPLC coupled to FT-ICR-MS (LC-FT-MS) analyses from the same sample. This resulted in several thousands of detected m/z-features. ANOVA and multivariate statistical analysis revealed 139 significantly changed metabolites (30 by GC-TOF-MS and 109 by LC-FT-MS). The small-statured plants L. autumnalis, B. perennis and L. corniculatus showed metabolic response signatures to increasing plant diversity and species richness in contrast to tall-statured plants. Key-metabolites indicated C- and N-limitation for the non-leguminous small-statured species B. perennis and L. autumnalis, while the metabolic signature of the small-statured legume L. corniculatus indicated facilitation by other legumes. Thus, metabolomic analysis provided evidence for negative effects of resource competition on the investigated small-statured herbs that might mechanistically explain their decreasing performance with increasing plant diversity. In contrast, taller species often becoming dominant in mixed plant communities did not show modified metabolite profiles in response to altered resource availability with increasing plant diversity. Taken together, our study demonstrates that metabolite profiling is a strong diagnostic tool to assess individual metabolic phenotypes in response to plant diversity and ecophysiological adjustment
Plant Species Loss Affects Life-History Traits of Aphids and Their Parasitoids
The consequences of plant species loss are rarely assessed in a multi-trophic context and especially effects on life-history traits of organisms at higher trophic levels have remained largely unstudied. We used a grassland biodiversity experiment and measured the effects of two components of plant diversity, plant species richness and the presence of nitrogen-fixing legumes, on several life-history traits of naturally colonizing aphids and their primary and secondary parasitoids in the field. We found that, irrespective of aphid species identity, the proportion of winged aphid morphs decreased with increasing plant species richness, which was correlated with decreasing host plant biomass. Similarly, emergence proportions of parasitoids decreased with increasing plant species richness. Both, emergence proportions and proportions of female parasitoids were lower in plots with legumes, where host plants had increased nitrogen concentrations. This effect of legume presence could indicate that aphids were better defended against parasitoids in high-nitrogen environments. Body mass of emerged individuals of the two most abundant primary parasitoid species was, however, higher in plots with legumes, suggesting that once parasitoids could overcome aphid defenses, they could profit from larger or more nutritious hosts. Our study demonstrates that cascading effects of plant species loss on higher trophic levels such as aphids, parasitoids and secondary parasitoids begin with changed life-history traits of these insects. Thus, life-history traits of organisms at higher trophic levels may be useful indicators of bottom-up effects of plant diversity on the biodiversity of consumers
Cryptic Variation between Species and the Basis of Hybrid Performance
Studies on natural variation in gene expression and its phenotypic effects provide fresh insights into the origins of vigour and sterility in species hybrids
Combining functional weed ecology and crop stable isotope ratios to identify cultivation intensity: a comparison of cereal production regimes in Haute Provence, France and Asturias, Spain
This investigation combines two independent
methods of identifying crop growing conditions and husbandry
practices—functional weed ecology and crop stable
carbon and nitrogen isotope analysis—in order to assess
their potential for inferring the intensity of past cereal
production systems using archaeobotanical assemblages.
Present-day organic cereal farming in Haute Provence,
France features crop varieties adapted to low-nutrient soils
managed through crop rotation, with little to no manuring.
Weed quadrat survey of 60 crop field transects in this region
revealed that floristic variation primarily reflects
geographical differences. Functional ecological weed data
clearly distinguish the Provence fields from those surveyed
in a previous study of intensively managed spelt wheat in
Asturias, north-western Spain: as expected, weed ecological
data reflect higher soil fertility and disturbance in
Asturias. Similarly, crop stable nitrogen isotope values
distinguish between intensive manuring in Asturias and
long-term cultivation with minimal manuring in Haute
Provence. The new model of cereal cultivation intensity
based on weed ecology and crop isotope values in Haute
Provence and Asturias was tested through application to
two other present-day regimes, successfully identifying a
high-intensity regime in the Sighisoara region, Romania,
and low-intensity production in Kastamonu, Turkey. Application
of this new model to Neolithic archaeobotanical
assemblages in central Europe suggests that early farming
tended to be intensive, and likely incorporated manuring,
but also exhibited considerable variation, providing a finer
grained understanding of cultivation intensity than previously
available
Correlations among biodiversity, biomass and other plant community parameters using the phytosociological approach: A case study from the south-eastern Alps
The present study deals with the grassland complex of communities which may be found on the limestones in the southeastern
Alps; these communities show in fact a particular interest for their high biodiversity degree and for their importance
for the traditional land-use economy of the south-European mountain regions. Phytosociological releve´s corresponding to
well-defined plant associations have been used in order to get information on the relationships among plant species diversity,
biomass, chorotypes, pollination types, functional strategies and soil characteristics. The analysis was carried out both along
an altitudinal and a soil evolution gradient. The analysis of the correlations among the variables and the application of the
principal component analysis shows a positive correlation between soil parameters and biomass, eurichory, anemogamy and
C- and R-strategies; on the contrary, a negative correlation among stenochory, entomogamy and S-strategy with the soil
evolution seems to be present. This article shows how the phytosociological approach can be used to get information and
knowledge on the correlations between several variables useful to understand the complex nature of the plant communities in
order to support management plans
Coalescent Simulations Reveal Hybridization and Incomplete Lineage Sorting in Mediterranean Linaria
We examined the phylogenetic history of Linaria with special emphasis on the Mediterranean sect. Supinae (44 species). We revealed extensive highly supported incongruence among two nuclear (ITS, AGT1) and two plastid regions (rpl32-trnLUAG, trnS-trnG). Coalescent simulations, a hybrid detection test and species tree inference in *BEAST revealed that incomplete lineage sorting and hybridization may both be responsible for the incongruent pattern observed. Additionally, we present a multilabelled *BEAST species tree as an alternative approach that allows the possibility of observing multiple placements in the species tree for the same taxa. That permitted the incorporation of processes such as hybridization within the tree while not violating the assumptions of the *BEAST model. This methodology is presented as a functional tool to disclose the evolutionary history of species complexes that have experienced both hybridization and incomplete lineage sorting. The drastic climatic events that have occurred in the Mediterranean since the late Miocene, including the Quaternary-type climatic oscillations, may have made both processes highly recurrent in the Mediterranean flora
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