53 research outputs found

    Growth and Asymmetry of Soil Microfungal Colonies from “Evolution Canyon,” Lower Nahal Oren, Mount Carmel, Israel

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    Fluctuating asymmetry is a contentious indicator of stress in populations of animals and plants. Nevertheless, it is a measure of developmental noise, typically obtained by measuring asymmetry across an individual organism's left-right axis of symmetry. These individual, signed asymmetries are symmetrically distributed around a mean of zero. Fluctuating asymmetry, however, has rarely been studied in microorganisms, and never in fungi.We examined colony growth and random phenotypic variation of five soil microfungal species isolated from the opposing slopes of “Evolution Canyon,” Mount Carmel, Israel. This canyon provides an opportunity to study diverse taxa inhabiting a single microsite, under different kinds and intensities of abiotic and biotic stress. The south-facing “African” slope of “Evolution Canyon” is xeric, warm, and tropical. It is only 200 m, on average, from the north-facing “European” slope, which is mesic, cool, and temperate. Five fungal species inhabiting both the south-facing “African” slope, and the north-facing “European” slope of the canyon were grown under controlled laboratory conditions, where we measured the fluctuating radial asymmetry and sizes of their colonies. from the “African” slope were more asymmetric than those from the “European” slope.Our study suggests that fluctuating radial asymmetry has potential as an indicator of random phenotypic variation and stress in soil microfungi. Interaction of slope and species for both growth rate and asymmetry of microfungi in a common environment is evidence of genetic differences between the “African” and “European” slopes of “Evolution Canyon.

    Toxic but Drank: Gustatory Aversive Compounds Induce Post-ingestional Malaise in Harnessed Honeybees

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    BACKGROUND: Deterrent substances produced by plants are relevant due to their potential toxicity. The fact that most of these substances have an unpalatable taste for humans and other mammals contrasts with the fact that honeybees do not reject them in the range of concentrations in which these compounds are present in flower nectars. Here we asked whether honeybees detect and ingest deterrent substances and whether these substances are really toxic to them. RESULTS: We show that pairing aversive substances with an odor retards learning of this odor when it is subsequently paired with sucrose. Harnessed honeybees in the laboratory ingest without reluctance a considerable volume (20 ”l) of various aversive substances, even if some of them induce significant post-ingestional mortality. These substances do not seem, therefore, to be unpalatable to harnessed bees but induce a malaise-like state that in some cases results in death. Consistently with this finding, bees learning that one odor is associated with sugar, and experiencing in a subsequent phase that the sugar was paired with 20 ”l of an aversive substance (devaluation phase), respond less than control bees to the odor and the sugar. Such stimulus devaluation can be accounted for by the malaise-like state induced by the aversive substances. CONCLUSION: Our results indicate that substances that taste bitter to humans as well as concentrated saline solutions base their aversive effect on the physiological consequences that their ingestion generates in harnessed bees rather than on an unpalatable taste. This conclusion is only valid for harnessed bees in the laboratory as freely-moving bees might react differently to aversive compounds could actively reject aversive substances. Our results open a new possibility to study conditioned taste aversion based on post-ingestional malaise and thus broaden the spectrum of aversive learning protocols available in honeybees

    Discovery of a cave as the day roost of a rarest fruit bat Latidens salimalii

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    Salim Ali's fruit bat Latidens salimalii is one of the three rarest bats in the world. It is endemic to Tamil Nadu in the southern part of India. Even though it was repeatedly mist-netted in the High Wavy Mountains, whether it roosts in foliage or trees or buildings during daytime, similar to sympatric fruit bats, was previously unknown. We report here for the first time that this species roosts in a cave in the High Wavy Mountains. Most of the individuals roosted in clusters in the darkest areas of the cave. We mist-netted 24 individuals during their evening outflights and confirmed their identity. The distance between the day roost and the only known night roost of L. salimalii was less than 1 km

    InfluĂȘncia do ciclo lunar na captura de morcegos Phyllostomidae Influence of moon cycle in phyllostomid bat capture

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    A influĂȘncia da luz da lua no padrĂŁo de atividade de morcegos jĂĄ foi documentada em algumas espĂ©cies. Geralmente os morcegos reagem ao aumento da iluminação reduzindo o uso de espaços abertos e restringindo a atividade de forrageio ou a duração do perĂ­odo de atividade. Para estabelecer a influĂȘncia do ciclo lunar na eficiĂȘncia de captura de morcegos, foi realizada uma anĂĄlise com 28 noites de capturas no sudeste do Brasil. A taxa de captura e a riqueza de espĂ©cies apresentaram relação linear inversa com a porção iluminada pela lua. Das espĂ©cies mais freqĂŒentemente capturadas, apenas duas apresentaram relação significativa e negativa com o aumento da iluminação pela lua. Maiores variaçÔes na riqueza de espĂ©cies foram observadas em morcegos catadores e nectarĂ­voros. Os dias apĂłs a lua nova sĂŁo os mais produtivos em relação a capturas e riqueza. A riqueza local nĂŁo pode ser totalmente amostrada se a amostragem for restrita a qualquer perĂ­odo do ciclo lunar. Para estudar a comunidade de morcegos Ă© mais apropriado realizar amostragem durante todo o ciclo lunar.<br>The influence of moonlight on the activity patterns of bats has been reported to some species. In general, bats react to the increase of nocturnal illumination by reducing the use of open spaces, by limiting foraging activity or by shortening the activity periods. To determine the influence of moon cycle on the efficiency of bat netting, captures of 28 night-samplings were analyzed in southeastern Brazil. The capture rate and species richness were inversely related to the moonlight intensity. Among the most frequently netted species, only two showed significant and negative relation with increasing moonlight. The highest variation in species richness was observed in gleaners and nectarivorous species. The days following new moon were the most productive in terms of capture rate and species richness. The local species richness was not archived when sampling was restricted to any single period of the moon cycle. Bat community studies may benefit from samplings spanning the entire moon cycle

    The promise of genomics in the study of plant-pollinator interactions

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    Flowers exist in exceedingly complex fitness landscapes, in which subtle variation in each trait can affect the pollinators, herbivores and pleiotropically linked traits in other plant tissues. A whole-genome approach to flower evolution will help our understanding of plant-pollinator interactions
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