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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
51

A Test of an Evolutionary Theory of Adiposity Gain Induced by Long Sleep in Descendants of European Hunter-Gatherers

Chadyuk, Oleksiy 27 November 2013 (has links)
<p> Researchers have identified inadequate sleep duration as one of the factors contributing to global obesity. The purpose of this study was to test a hypothesis deduced from a new sleep-duration-based evolutionary theory claiming that sleep extension in response to lengthening night duration in early fall evolved into a behavioral marker of an approaching winter; this adaptive trait was theorized to produce adiposity gain in White men in response to sleep extension. The hypothesis was that White Americans would show a greater increase in the age-adjusted fat mass index per unit of sleep duration compared to that of Black Americans. Data were part of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) study between 2005 and 2010. The multiple regression analysis did not support the study hypothesis. The results indicated that habitual sleep duration had no effect on the annual rate of adiposity gain in White men, while in Black men, longer sleep was associated with significantly higher annual rates of adiposity gain. Implications for social change include the case for population-specific antiobesity interventions in Black men, including closer monitoring of sleep duration in order to prevent adverse habitual sleep extension and to improve time budgeting for physical exercise.</p>
52

Variation in mating preferences and behaviors in Drosophila melanogaster

Dolphin, Kimberly E. 28 March 2015 (has links)
<p> I found that in inbred females <i>D. melanogaster,</i> physical condition plays a major role in the amount of polyandry. In some systems there is evidence that the ability to self assess allows inbred females to vary their reproductive behavior to increase promiscuity. I predicted that this may be true in <i>Drosophila melanogaster</i> females, but we found that inbred females behaved less promiscuously in three proxies than outbred females. Inbred females mated with fewer total males, fewer different males, and had longer copulation latency than their outbred conspecifics. However, male mate choice is not predicted in <i>Drosophila melanogaster </i> because males invest less than females, but recently the importance of male preference has been gaining support. How these males are making decisions is an important component to understanding the evolutionary impacts of the male's behaviors. I found that male mate choices are heavily influenced by previous experiences, and the lack of experience causes significant changes in courtship latency and overall preferences.</p>
53

Social and Physical Cognition in Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes )| Preliminary Investigation of Domain-General versus Domain-Specific Intelligence

Faughn, Carley E. 08 August 2014 (has links)
<p> Comparative and evolutionary cognitive scientists disagree on whether human and nonhuman primate cognition is driven by a general intelligence or more specific, modular mechanisms. Comparative research with chimpanzees is extensive and provides the opportunity to better understand the evolution of human cognition. Little research has been dedicated to individual differences in chimpanzee social and physical cognition. The study of individual differences can be informative in better understanding the generality of primate intelligence. Results supporting a correlation between performances in the social and physical domains would suggest that a domain-general inference system may be responsible. If no relationship is revealed between performances then more compartmentalized, modular mechanisms may be responsible. As a preliminary investigation, I administered four studies focusing on social and physical cognition to a large number of captive chimpanzees. Performance on two tool-using tasks served as indicators of physical intelligence. I administered two social investigations regarding individual variation in social responsiveness and sociability. I did not find a correlation between the social and physical investigations; however strong individual differences in performances were observed. Demographic factors sometimes played a role in the results presented here (e.g. dominance rank and age). While this research does not demonstrate a relationship between sociability and physical intelligence, additional social measures should be utilized in order to measure social cognitive ability in chimpanzees. Focusing on individual differences with a battery of social and physical tasks will be informative regarding the structure of primate intelligence and the underlying cognitive mechanisms that are responsible.</p>
54

Nutrient effects on sexual selection and comparison of mating calls in katydids (Tettigoniidae)

Trozzo, Lara Rae 13 June 2014 (has links)
<p> Male katydids produce mating calls through stridulation to attract potential mates. Calls were recorded in the field and analyzed to compare between two related species that occur in overlapping ranges in the northwestern United States. Distinct differences were found between the two species' calls in both dominant frequency and chirp rate. Also, one species interspersed trills amongst the chirps of the call, while the other species' call did not include trills. These distinct call differences can be used for species identification and can be easier to differentiate than physical characteristics. </p><p> The upper limits of sexual selection can be estimated using upper limits on Bateman gradients, which represent how fecundity increases with additional mates. Upper limits on Bateman gradients are expected to be constrained by various factors such as nutrition. These upper limits were estimated using controlled mating experiments with katydids on high and low protein diets (as adults) by measuring how maximum fecundity (fecundity with ideal mates) increased with each mating. Decreases in both maximum fecundity and the potential for sexual selection were expected in males and females due to protein limitation. This would result from decreased potential fecundity in low protein females and decreased value of nuptial gifts given by low protein males. The results did not support our predictions as strongly as hoped, but a decrease in the upper limits of sexual selection was nearly significant in low protein males, evidenced by reduced fecundity gains from remating. Also, spermatophores (the katydid nuptial gift) had a more complicated effect on fecundity than expected. Spermatophore size differed between males' first and second matings, however, larger spermatophores did not always confer more value to females, particularly in second matings. </p><p> Stable isotope analysis was used to examine the lack of significant effects from differences in dietary protein on the upper limits of sexual selection in the previous experiment. Stable isotope ratios were analyzed for three body tissues to infer diet at different life stages by comparison with isotopic values from the foods. Results showed that animals on the low protein diet may have eaten more food to make up for their protein deficit, which would have confounded nutritional effects in the previous study. Sex differences in nutrient processing were present as would be expected if males and females experience different nutritional requirements for reproduction. Nutrient processing in exoskeleton varied across food treatments in males but not in females. This suggests that males experienced greater protein limitation than females and adjusted their nutrient processing accordingly. Further work is underway to determine how much of each type of food was consumed by individuals in different experimental treatments and during different life stages. </p>
55

The evolution of BARREN INFLORESCENCE1 and related AUX/IAA genes in angiosperms

Child, Robert Joseph 23 April 2014 (has links)
<p> The plant hormone auxin plays a major role in shaping plant morphology and development, but the gene networks regulating its synthesis and transport are incompletely known. The maize <i>BARREN INFLORESCENCE 1</i> (<i>BIF1</i>) gene has recently been cloned and shown to play an important role in the early stages of polar auxin transport. Auxin is synthesized in shoot tips and transported basipetally through the plant shoot and acts as a morphogen by facilitating the degradation of transcriptional repressors in a concentration dependent manner. The <i>AUX/IAA</i> gene family encodes transcriptional repressors that regulate a subset of plant developmental responses governed by the transcription of early auxin inducible genes in plants. Although the maize <i>BIF1</i> gene is a member of the <i>AUX/IAA</i> gene family, the co-ortholog(s) of <i> BIF1</i> in <i>Arabidopsis thaliana</i> was not known prior to this research.</p><p> Bayesian phylogenetic reconstruction placed maize <i>BIF1</i> in a clade sister to <i>Arabidopsis thaliana AtIAA15</i>. The <i> BIF1</i> lineage has undergone two gene duplications since the divergence of the early grasses. Molecular evolutionary analyses by maximum likelihood suggest that the <i>BIF1</i> alignment is under strong purifying selection with positive selection acting on a glutamine residue located in a functional region associated with <i>AUX/IAA</i> protein dimerization in one clade of <i>BIF1</i> paralogs, the <i>BIF1-Like2</i> (<i>BIF1L2</i>) clade. A character reconstruction analysis using maximum parsimony estimated an adenine to cytosine transversion at the base of the <i>BIF1L2</i> clade changed a glutamine into an alanine residue in this functional region. Expression of <i>BIF1</i> orthologs is conserved in floral meristems in the eudicot <i>AtIAA15</i> clade containing the taxa <i>Erianthe Guttata, Arabidopsis thaliana, Medicago truncatula</i>, however grass <i>BIF1L2</i> expression has diverged within the PACMAD &ndash; BEP clade, specifically in rice, where <i> BIF1L2</i> expression is reported to have moved into root tissue. These results suggest that <i>BIF1</i> paralogs has changed following a second round of gene duplication in the grasses. Taken together, a change in localized expression in these sequences, and positive selection acting on a glutamine-rich region of the protein-protein binding motif could imply that BARREN INFLORESCENCE1-like2 proteins are probably interacting with a new set or subset of AUXIN RESPONSE FACTOR (ARF) binding partners, and that neofunctionalization has occurred in the <i>BARREN INFLORESCENCE1-like2 </i> clade.</p>
56

Increasing student comprehension of evolution through laboratory investigations and simulations

McClintock, Steven W. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Michigan State University. Interdepartmental Biological Sciences, 2008. / Title from PDF t.p. (viewed on Aug. 3, 2009) Includes bibliographical references (p.166-168). Also issued in print.
57

Phylogenetics and homology modeling

Smith, Allen Watkins. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Rutgers University, 2008. / "Graduate Program in Microbiology and Molecular Genetics." Includes bibliographical references (p. 431-473).
58

Evolutionary genetics of flowering time regulation and variation in Helianthus

Blackman, Benjamin K. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Indiana University, Dept. of Biology 2009. / Title from home page (viewed on Jul 8, 2010). Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 70-10, Section: B, page: 5957. Advisers: Loren H. Rieseberg; Scott D. Michaels.
59

An evo-devo framework for product design evolution /

Yang, Sen. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M.Phil.)--Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, 2007. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 79-82). Also available in electronic version.
60

Developments in social evolution and virulence in parasites

Leggett, Helen Catherine January 2014 (has links)
The study of social evolution and virulence in parasites is concerned with fitness consequences of trade-offs between parasite life history traits and interactions between parasite species and/or genotypes with their hosts. I develop our understanding of social evolution and virulence in parasites in several ways. (1) I review empirical evidence for the fundamental predictions of virulence-transmission trade-off theory and demonstrate that the fit between theory and data is primarily qualitative rather than quantitative; that parasites differ in their degree of host generalism, and this is likely to impact virulence in four ways. (2) I take a comparative approach to examine the underlying causes of an observed statistical variation in the size of parasite infectious doses across taxa, revealing that mechanisms used by parasites to infect hosts are able to explain variation in both infectious dose and virulence. (3) I formally compare data on human pathogens to explain variation in virulence across taxa, revealing that immune subversion and not growth rate, explains variation in virulence. This allows me to predict that immune subverters and not fast growing parasites are likely to cause the most virulent clinical infections. (4) Using bacteria and their naturally infecting viruses (bacteriophage), I take an experimental approach to investigate the consequences of coinfection for parasite life history traits, and find that viruses cultured under a mix of single infections and coinfections evolved plasticity; they killed hosts more rapidly when coinfecting, and this resulted in high fitness under both single infection and coinfection conditions. (5) I experimentally investigate how selection within and between hosts and patches of hosts affects the fitness and virulence of populations of these viruses. I find that limited host availability favours virulent, faster killing parasites with reduced transmission; suggesting high, rather than low, virulence may be common in spatially structured host-parasite communities.

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