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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.
171

Pavouci jako zdroje a příjemci antipredačních varovných signálů / Spiders as senders and receivers of antipredatory warning signals

Raška, Jan January 2019 (has links)
The introductory part of this thesis sums up the state of knowledge on aposematism and mimicry, the effect of aposematic and mimetic signals on spider predators, and cases when spiders do not receive but send such signals. Attachments of the thesis include four original manuscripts. In the first study, we presented jumping spiders (Evarcha arcuata, Salticidae) with different colour forms (red-and-black, yellow-and-black, white-and-black) of the firebug (Pyrrhocoris apterus, Pyrrhocoridae). Our goal was to compare reactions of the spiders to various intensity of aposematic signalization, expecting red-and-black coloration to have the strongest effect. Aversive learning of all colour forms was equally effective, but generalization of the learned avoidance to other colour forms was more effective after switch from less (white-and-black, yellow-and-black) to more (red-and-black) conspicuously coloured prey. When tested the next day, avoidance of the white-and-black prey got mostly forgotten. In the second study, we assessed little studied sensitivity of spiders to smells of unpalatable prey. After jumping spiders learned to avoid firebugs, most of them avoided the firebug smell, showing their sensitivity not only to optical, but also to chemical part of signalization of the unpalatable prey. In the...
172

Generation of cDNA chips from the black widow spider, latrodectus hesperus, for gene discovery and expression profiling using microarray technology, and molecular characterization of a novel silk glue protein

Vasanthavada, Keshav 01 January 2005 (has links)
eDNA microarray technology has generated a tremendous amount of interest among biologists because of its promise to monitor the entire genome on a single chip, thus enabling researchers to have a better picture of the interaction among thousands of genes simultaneously. In the current study, this technology was used to print over 3,000 unknown genes from various silk glands of the black widow spider to profile their expression patterns and to identify novel candidates. Spiders are remarkable creatures because of their ability to make different silks, each with a specific function. Some of these silks have amazing mechanical properties, comparable to those of the finest synthetic materials. Several silk genes have been cloned from various spiders over the last few years, and the contribution of each of those genes in silk production has been identified. However, the majority of cellular and biochemical processes involved in silk manufacture remain a mystery. In our research, we attempt to identify genes that might be involved in silk assembly, on a global scale and investigate more about those genes and their interplay with other key biological molecules involved in silk manufacture. Our study showed that silking spiders for a certain period of time resulted in down-regulation of two important silk genes, ECP-1 and ECP-2. Both these genes are key molecules implicated for their role in maintaining the egg case architecture in the black widow spider.,-and we believe that these genes are also directly or indirectly involved in the manufacture of dragline silk. Microarray analyses also enable the discovery of several other interesting molecules, two of which could be accessory proteins involved in silk formation. Furthermore, in a separate study we also characterized a novel silk glue protein with unique ensemble repeats. In conclusion, we believe that the findings of this study will indeed be significant to silk researchers and material scientists alike and it will enhance our knowledge in understanding the mystery behind silk production.
173

Evidence that aciniform silk and minor ampullate silk are major constituents of wrapping silk from the black widow

Reza, Ryan C. 01 January 2008 (has links)
Spider silk is one of the most remarkable materials produced in the natural world and its strength and extensibility are legendary. To date, the majority of studies have been performed on the following silks: dragline, capture spiral, and eggcase silk. The primary goal of this study was to characterize a lesser known silk type, called wrapping (swathing) silk, from Latrodectus hesperus. My research focused on elucidating the fibroins that make up the swathing silk. Perfonning MS/MS analyses on solubilized wrapping silk fibroins digested with trypsin, we demonstrate that a novel fibroin named AcSp !-like is present within wrapping silk. Consistent with this finding, SEM analyses reveal that wrapping silk is a composite material, containing at least three different diameter silk fibers. By using scanning electron micrographs, along with amino acid composition analyses and MS/MS analyses, we demonstrate wrapping material contains the fibroins AcSp1-like, MiSp1-like, MaSp1 and MaSp2. These are the first studies to reveal that minor, major and acinifonn silks are constituents of wrapping material.
174

Spiders and ants associated with fallen logs in Forillon National Park of Canada, Quebec

Varady-Szabo, Hirondelle January 2004 (has links)
No description available.
175

Subletální efekty insekticidů neonikotinoidů na migrační potenciál pavouků / Sublethal effects of the insecticides neonicotinoids on migration abilities of spiders

Přibáňová, Gabriela January 2021 (has links)
The purpose for using pesticides is to kill organisms that cause damage (so-called pests) on various crops and thus prevent possible crop losses. Their side effect is a negative impact on non-target organisms. The presented diploma thesis is focused on the effect of neonicotinoids on invertebrates particularly on spiders. Its main goal was to document their influence on behavioral parameters influencing dispersal abilities such as locomotion and tendency to spread by wind (so-called ballooning). The diploma thesis compares the influence of neonicotinoids on model species, Pardosa lugubris (Walckenaer, 1802) and Phylloneta impressa (L. Koch, 1881) with different modes of prey hunting and compares the influence on adult and nymphal stages. Pesticides Actara® 25 WG, Biscaya® 240 OD, Confidor® 200 OD and Mospilan® 20 SP were applied to the spiders under laboratory conditions and their effect was tested at different concentrations and different methods of application. The biggest impact on spiders had Confidor. It clearly had the most significant negative effect on mobility and a tendency to spider wind propagation. The lethal effects were caused by neonicotinoids in nymphal individuals Pardosa lugubris, especially Confidor (even 100% mortality for tarsal application). During an experiment studying the...
176

Karyotypová evoluce pavouků čeledi Araneidae / Karyotype evolution of the family Araneidae

Pajpach, Filip January 2018 (has links)
Orb-weavers (Araneidae) are a diversified spider family comprising more than 3,100 species in more than 170 genera. Together with 13 other families, they con- stitute to superfamily Araneoidea. The presented thesis focuses on karyotype evo- lution of Araneidae, including its comparison with a related family Tetragnathidae. The results obtained from 19 araneid and four tetragnathid species confirm previ- ously postulated hypothesis that the ancestral karyotype of Araneoidea (including Araneidae) consists of 24 acrocentric chromosomes in males, including two acro- centric X chromosomes of system X1X20. However, there is a tendency of 2n decrease in some araneids due to centric fusions. In these cases, centric fusions affected most autosomes (and sometimes gonosomes as well); number of chromosome pairs de- creased from 11 to six. Three independent reduction events were detected in this thesis. Furthermore, pattern of nucleolar organizer regions (NORs) was studied in this thesis using fluorescent in situ hybridization, since data on evolution of this marker are scarce in spiders. Striking variability in NORs number was discovered, ranging from one to 13 loci. Remarkably, multiple centric fusions were always ac- companied by considerable increase of NORs number. In araneids and tetragnathids possessing...
177

Metagenomics Reveals Microbiome Correlations with Ecology and Behavior in a Socially Polymorphic Spider, Anelosimus Studiosus (Araneae: Theridiidae)

Herrig, Ashley 01 December 2018 (has links) (PDF)
The unifying concept of endosymbiosis and the ‘holobiont’ is that the interaction of the microbial community and the host’s biology can affect myriad processes from speciation to physiology to behavior. This study explored the role of the microbiome as a potential facilitator of rapid evolution of social behavior in a socially polymorphic species of spider, Anelosimus studiosus. Adult females were collected from solitary and social colonies at two geographically distinct locations, and behaviorally assayed to assign individuals to ‘docile’ or ‘aggressive’ phenotypes. Microbiomes of each individual were analyzed by 16s rRNA sequencing. Correlations were found with external influences on the microbiome (colony type, local environmental microbiota, and among colony), and also between the microbiome and individual’s behavioral phenotype. While causation has not yet been established, these data suggest that demographics and ecology affect the microbiome, and that behavior may be affected by the microbiome.
178

Seismic Communication in a Wolf Spider

Gibson, Jeremy S. 17 July 2006 (has links)
No description available.
179

Behavior and success in web contests between an invading <i>Pholcus</i> spider and a local congener

Campbell, Lacey D. 01 December 2015 (has links)
No description available.
180

Ants and spiders in grassland food webs / Top-down control and intraguild interactions / Ameisen und Spinnen in Grasland Nahrungsnetzen / Top-down Wirkung und Intraguilden Interaktionen

Sanders, Dirk 24 January 2008 (has links)
No description available.

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