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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.
151

Perfil hormonal anual de machos e f?meas adultos de saguis (callithrix jacchus)

Rego, M?rcio Vin?cius 31 March 2008 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2014-12-17T15:36:52Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 MarcioVR.pdf: 229432 bytes, checksum: 1ee93b8bd1e9e53f934d759c8f562466 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2008-03-31 / Many behavioral and biological variables of animals are expressed in the form of biological rhytms, down by the Circadian Timing System, that synchronize them with the environment from external stimuli such as light. One of them is the secretion profile of most circulating hormones regulated by the hypothalamuspirtuitary axis, which controls functions essential for the survival and reproduction of organisms. The sag?i, Callithrix jacchus, one of the most studied species about their endocrine physiology, is an appropriate subject for evaluating the profile of plasma prolactin and cortisol of adult males and females born in captivity throughout the year. Three male and two adult femelas were housed individually and subjected to natural environmental conditions over two years. Blood samples were used to measure the circulating levels of both hormones by methods radioimmunoassay (RIA) and immunoassay (ELISA), respectively. The analysis during the year of the plasmatic values of both hormones test was performed by ANOVA for repeated measures, the correlation of Spearman, and the test of Friedman and Student's t-test. The levels of prolactin in plasma were higher during the months in which there is a greater incidence of births of baby in the colony, possibly serving for modulating the expression of the behavior of parental care in both sexes. The plasma cortisol showed a lift in anticipation of the station with the highest birth rate and may be associated with the preparation of individual participation in caring for the baby, and also with the establishment of emotional bond between reproductive partners. Thus, this study shows that, despite the variations observed in the environment in which the animals live, plasma levels of prolactin and cortisol vary little throughout the year. / Muitas vari?veis biol?gicas e comportamentais dos animais se expressam sob a forma de ritmos biol?gicos, determinadas pelo Sistema de Temporiza??o Circadiana, que as sincronizam com o ambiente a partir de est?mulos externos, com a luz. Uma delas ? o perfil de secre??o da maioria dos horm?nios circulantes regulado pelo eixo Hipot?lamo-Hipofis?rio, que control fun??es essenciais para a sobreviv?ncia e a reprodu??o dos organismos. O sag?i, Callithrix jacchus, uma das esp?cies mais estudadas quanto ? sua fisiologia end?crina, ? um sujeito adequado para a avalia??o do perfil plasm?tico de prolactina e cortisol de machos e f?meas adultas nascidos em cativeiro ao lonto do ano. Tr?s machos e duas f?meas adultas foram alojados individualmente e submetidos ?s condi??es ambientais naturais durante dois anos. Amostras de sangue foram usadas para dosar os n?veis circulantes de ambos os horm?nios pelos m?todos Radioimunoensaio (RIA) e Imunoenzim?tico (ELISA), respectivamente. A an?lise ao longo do ano dos valores plasm?ticos de ambos os horm?nios foi realizada pelo teste de ANOVA para Medidas Repetidas, pela correla??o de Spearman, e pelos testes de Friedman e t de Student. Os n?veis de prolactina no plasma se mostraram mais elevados durante os meses nos quais h? uma maior ocorr?ncia de nascimentos de filhotes na col?nia, servindo possivelmente para modular a express?o do comportamento de cuidado parental em ambos os sexos. O cortisol plasm?tico mostrou uma eleva??o em antecipa??o ? esta??o com maior natalidade, podendo estar associada com a prepara??o do indiv?duo para participa??o no cuidado aos filhotes, e tamb?m com o estabelecimento de la?o afetivo entre os parceiros reprodutivos. Assim, o presente estudo mostra que, apesar das varia??es observadas no ambiente no qual os animais vivem, os n?veis plasm?ticos de prolactina e cortisol oscilam pouco ao longo do ano.
152

Otimiza??o no uso de martelos e bigornas para quebrar sementes por macacos prego (Cebus flavius e C. libidinosus) no Bioma Caatinga

Emidio, Ricardo Almeida 28 May 2010 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2014-12-17T15:36:59Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 RicardoAL_DISSERT.pdf: 2035586 bytes, checksum: ca26983e504667d744bf6cb052c449e0 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2010-05-28 / Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cient?fico e Tecnol?gico / Recently, capuchin monkeys (Cebus spp.) inhabitants of dry environments and with restriction of fleshy fruits, have been the subject of several studies regarding the use of instruments. During behaviour of using stones to crack open nuts there is evidence of selection of more effective hammers, as well as selection of anvils related to reducing the risk of predation. The aim of this study was to determine whether two groups of capuchin monkeys (C.flavius and and C.libidinosus) inhabitants of the Caatinga of Rio Grande do Norte make choice of hammers and anvils. The record of weight and location of stones indicated active choices of with what (choice of hammers) and where (selection of anvils) to crack open encapsulated seeds. The choice of hammers to break nuts depended on the type and degree of ripeness seed. Thus, smaller seeds were smashed with lighter hammers and larger seeds with heavier hammers. Still, C. flavius was the only species that presented a refinement in the choice of hammers that depended on the ripeness of seeds. For both species of capuchin monkeys studied, the nut-crack sites were not spread in accordance with the spatial distribution of seed-producing species, suggesting that the capuchin monkeys promote active choice of anvils. Thus, in environments with more escape routes through the trees, the nut-crack sites were found further apart than in regions that had less chance of escape through the trees. Also, there was a difference in the spacing of the anvils to depend on the type of seed: sites used to crack larger and more caloric seeds were found farther apart than the sites used to crack smaller and less caloric seeds, suggesting a pattern of avoiding direct competition. We conclude that the capuchin monkeys maximize energy savings and reduced risk of predation and the costs of food competition during the behaviour of using stones to crack open nuts / Recentemente, macacos prego (Cebus spp.) habitantes de ambientes secos e com restri??o de frutos carnosos, v?m sendo alvo de diversos estudos acerca do uso de instrumentos. Em atividades de quebra de sementes, h? ind?cios de escolhas eficientes de martelos, bem como de sele??o de bigornas para redu??o dos riscos de preda??o. O objetivo deste trabalho foi verificar se dois grupos de macacos prego (C. flavius e C. libidinosus) habitantes da caatinga do Rio Grande do Norte realizam escolhas de martelos e bigornas. O registro do peso e da localiza??o das pedras indicou escolhas ativas de com o que (escolha de martelos) e onde (sele??o de bigornas) quebrar sementes encapsuladas. O padr?o de escolha dos martelos para quebrar sementes dependeu da esp?cie e do estado de matura??o. Assim, sementes menores foram quebradas com martelos mais leves e sementes maiores com martelos mais pesados. Ainda, C. flavius foi a ?nica esp?cie que apresentou um refinamento na escolha de martelos que dependia do estado de matura??o de sementes. Para ambas as esp?cies de macacos prego estudadas, os s?tios de quebra n?o estavam dispostos de acordo com a distribui??o espacial das esp?cies produtoras de sementes, sugerindo que os macacos prego promovem escolha ativas de bigornas. Assim, em ambientes que havia maior chance de fuga atrav?s das ?rvores, os s?tios de quebra foram encontrados mais afastados entre si do que em regi?es que havia menor chance de fuga pelas ?rvores. Tamb?m, foi verificada diferen?a no espa?amento das bigornas a depender do tipo de semente: s?tios de quebra de sementes maiores e mais cal?ricas foram encontrados mais distantes entre si do que os s?tios de quebra de sementes menores e menos cal?ricas, sugerindo um padr?o de evitac?o de competi??o direta. Conclu?mos que os macacos prego maximizam os ganhos energ?ticos e reduziram os riscos de preda??o bem como os custos de competi??o por alimento durante o comportamento de uso de pedras para quebra de sementes
153

Enjeux et mécanismes d'un comportement prophylactique: le rejet des cadavres chez la fourmi Myrmica rubra

Diez, Lise 04 December 2012 (has links)
La vie en société offre de nombreux avantages, mais comporte toutefois certains risques comme celui de la prolifération des pathogènes. Cette susceptibilité accrue s'explique notamment par la densité élevée des individus au sein des colonies, la proximité génétique et la fréquence des interactions sociales. Au sein du nid, les cadavres peuvent être porteurs de pathogènes :ils représentent un risque important pour la survie de la colonie entière et doivent donc en être écartés en permanence. L’objectif général de cette thèse est d’améliorer la compréhension des mécanismes individuels et collectifs qui régissent le rejet de ces cadavres à l’extérieur de la colonie chez la fourmi rouge, Myrmica rubra. <p><p>Tout d’abord, nous avons mis en évidence l’importance du rejet des déchets pour la survie des fourmis (Chapitre 1). Le rejet des cadavres, même exempts de pathogènes, permet d’augmenter légèrement la survie des ouvrières. La nécrophorèse prend toute son importance lorsque la colonie est exposée à des cadavres infectés par le champignon Metarrhizium anisopliae. Une limitation du rejet de ces cadavres porteurs de pathogènes entraîne une mortalité des ouvrières relativement importante (jusqu’à 30% après 50 jours) tandis que celle des larves reste très limitée. Nous avons également cherché à identifier les composés chimiques susceptibles de déclencher le rejet des cadavres par leurs congénères (Chapitre 2). Les cadavres fraîchement tués n’étaient pas rejetés rapidement. Par contre, des cadavres vieux de 1 à 6 jours étaient presque toujours éloignés du nid. Sur ces corps « âgés » de 1 à 6 jours, on constate l’apparition de deux composés :les acides oléique et linoléique. L’adjonction sur des cadavres frais d’acide oléique et/ou d’acide linoléique en quantités équivalentes à celles trouvées sur un cadavre de plus de 24h en provoque le rejet par les ouvrières. Nous avons ensuite étudié les facteurs susceptibles d’influencer le lieu de dépôt des cadavres à l’extérieur du nid (Chapitre 3). Les cadavres ne sont pas entassés dans un endroit particulier, mais dispersés autour du nid, relativement loin de l’entrée de celui-ci. De plus, le marquage passif des zones explorées par les ouvrières -qui sont un indice de fréquentation de cette zone par la colonie- n’influence pas la décision des ouvrières d’y déposer le cadavre. Lors du transport des corps, nous avons étudié quels sont les moyens utilisés par les fourmis pour leur orientation (Chapitre 4). Aucune clé chimique n’intervient dans l’orientation des fourmis transporteuses mais celles-ci utilisent leur mémoire spatiale en retournant préférentiellement dans la direction déjà visitée. Enfin, nous avons testé s’il existe une spécialisation à court ou moyen terme des ouvrières dans le transport de cadavres (Chapitre 5). Nous avons pu montrer que les fourmis transporteuses de corps peuvent se spécialiser lors de transports successifs à court terme (de l’ordre d’une heure). Par contre, aucune spécialisation dans les activités de nécrophorèse n’a pu être mise en évidence à moyen terme (de l’ordre de quelques semaines). Les fourmis transporteuses de cadavres sont le plus souvent des ouvrières actives à l’extérieur du nid qui n’ont que peu de contacts avec leurs congénères au sein du nid ou avec les stades particulièrement sensibles aux pathogènes tels que les larves.<p><p>L’ensemble des comportements liés au rejet et au transport des cadavres s’inscrivent dans les stratégies prophylactiques et hygiéniques de la colonie. Nous discuterons des liens entre le rejet des cadavres et l’ensemble des comportements appartenant à l’immunité sociale, qui permettent de limiter la prévalence et la propagation des pathogènes chez les insectes sociaux.<p> / Doctorat en Sciences agronomiques et ingénierie biologique / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
154

The Sub-Chronic Effects of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons on the sheepshead minnow (Cyrpinodon variegatus) Gut-Microbiome and Foraging Behavior

Maggie A Wigren (8741202), Timothy A. Johnson (2384710), Robert J. Griffitt (241837), Marisol S. Sepúlveda (2919935) 24 April 2020 (has links)
The microbiome plays a key symbiotic role in maintaining host health and aids in acquiring nutrients, supporting development and immune function, and modulating behavior. However, more research is needed to elucidate the potential impact of environmental pollutants on host microbial communities and how microbiomes can modulate the toxicity of contaminants to the host. Through a literature review of 18 studies that assessed the impacts of various anthropogenic chemicals on fish-associated microbiomes, we found that toxicants generally decrease microbial diversity, which could lead to long-term health impacts if chronically stressed, and can increase the host’s susceptibility to disease as well as the chemical resistance of certain microbes. These findings led us to explore the impacts of one of the reviewed contaminants, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), typically found in oil. The Deepwater Horizon disaster of April 2010 was the largest oil spill in U.S. history and had catastrophic effects on several ecologically important fish species in the Gulf of Mexico (GoM). This study tested the hypotheses that exposure to weathered oil would cause significant shifts in fish gut-associated microbial communities, with taxa known for hydrocarbon degradation increasing in abundance and that foraging behavior would decrease, potentially due to microbial dysbiosis via the gut-brain axis. We characterized the gut microbiome (with 16S rRNA gene sequencing) of a native GoM estuarine species, the sheepshead minnow (Cyprinodon variegatus). Fish were exposed to High Energy Water Accommodated Fractions (HEWAF; tPAH = 80.99 ± 12.5 μg/L) of oil over a 7-day period and whole gastrointestinal tracts were sampled for microbiome analyses. A foraging behavioral assay was used to determine feeding efficiency before and after oil exposure. The fish gut microbiome did not experience any significant changes in alpha or beta diversity but known hydrocarbon degrading taxa were noticeably present in oil-exposed communities and were absent in controls. We found the order Pseudomonadales, the family Paenibacillaceae, and Pseudomonas pachastrellae to be among these, with Pseudomonadales increasing in abundance. Foraging behavior was not significantly affected by oil exposure. This work highlights the need for further research to elucidate the functional metagenomic responses of the fish gut-microbiome under oil spill conditions.
155

Community and Ecosystem Level Implications of Helminth Parasitism

Jonathan T Vannatta (10279934) 16 March 2021 (has links)
Pathogens and parasites are increasingly recognized as important components within host populations, communities, and ecosystems. Parasite contributions to ecosystem function most likely manifest as density-mediated impacts of parasites on their hosts, the direct contributions of parasite biomass to a system, and via parasite-induced changes in host behavior and physiology (trait-mediated impacts). Here, a framework was constructed that can be used to conceptualize parasite contributions to ecosystem function (Chapter 1). Then the influence of parasite attack on host movement was explored to further evince the mechanistic underpinnings of trait-mediated parasite impacts (Chapter 2). Additionally, mesocosms were created across a gradient of parasitism to examine how these mechanisms are likely to unfold at larger biological scales (Chapter 3). Lastly, a series of differential equations was created to model host-parasite-ecosystem interactions and generate theoretical predictions about how and when parasites are likely to influence ecosystem processes (Chapter 4). Parasites have many characteristics of ecosystem engineers, but their role has historically been ignored. These studies begin to explore the role that parasitism may have as one of the drivers of ecosystem processes.
156

Using Soundscapes to Measure Biodiversity, Habitat Condition, and Environmental Change in Aquatic Ecosystems

Ben L Gottesman (8098112) 06 December 2019 (has links)
<div>Biodiversity loss is the silent crisis of the 21st century. Human activities are drastically altering the diversity of life on Earth, yet the extent of this transformation is shrouded by our limited information on biodiversity and how it is changing. Emerging technologies may be suited to fill this information gap, and as a result increase our capacity to measure and manage natural systems. Acoustic monitoring is a remote sensing technique that is rapidly reshaping the temporal and spatial scales with which we can assess animal biodiversity. Through recording and analyzing soundscapes—the collection of sounds occurring at a given place and time—we can assess biodiversity, habitat condition, and environmental change. However, the relationships between soundscapes and these three ecological dimensions are still in the early phases of categorization, especially in aquatic systems. </div><div><br></div><div>This dissertation investigates how soundscapes can be used to measure biodiversity, habitat condition, and environmental change in aquatic habitats. It addresses several knowledge gaps: First, I develop a framework for classifying unknown sounds within a soundscape, which I use to measure the acoustic diversity and dynamics within a tropical freshwater wetland. Second, I demonstrate that soundscapes can reflect the resilience of animal communities following disturbance events. Altered soundscapes revealed that Hurricane Maria, which swept through Puerto Rico in September 2017, impacted dry forest animal communities more than adjacent coral reef communities. Third, in kelp forest habitats off the coast of California, USA, I showed that soundscape variables correlated with ecological variables associated with regime shift in kelp forests, including urchin density, kelp cover, and fish diversity. Overall, this dissertation demonstrates that soundscape recording and analysis is a promising way to assess the ecological conditions of aquatic systems. </div>
157

Visual cortical circuit dynamics in health and disease

Yu Tang (12441534) 21 April 2022 (has links)
<p>My thesis revolves around neuronal circuit dynamics in health and disease. The first part of the thesis characterized cross-regional synchrony within the visual cortical network following visual perceptual experience in healthy mice. This work for the first time described inter-areal 4-8 Hz superficial layer LFP synchrony across mouse visual cortical regions persisting beyond visual stimulation time window, and revealed that the synchrony was expressed specifically between V1 and the higher-order visual area (HVA) with functional preference matching the entrained spatial frequency (SF) and temporal frequency (TF) content, in mice. The discovery of visual familiarity induced inter-areal 4-8 Hz synchrony extends the previous discovery of the 4-8 Hz oscillation in V1 after visual experience from our lab (Kissinger et al., 2018; Kissinger et al., 2020; Gao et al., 2021), and provided the first pivotal evidence supporting the role of 4-8 Hz oscillation in mediating cross-regional communication. Such 4-8 Hz visual cortical network synchrony has been mostly reported in primate studies in contexts of visual attention and working memory (Liebe et al., 2012; Spyropoulos et al., 2018), while our study extended the visual cortical network synchrony research scope to mouse models and in a new context of visual familiarity. The work is a key step for starting cortical network studies in mice, and for starting predictive coding theory study in the context of oscillations in mouse cortical network in the future. Additionally, unit spiking was more strongly modulated by 4-8 Hz oscillations in V1 and HVAs after visual experience. The visually-locked responsive units in V1 and HVAs exihibted either increased or decreased inter-areal spiking synchrony, while most post-stimulus responsive units in V1 and HVA exhibited higher spiking synchrony. </p> <p>The other parts of my dissertation looked at V1 activity in disease and following a novel CNS therapy. One project looked at recovery of visually evoked response in mouse V1 after ischemia through NeuroD1 mediated astrocyte-to-neuron conversion, where we characterized the formation of cortical laminated structure from the converted neurons, longitudinal recovery of visually evoked responses of unit populations in V1, and units’ selective responses to orientations. Another project looked at altered visual cortical activity in an Auxilin knockout mouse model, which demonstrated overall reduced visually evoked responses, less selective responses to orientations, impaired visual adaptive responses and mismatch responses, as well as slower visual experience induced oscillations. These projects utilized the high-density silicon probe recording technique to 1) characterize visual cortical function recovery following a therapy, which provided evidence for its high efficacy for recovering physiological functions, and to 2) phenotype visual cortical functional impairments in a mouse disease model, which provided more basic understanding in visual cortical physiology of Auxilin related disease.</p> <p>In sum, my dissertation work took advantage of the high-density silicon probe recording technique to probe neuronal circuits in health and disease. The discovery of visual experience induced inter-areal 4-8 Hz synchrony paves the way for studying 4-8 Hz activity in relation to stream-dependent visual processing and predictive coding in health and disease.</p>
158

Bat Community Structure and Habitat Selection Across an Urban-Agricultural Landscape

Galen Edward Burrell (13171299) 29 July 2022 (has links)
<p>  </p> <p>Bats serve important ecological and economic roles in their communities. However, due to anthropogenic land use and human-introduced disease, bat populations in North America are facing unprecedented declines. To better inform conservation efforts for bat species in northeastern Indiana, I studied two aspects of bat ecology: (1) the effects of urbanization and agriculture on bat community composition in northeastern Indiana and (2) the roosting behavior of a population of state endangered/federally threatened northern long-eared bats (<em>Myotis septentrionalis</em>; hereafter northern myotis) in a restored mesic forest adjacent to a moderately sized city (Fort Wayne, IN). To study the first aspect, I deployed acoustic detectors in green spaces throughout Fort Wayne and the surrounding rural areas of Allen County. For each detector site, I compared species occupancy rates with site-specific characteristics at the plot scale (e.g., % canopy cover, midstory density) and at multiple landscape scales (e.g., % impervious cover within 1 km). Across 429 survey nights, acoustic detectors recorded calls from eight unique bat species, of which six species were abundant enough to conduct occupancy modeling. In four of the six species, measures of the amount of forest and forest edge in the landscape were included in one or more of the top models. The top models for the two other bat species, tricolored bats (<em>Perimyotis subflavus</em>) and silver-haired bats (<em>Lasionycteris noctivagans</em>), included measures of urban land cover and revealed a negative relationship between probability of occupancy and the proportion of high-density urban land in the area. The effect of habitat scale also differed between species. For example, models in the confidence set for eastern red bats (<em>Lasiurus borealis</em>) included variables associated with the plots surrounding detectors and with landscape features within 100 m of detectors. In contrast, the top models for hoary bats (<em>Lasiurus cinereus</em>) included landscape features at larger scales, within 500m and 1 km of detector sites. These findings suggest that both generalist and forest-obligate bat species in this study area selected spaces with greater levels of forested habitat. Furthermore, heavily urbanized areas were less likely to support the same levels of bat diversity as areas with forests and other green space.</p> <p>To accomplish the second aspect of my project, I captured bats in Fox Island County Park (Fort Wayne, IN) using mist-nets and affixed temperature-sensitive radio transmitters to four northern myotis individuals. I tracked these individuals back to day roosts, where I recorded roost characteristics (e.g., tree height, # of roost trees within 0.1 ha) and monitored bat skin temperatures (Tsk). I compared the characteristics of selected roosts to those of randomly assigned available trees in the same landscape to determine trends in roost selection preferences. Northern myotis in this study strongly preferred standing dead trees within a 31-ha patch of flooded forest on the northern border of Fox Island. These trees were highly exposed to solar radiation and were consistently warmer than ambient weather conditions, which suggests they may provide important thermoregulatory benefits to reproductive females and other members of the population.</p> <p>My research offers valuable information regarding resource use by bat communities in a landscape dominated by anthropogenic development. Urban areas containing large stretches of forests with trees in various stages of decay will be more likely to meet the needs of bats that would otherwise struggle in developed landscapes. The results of this study can be used to inform conservation efforts aimed at protecting populations of bats throughout Indiana and the Midwestern United States.</p>
159

<b>Investigation of odorant receptors associated with nestmate recognition in the Argentine ant, </b><b><i>L</i></b><b><i>inepithema humile</i></b>

Mathew A. Dittmann (5930612) 18 April 2024 (has links)
<p dir="ltr">Given the relatively poor visual acuity of compound eyes, many insects have developed alternative means for navigating their environment. For example, insects often rely on chemosensation to find food, mates, and inter- and intraspecific communication. Eusocial insects in particular have developed complex systems of pheromone communication to organize their colonies, enabling them to partition labor for foraging, brood care, and colony defense tasks to different portions of the colony. A variety of genes coding for proteins are involved in detecting these chemicals, including gustatory receptors, ionotropic receptors, and odorant receptors (ORs). Eusocial insects, and especially ants, have evolved an expanded clade of ORs in their genome, likely due to an increased reliance on pheromones compared to other insects. The ability to recognize nestmates from non-nestmates is one of the vital functions performed by these ORs, which detect hydrocarbons present on the cuticle to distinguish friend from foe. However, research into the details of nestmate recognition has been stymied due to difficulties in manipulating OR genes. Despite advances in genetic sequencing and manipulation technologies, strict reproductive divisions within most ant lineages make generating transgenic ants nearly impossible, and so we have been left with limited options to further investigate these receptors. To narrow down the ORs that could be involved in nestmate recognition in the Argentine ant (Mayr, 1868), I took a multi-pronged approach of generating tissue transcriptomes to identify ORs that are selectively upregulated in the antennae, as well as conducting a phylostratigraphic analysis to identify which OR genes arose more recently in the Argentine ant genome. While conducting these analyses, it became necessary to reannotate the set of Argentine ant OR genes, due to current published annotations not containing the full breadth of <i>L. humile</i> ORs. Finally, I orally administered fluorescently-labelled dsRNA to workers, and tracked the extent to which ingested dsRNA is capable of traversing the tissues of ant workers, to investigate whether RNAi is a viable method for investigating gene function for genes showing tissue-selective expression. I discovered a subset of OR genes that are highly expressed in the antennae and confirmed that dsRNA is able to reach the antennae and knock down OR gene expression through ingestion, meaning that RNA interference is a viable method for the practical study of ant OR genes and can be used to further explore how individual ORs regulate nestmate recognition.</p>
160

Niche segregation by cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus) as a mechanism for co-existence with lion (Panthera leo) and spotted hyaena (Crocuta crocuta)

Broekhuis, Femke January 2012 (has links)
Intraguild competition and predation have been recognised as important ecological factors influencing the population dynamics of carnivores. The effects of these interactions are often asymmetrical due to a size-related dominancy hierarchy. However, it has been suggested that competitively subordinate carnivores can minimise the costs of predation and competition through spatial and temporal avoidance. Here I investigate the ecological and behavioural mechanisms by which cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus) coexist with competitively stronger lions (Panthera leo) and spotted hyaenas (Crocuta crocuta). Fieldwork was carried out in the Okavango Delta, northern Botswana, between October 2008 and August 2011. A total of 20 Global Positioning System (GPS) radio-collars were fitted on all known cheetahs (n=6), lion prides (n=5) and spotted hyaena clans (n=6) in the study area (approx. 3 000 km<sup>2</sup>). Pre-programmed radio-collars recorded locations and activity continuously for each individual and these data were complemented with direct behavioural observations. Cheetah data were analysed with respect to the temporal and spatial likelihood of encountering lions and spotted hyaenas. Results suggest that the response to the risks posed by other predators is species-specific, habitat-specific and dependent on the immediacy of the risk. Resource partitioning was not the main mechanism for coexistence as cheetahs overlapped extensively with lions and spotted hyaenas in time, space and habitat use. Instead, cheetahs adjusted their spatial distribution in response to immediate risks or adapted their habitat use depending on their vulnerability (e.g. behaviours such as feeding or with differing levels of moonlight at night). In general, cheetah temporal and spatial distribution is a hierarchal process, firstly driven by resource acquisition and thereafter fine-tuned by predator avoidance. In addition, habitat heterogeneity seemed to be key in facilitating coexistence. Understanding the behavioural mechanisms that interacting apex predators adopt to regulate these negative interactions could be crucial to carnivore conservation, especially as human-related habitat loss is forcing species into ever smaller areas.

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