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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.
1

Budding in Perophora

Lefevre, George, January 1898 (has links)
Thesis--Johns Hopkins University.
2

The Artificial production of spores of Monas by a reduction of temperature ... /

Greeley, Arthur White. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Chicago. / Reprinted from the first series, v. 10 (p. 73-[77]) of the Decennial publications of the University of Chicago. Includes bibliographical references. Also available on the Internet.
3

The Artificial production of spores of Monas by a reduction of temperature ...

Greeley, Arthur White. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Chicago. / Reprinted from the first series, v. 10 (p. 73-[77]) of the Decennial publications of the University of Chicago. Includes bibliographical references.
4

Inheritance in the asexual reproduction of Hydra

Lashley, Karl S. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Johns Hopkins University, 1914. / Vita. "Reprinted from the Journal of Experimental Zoology, vol. 19, no. 2. August, 1915." "Literature cited": p. 205-207.
5

Budding in Perophora

Lefevre, George, January 1898 (has links)
Thesis--Johns Hopkins University.
6

A comparison of the ecology and behaviour of parthenogenetic and sexual taxa of the Australian skink, Menetia greyii: implications for coexistence.

Griffin, Clare Louise, clare.griffin@flinders.edu.au January 2006 (has links)
Menetia greyii, a small Australian skink, has recently been determined to be a species complex that consists of both sexual and parthenogenetic taxa (Adams et al. 2003). In total, seven distinct taxa have been identified in the south-central region of Australia. This includes three sexual taxa, three apparent parthenogen lineages, and one lizard of uncertain status The study population occurs near Bundey Bore station in the semi-arid region of South Australia (approximately 160km north east of Adelaide). At this site, one sexual taxon (SAS) and two all-female parthenogenetic taxa (WP and RP3) were found to occur in sympatry. In a search for ecological differences, I examined spatial, thermal, physiological and morphological niche relationships in the parthenogenetic and sexual forms. Capture rates were used to determine microhabitat and macrohabitat use in the field. The use of different microhabitats and the amount of time spent occupying different exposures (sun vs. shade) were also examined under laboratory conditions. Thermal preferences, physiological performance (sprint speed ability) and daily activity periods were investigated in the laboratory. The study failed to find any major differences among the different taxa that would indicate they are partitioning resources and therefore explain how the sexual and parthenogenetic forms are coexisting. The only difference observed was that the parthenogens expressed superior sprinting ability, running faster than the sexuals over a range of temperatures. In addition, I found that sexual and parthenogenetic females within this population differed very little in their reproductive effort and output, indicating that RP3 and WP parthenogens possess a reproductive advantage over sexual females as a result of not having to produce males (Williams 1975, Maynard-Smith 1978, Bell 1982). In staged interactions between pairs of sexual and parthenogen individuals, the parthenogens were more aggressive and dominated the sexuals. As a result, the parthenogens were able to outcompete the sexuals for food items. This had serious consequences on fitness, with the sexuals losing significantly more weight than the parthenogens. All of these factors would suggest that the parthenogens should eliminate the sexuals at Bundey Bore. Despite this, the parthenogenetic females at Bundey Bore do not outnumber the sexual subpopulation. This raises the question of how the sexuals are persisting. An examination of endoparasites in the scats of parthenogen and sexual M. greyii found that WP parthenogens had significantly higher parasite prevalence than sexuals. Further to this, there is evidence of matings occurring within the study population between sexual males and WP parthenogen females with five tetraploid males being captured. Therefore, WP parthenogens may be suffering from destabilising hybridization. These factors may account for why the parthenogens (or at least the WP parthenogens) have not competitively excluded sexual M. greyii from Bundey Bore. Other possible reasons are discussed in the general discussion in Chapter 8.
7

Sim-paramecium Evolution Algorithm based on Enhanced Livability and Competition

Sie, Kun-Sian 16 August 2007 (has links)
This thesis proposes an algorithm to enhance the convergence speed of genetic algorithm by modifying the function flow of a simple GA. Additional operators, such as asexual reproduction, competition, and livability, are added before the survival operation. After adding these three operators to the genetic algorithm, the convergence speed can be increased. Experiments indicate that simulations with the proposed algorithm have a 47% improvement in convergence speed on the traveling salesman problem. As for the graph coloring problem, the proposed algorithm also has a 10% improvement. Also, since these operators are additional parts to the original GA, the algorithm can be further improved by enhancing the operators, such as selection, crossover, and mutation.
8

A limnological study of certain fresh-water Polyzoa with special reference to their statoblasts

Brown, Claudeous Jethro Daniels, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Michigan, 1933. / Cover title. Thesis note on label mounted on p. 271. "Reprinted from Transactions of the American microscopical society, vol. LII, no. 4, October,1933." "Literature cited": p. 312-313.
9

Mean fitness of long-term sexual and asexual populations of Chlamydomonas in benign environments

Renaut, Sébastien January 2004 (has links)
Populations of Chlamydomonas were maintained in a benign laboratory environment as obligatory sexual or asexual populations for five years. Sexual reproduction is expected to facilitate the elimination of mildly deleterious mutations and thereby increase the mean fitness of a sexual population relative to an asexual population (Kondrashov 1988). Fitness in competition and in pure culture was measured. In neither of the fitness assays, both in solid and liquid cultures of Chlamydomonas, was a fitness advantage of sexual reproduction seen, even though the results varied depending on the definition of fitness. I hypothesized that the effect of mutation clearance could be masked by different forces acting on the selection strain (such as an antagonistic relationship between sexual and vegetative fitness).
10

Asexual reproduction in planaria studies on inhibition

Fitzgerald, Hal R. 01 August 1970 (has links)
The invertebrates display several methods of asexual reproduction, such as fission and gemnule formation and budding (Hay, 1966). Planaria reproduce asexually only by fission.

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