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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.
181

Ecological Factors and Historical Biogeography Influence the Evolutionary Divergence of Insular Rodents

Durst, Paul Alexander Pinette January 2014 (has links)
<p>Islands have been the inspiration for some of evolutionary biology's most important advances. This is largely due to the unique properties of islands that promote the differentiation of island species from their mainland counterparts. Rodents are widely distributed across even the most remote islands, a rarity among mammals, making them uniquely suited to study the factors leading to the divergence of insular species. In this dissertation, I use two case studies to examine the morphological and genetic divergences that take place in an insular environment.</p><p>In chapters one and two, I examine how different factors influence insular body size change in rodents. In chapter one, I examine factors influencing the direction of island body size change using classification tree and random forest (CART) analyses. I observe strong consistency in the direction of size change within islands and within species, but little consistency at broader taxonomic scales. Including island and species traits in the CART analyses, I find mainland body mass to be the most important factor influencing size change. Other variables are significant, though their roles seem to be context-dependent.</p><p>In chapter two, I use the distributions of mainland rodent population body sizes to identify `extreme' insular rodent populations and compare traits associated with those populations and their islands with those island populations of a more typical size. I find that althought there is no trend among all insular rodents towards a larger or smaller size, `extreme' populations are more likely to increase in size. Using CART methods, I develop a predictive model for insular size change that identifies resource limitations as the main driver when insular rodent populations become `extremely small'. </p><p>Chapters three and four shift their focus to a single rodent species, the deer mouse <italic>Peromyscus maniculatus</italic>, as they examine the genetic differentiation of deer mice across the California Channel Islands and the nearby mainland. In chapter three, I sequence a region of the mitochondrial control region for individuals from 8 populations across the northern Channel Islands and two mainland sites, and I analyze these sequences by calculating population genetics parameters and creating a Bayesian inference tree and a statistical parsimony haplotype network. All of these analyses reveal significant divergences between island and mainland populations. Among the islands, Santa Barbara and Anacapa islands both display unique genetic signatures, but the other northern islands remain relatively undifferentiated.</p><p>In chapter four, I genotype individuals from the previous chapter at 5 microsatellite loci, I calculate additional population genetics parameters and I utilize a Bayesian clustering algorithm to examine the similarities and differences between nuclear and mitochondrial analyses. I find the nuclear data to be largely congruent with the mitochondrial analyses; there are significant differences between island and mainland populations, and Anacapa Island is significantly differentiated from the other islands. Unlike the previous analyses, Santa Barbara Island is not significantly different from the northern islands, yet San Miguel Island has a unique genetic signature. </p><p>These studies underscore the importance of ecological processes and historical biogeography in the generation of diversity, and they highlight the role of islands as drivers of evolutionary divergence.</p> / Dissertation
182

Functional Interactions and Evolution of cAMP-PKA Signaling in Saccharomyces

KAYIKCI, OMUR January 2013 (has links)
<p>In an attempt to gain more insight on functional evolution of cAMP-PKA pathway I have taken a comparative approach and examined functional interactions of cAMP-PKA signaling in well-studied yeast developmental programs and closely related <italic>Saccharomyces sensu stricto<italic/>. species. I have shown that variation in cAMP-PKA signaling contributes significantly to variation in developmental responses in <italic>S cerevisiae. Variation in pseudohyphal growth and sporulation, two inversely correlated developmental strategies to nutrient limitation in yeast, proportional to variation in intracellular cAMP levels. <italic>S. cerevisiae strains proficient in pseudohyphal growth have higher intracellular cAMP concentrations relative to strains that sporulate efficiently. Phenotypic, genetic and signaling data presented here suggest that the cAMP-PKA signaling underlies a phenotypic trade-off between sporulation and pseudohyphal growth in <italic>S. cerevisiae<italic/>.</p><p>Further investigation into the role of cAMP-PKA signaling in closely related <italic>S paradoxus<italic/> and <italic>S bayanus revealed an antagonistic function of cAMP-PKA signaling for developmental responses in <italic>S. bayanus. Unlike in <italic>S. cerevisiae, increased cAMP concentrations surprisingly inhibit pseudohyphal response in <italic>S. bayanus<italic/>. Another unanticipated finding in this work is that in <italic>S. bayanus<italic/>. Flo11, required for pseudohyphal differentiation in S. cerevisiae, is dispensable. Additionally, interactions of cAMP-PKA signaling and the general-stress response mechanism appear reversed in <italic>S. bayanus<italic/>. As shown by deletion mutation, gene expression and pharmacological treatment data, altered interactions and alternative targets downstream of cAMP-PKA could critically contribute to alternative regulation of nutrient-induced development in <italic>S. bayanus<italic/>.</p><p>Intracellular cAMP concentrations show decaying oscillations upon glucose replenishment in derepressed yeast cells. The quantitative characteristics of oscillations are distinct within and between Saccharomyces species. Given the tight regulation of cAMP levels and its critical role, the variation in cAMP oscillatory dynamics could be reflective of differential interactions of cAMP-PKA signaling that also underlie induction of developmental programs to changing environments. As such, intracellular cAMP levels and dynamics could potentially be used as molecular phenotypes.</p> / Dissertation
183

The Influence of Genetic and Environmental Factors on the Phenology and Life-Cycle Expression of Arabidopsis thaliana

Burghardt, Liana T. January 2015 (has links)
<p>This dissertation examines the processes that generate phenotypic variation in life cycles in seasonal environments. Collectively, a life cycle describes the stages an organism passes through during a generation. The timing, or phenology, of these transitions is often influenced by both environmental and allelic variation. Using the model organism Arabidopsis thaliana and both empirical and modeling approaches, I examine how correlations between life-cycle transitions, environment-dependent allelic effects, and epistasis generate patterns of life-cycle variation both within and between generations. In my first chapter, I use experiments to determine that many combinations of genetic, environmental, and developmental factors can create similar germination phenotypes, that maternal effects can influence phenotypes more than genetic differences, and that cross-generational effects can reduce variation in germination timing despite variation in flowering and dispersal time. In my second chapter, I use a modeling approach to consider the entire life cycle. I find that environmental variation is a major driver of phenotypic variation, and that considering the known geographic distribution of allelic variation across the range improves the match of model predictions to phenotypes expressed in natural populations. Specifically, variation in dormancy generated in the previous generation is predicted to cause life-cycle differences within a location, and the geographic distribution of allelic variation in dormancy interacts with local climatic environments to canalize an annual life history across the range. Finally, I test if allelic and environmental variation that affects early life stages can influence the environment experienced during reproduction. This environment determines both the time available for reproduction and the environment experienced during senescence. By implementing simple survival rules for flowering plants in the model, I show that time available for a plant to reproduce depends on earlier phenological traits and varies widely from year to year, location to location, and genotype to genotype. If reproductive trade-offs that underlie the evolution of senescence are environmentally sensitive, these results suggest that genetic variation in earlier life-stage transitions might shape senescence rates and whether they are environmentally responsive. In sum, my dissertation demonstrates the importance of pleiotropy, environment-dependent allelic expression, and epistasis in defining life-cycle variation, and proposes a novel way of predicting these relationships and complex life cycles under seasonal conditions.</p> / Dissertation
184

Selection and Constraint: Population Genetic Approaches to Understanding the Evolution of Sea Urchin Development

Garfield, David January 2011 (has links)
<p>Changes in the expression and function of genes active during metazoan development have played a critical role in the evolution of morphological differences between species and phyla, yet the origins of these changes remain poorly understood. What roles do positive and negative selection play in the evolution of development? How do evolutionary changes accumulate given the degree to which organisms are able to buffer the effects of environmental and genetic perturbations during development? The crucial insight of the Modern Evolutionary Synthesis was that divergence between species arises from variation within populations. Following this principle, I have made use of tools from quantitative and population genetics to investigate three central questions: 1) How much genetic variation is there in the networks of genes that underlie metazoan development? 2) What affect does developmental buffering have on the accumulation of selectable genetic variation? 3) To what extent does selection act to shape patterns of genetic variation among different kinds of genes and at different stages of development? I show that developmental systems can harbor extensive levels of genetic variation, and that the amount of genetic variation in individual genes at different stages of development is related to the extent to which variation in those genes is buffered by genetic interactions. I also show that while selection plays an active role in shaping genetic variation in development, the extent to which variation in a gene is visible to selection depends in predictable ways on a) the biological function of that gene and b) whether the mutations in question influence gene expression or protein function. My results as a whole demonstrate the utility of population level approaches to the study of the evolution of development, and provide key insights into the role that selection plays in generating developmental variation.</p> / Dissertation
185

The Psychology and Evolution of Foraging Skills in Primates

Rosati, Alexandra January 2012 (has links)
<p>Primates in the wild face complex foraging decisions where they must assess the most valuable of different potential resources to exploit, as well recall the location of options that can be widely distributed. While differences in diet and ecology have long been thought to be an important factor influencing brain evolution in primates, it is less well understood what psychological abilities animals actually use when making foraging decisions. This dissertation examines cognitive domains that play a crucial role in supporting foraging behaviors--spatial memory and decision-making--by integrating both psychological and biological approaches to behavior. In particular, the research presented here examines multiple species of primates to address the cognitive skills that different animals use to solve foraging problems (at the proximate level of analysis), as well as why some species appear to solve such problems differently than other species (at the ultimate level of analysis).</p><p>The first goal of the dissertation is to compare closely-related species that vary in ecological characteristics, in order to illuminate how evolution shapes the cognitive skills used in foraging contexts. This component focuses on comparisons between chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) and bonobos (Pan paniscus), humans' closest extant relatives. In addition, this component reports comparisons amongst strepsirrhines (Lemur catta, Eulemur mongoz, Propithecus coquereli, and Varecia subsp.) to model cognitive evolution in a taxonomic group with greater ecological diversity than Pan. The first two chapters test the hypothesis that more frugivorous species exhibit more accurate spatial memory skills, first by comparing apes' spatial memory abilities (Chapter 2), and then by comparing four species of lemurs on a related set of spatial memory tasks (Chapter 3). In subsequent chapters, I examine apes' decision-making strategies to test the hypothesis that chimpanzees are more willing to pay decision-making costs than are bonobos, due to differences in their feeding ecology. I focus on preferences about the timing of payoffs (Chapter 4); preferences about risk, or the variability in payoffs (Chapters 4 and 5); and preferences about ambiguity, or knowledge about available options (Chapter 6). </p><p>The second goal of the dissertation is to compare the psychological mechanisms that human and nonhuman great apes use for foraging, in order to identify potentially human-unique cognitive abilities. In terms of spatial memory, I examine whether other apes also exhibit human-like patterns of spatial memory development (Chapter 2). In terms of decision-making, I examine whether apes exhibit a suite of human-like biases when making value-based choices. In particular, I test whether emotional and motivational processes, which are critical components of human decision-making, also play a role in apes' choices (Chapters 4); whether apes are sensitive to social context when making economic decisions (Chapter 5); and whether apes are sensitive to their degree of knowledge when making choices under uncertainty (Chapter 6). Finally, I directly compare human and ape preferences on a matched task to assess whether humans use any unique psychological abilities when making decisions about risk (Chapter 7). In sum, this dissertation links studies of mechanism with hypotheses about function in order to illuminate the evolutionary roots of human's unique cognitive phenotype.</p> / Dissertation
186

Nonsocial Influences on Canine Size in Anthropoid Primates

January 2010 (has links)
abstract: Early hominins present an unusual pattern of sexual dimorphism. On one hand, the canine teeth of these species are weakly size-dimorphic, vertically short, and nonhoning, suggesting a social system characterized by infrequent, low-intensity intermale competition and monogamous pair-bonding. On the other hand, marked size variation in skeletal remains attributed to species of Australopithecus is thought to reflect strong body-mass dimorphism, which is more consistent with intense intermale competition. Reconciling these conflicting signals and understanding their adaptive significance is a major goal of paleoanthropology. This dissertation research contributes to this objective by investigating factors that may constrain or reduce canine height in extant anthropoid primates. Two hypotheses regarding the relationship between canine height and other elements of the masticatory system were tested using phylogenetic comparative methods. According to the first hypothesis, canine reduction is a pleiotropic by-product of changes in the sizes of other components of the dentition. With respect to canine height, the results of this study fail to support this idea. There is limited evidence for a relationship between basal canine crown dimensions and incisor and postcanine size, but significant interspecific correlations between these variables are not strong and are restricted primarily to the female maxillary dentition. These results indicate that if pleiotropy influences canine size, then its effects are weak. The second hypothesis proposes that canine reduction is a consequence of selection for increased jaw-muscle leverage. This hypothesis receives some support: there is a clear inverse relationship between canine height and the leverage of the masseter muscle in male anthropoids. Females do not exhibit this association due to the fact that dimorphism in muscle leverage is weak or absent in most anthropoid species; in other words, female muscle leverage tracks male muscle leverage, which is linked to canine height. Leverage of the temporalis muscle is not correlated with canine height in either sex. Two specimens of the 3.0-3.7-million-year-old hominin Australopithecus afarensis fall at or beyond the upper end of the great ape range of variation in masseter leverage, which is consistent with the idea that hominin canine evolution was influenced by selection for increased jaw-muscle leverage. / Dissertation/Thesis / Ph.D. Anthropology 2010
187

Nagel and Burge on Intentionality and Physicalism

January 2011 (has links)
abstract: Given the success of science, weak forms of mind-brain dependence are commonly treated as uncontroversial within contemporary philosophies of mind. More controversial are the different metaphysical claims inferred from this dependence, many ascribing ontological priority to the brain. Consider the following three propositions: (i) neurological events are essentially identified by their role in material systems, laws, and causes that are constitutively non-rational; (ii) at least some mental events are essentially identified in virtue of their role in the use of reason; (iii) all mental events are realized by, identical to, or composed out of, neurological events. (i) is uncontroversial. However, (iii) is strictly materialistic. (i), (ii) and (iii) taken together appear incoherent. A fruitful task for philosophy is to resolve this apparent incoherence. In his 1997 book The Last Word Thomas Nagel offers an explication of reason that conceptually transcends the nature of material substrate. In his 2010 article "Modest Dualism" Tyler Burge offers reasons to think of propositional thought as irreducible to the concepts of the material sciences. Both focus on rationality as a unique form of intentionality. Both philosophers also reject materialism (iii). On their accounts it's reasonable to take 'rational intentionality' as exhibiting a logical priority of the mind with respect to the brain in inquiries into the nature of mind. Granting this, the diminished conception of mind presupposed by prevailing contemporary theories is seen to be the result of a more general failure to recognize the logical priority and intricate nature of rationality. The robust views of rationality expressed by Nagel and Burge constitute grounds for argument against even the weakest form of materialism. I develop such an argument in this thesis, showing that the propositional attitudes exhibited in thought and speech preclude all materialistic notions of mind. Furthermore, I take the nature of propositional attitudes to suggest a perspective for exploring the fundamental nature of mind, one that focuses not on composition but on rational powers. / Dissertation/Thesis / M.A. Philosophy 2011
188

Morphological Integration and the Anthropoid Dentition

January 2011 (has links)
abstract: The pattern and strength of genetic covariation is shaped by selection so that it is strong among functionally related characters and weak among functionally unrelated characters. Genetic covariation is expressed as phenotypic covariation within species and acts as a constraint on evolution by limiting the ability of linked characters to evolve independently of one another. Such linked characters are "constrained" and are expected to express covariation both within and among species. In this study, the pattern and magnitude of covariation among aspects of dental size and shape are investigated in anthropoid primates. Pleiotropy has been hypothesized to play a significant role in derivation of derived hominin morphologies. This study tests a series of hypotheses; including 1) that negative within- and among-species covariation exists between the anterior (incisors and canines) and postcanine teeth, 2) that covariation is strong and positive between the canines and incisors, 3) that there is a dimorphic pattern of within-species covariation and coevolution for characters of the canine honing complex, 4) that patterns of covariation are stable among anthropoids, and 5) that genetic constraints have been a strong bias on the diversification of anthropoid dental morphology. The study finds that patterns of variance-covariance are conserved among species. Despite these shared patterns of variance-covariance, dental diversification has frequently occurred along dimensions not aligned with the vector of genetic constraint. As regards the canine honing complex, there is no evidence for a difference in the pleiotropic organization or the coevolution of characters of the complex in males and females, which undermines arguments that the complex is selectively important only in males. Finally, there is no evidence for strong or negative pleiotropy between any dental characters, which falsifies hypotheses that predict such relationships between incisors and postcanine teeth or between the canines and the postcanine teeth. / Dissertation/Thesis / Ph.D. Anthropology 2011
189

The Physiology of Division of Labor in the Ant, Pogonomyrmex californicus

January 2012 (has links)
abstract: A notable feature of advanced eusocial insect groups is a division of labor within the sterile worker caste. However, the physiological aspects underlying the differentiation of behavioral phenotypes are poorly understood in one of the most successful social taxa, the ants. By starting to understand the foundations on which social behaviors are built, it also becomes possible to better evaluate hypothetical explanations regarding the mechanisms behind the evolution of insect eusociality, such as the argument that the reproductive regulatory infrastructure of solitary ancestors was co-opted and modified to produce distinct castes. This dissertation provides new information regarding the internal factors that could underlie the division of labor observed in both founding queens and workers of Pogonomyrmex californicus ants, and shows that changes in task performance are correlated with differences in reproductive physiology in both castes. In queens and workers, foraging behavior is linked to elevated levels of the reproductively-associated juvenile hormone (JH), and, in workers, this behavioral change is accompanied by depressed levels of ecdysteroid hormones. In both castes, the transition to foraging is also associated with reduced ovarian activity. Further investigation shows that queens remain behaviorally plastic, even after worker emergence, but the association between JH and behavioral bias remains the same, suggesting that this hormone is an important component of behavioral development in these ants. In addition to these reproductive factors, treatment with an inhibitor of the nutrient-sensing pathway Target of Rapamycin (TOR) also causes queens to become biased towards foraging, suggesting an additional sensory component that could play an important role in division of labor. Overall, this work provides novel identification of the possible regulators behind ant division of labor, and suggests how reproductive physiology could play an important role in the evolution and regulation of non-reproductive social behaviors. / Dissertation/Thesis / Ph.D. Biology 2012
190

Climate as a moderator of the effect of disease threat on interpersonal behavior

January 2012 (has links)
abstract: Infectious diseases have been a major threat to survival throughout human history. Humans have developed a behavioral immune system to prevent infection by causing individuals to avoid people, food, and objects that could be contaminated. This current project investigates how ambient temperature affects the activation of this system. Because temperature is positively correlated with the prevalence of many deadly diseases, I predict that temperature moderates the behavioral immune system, such that a disease prime will have a stronger effect in a hot environment compared to a neutral environment and one's avoidant behaviors will be more extreme. Participants were placed in a hot room (M = 85F) or a neutral room (M = 77F) and shown a disease prime slide show or a neutral slide show. Disgust sensitivity and perceived vulnerability surveys were used to measure an increased perceived risk to disease. A taste test between a disgusting food item (gummy bugs) and a neutral food item (gummy animals) measured food avoidance. There was no significant avoidance of the gummy and no significant difference in ratings of disgust sensitivity or perceived vulnerability as a function of temperature conditions. There were no significant interactions between temperature and disease. The conclusion is that this study did not provide evidence that temperature moderates the effect of disease cues on behavior. / Dissertation/Thesis / M.A. Psychology 2012

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