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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

Evolution of Silica Biomineralizing Plankton

Kotrc, Benjamin 18 September 2013 (has links)
The post-Paleozoic history of the silica cycle involves just two groups of marine plankton, radiolarians and diatoms. I apply paleobiological methods to better understand the Cenozoic evolution of both groups. The Cenozoic rise in diatom diversity has long been related to a concurrent decline in radiolarian test silicification. I address evolutionary questions on both sides of this coevolutionary coin: Was the taxonomic diversification of diatoms accompanied by morphological diversification? Is our view of morphological diatom diversification affected by sampling biases? What evolutionary mechanisms underlie the macroevolutionary decline in radiolarian silicification? Conventionally, diatom diversification describes a steep, monotonic rise, a view recently questioned due to sampling bias. For a different perspective, I constructed a diatom morphospace based on discrete characters, populated through time using an occurrence-level database. Distances between taxa in morphospace and on a molecular phylogeny are not strongly correlated, suggesting that morphospace was explored early in their evolutionary history, followed by relative stasis. I quantified morphospace occupancy through time using several disparity metrics. Metrics describing average separation of taxa show stasis, while metrics describing occupied volume show an increase with time. Disparity metrics are also subject to sampling biases. Under subsampling, I find that disparity metrics show varied responses: metrics describing separation of taxa into morphospace are unaffected, while those describing occupied volume lose their clear increases. Disparity can have geographic components, analogous to \(\alpha\) and \(\beta\) taxonomic diversity; I find more evidence of stasis in an analysis of \(\bar{\alpha}\) disparity. Overall, these results suggest stasis in Cenozoic diatom disparity. The radiolarian decline in silicification could result from either macroevolutionary processes operating above the species level (punctuated queilibria) or anagenetic changes within lineages. I measured silicification in three phyletic lineages, Stichocorys, Didymocyrtis, and Centrobotrys, from four tropical Pacific DSDP sites. Likelihood-based model fitting finds no strong support for directional evolution, pointing toward selection among species, rather than within species. Each lineage shows a different trajectory, perhaps due to differences in the ecological role played by the test. Because Stichocorys shows close correspondence to the assemblage-level trend, abundance may be an important factor through which within-lineage changes can influence the macroevolutionary pattern. / Earth and Planetary Sciences
2

Kovariance mezi intenzitou UV-reflektance, tvarem křídla a proměnnými prostředí u Pieris napi (Lepidoptera: Pieridae) / Covariance between UV-reflectance, wing shape, and environmental variables in Pieris napi (Lepidoptera: Pieridae)

Stella, David January 2013 (has links)
Visual features of the wing colour, with special reference to the intensity of UV reflectance of the Green-veined White (Pieris napi) were investigated. Several studies revealed that only females of Pieris napi possess UV reflectance on dorsal wing surface. Based on UV sensitive photography, we analysed correlation between environmental conditions (productivity and climate) and 3 patches on forewing of 347 specimens of P. napi from Palaearctic region. Males significantly differ in level of intensity of UV reflectance from females. UV intensity in females is 25% higher in comparison with males. This phenomenon is explained by different deposition of wing pterins. Further, environment significantly affects UV intensity on the forewings of females, but not males. Moreover, we accomplished the analysis of fluctuating asymmetry. First we subjected the environmental variables to PCA. In females, the first PCA axis (temperature seasonality, temperature annual range and longitude) significantly correlated with UV intensity. In males, the second PCA axis (latitude and altitude) was significantly correlated with FA. Additionally, we performed Two-Block Partial Least- Squares (PLS) analysis to assess co-variation between intraspecific shape...
3

ON GEOMETRIC AND ALGEBRAIC PROPERTIES OF HUMAN BRAIN FUNCTIONAL NETWORKS

Duy Duong-Tran (12337325) 19 April 2022 (has links)
<p>It was only in the last decade that Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) technologies have achieved high-quality levels that enabled comprehensive assessments of individual human brain structure and functions. One of the most important advancements put forth by Thomas Yeo and colleagues in 2011 was the intrinsic functional connectivity MRI (fcMRI) networks which are highly reproducible and feature consistently across different individual brains. This dissertation aims to unravel different characteristics of human brain fcMRI networks, separately through network morphospace and collectively through stochastic block models.</p><p><br></p><p>The quantification of human brain functional (re-)configurations across varying cognitive demands remains an unresolved topic. Such functional reconfigurations are rather subtle at the whole-brain level. Hence, we propose a mesoscopic framework focused on functional networks (FNs) or communities to quantify functional (re-)configurations. To do so, we introduce a 2D network morphospace that relies on two novel mesoscopic metrics, Trapping Efficiency (TE) and Exit Entropy (EE). We use this framework to quantify the Network Configural Breadth across different tasks. Network configural breadth is shown to significantly predict behavioral measures, such as episodic memory, verbal episodic memory, fluid intelligence and general intelligence.</p><p><br></p><p>To properly estimate and assess whole-brain functional connectomes (FCs) is among one of the most challenging tasks in computational neuroscience. Among the steps in constructing large-scale brain networks, thresholding of statistically spurious edge(s) in FCs is the most critical. State-of-the-art thresholding methods are largely ad hoc. Meanwhile, a dominant proportion of the brain connectomics research relies heavily on using a priori set of highly-reproducible human brain functional sub-circuits (functional networks (FNs)) without properly considering whether a given FN is information-theoretically relevant with respect to a given FC. Leveraging recent theoretical developments in Stochastic block model (SBM), we first formally defined and subsequently quantified the level of information-theoretical prominence of a priori set of FNs across different subjects and fMRI task conditions for any given input FC. The main contribution of this work is to provide an automated thresholding method of individuals’ FCs based on prior knowledge of human brain functional sub-circuitry.</p>
4

Phylogeny, diversity, and ecology of the ammonoid superfamily Acanthoceratoidea through the Cenomanian and Turonian

Mertz, David A.A. 02 August 2017 (has links)
No description available.

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