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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.
341

Variation in mallard home range size and composition in the prairie parkland region of Canada : correlates and consequences for breeding females

Mack, Glenn G. 25 August 2003
Wetland density is believed to be an important determinant of home range size variation in mallards (Anas platyrhynchos), but hypothesized effects of upland habitat and female size and age have not been adequately evaluated. Thus, I investigated correlates and consequences of home range size variation using radio-tracking data for 131 female mallards studied on 12 Canadian prairie parkland sites, 1995-1998. Home range size and habitat composition varied within and among study areas; overall, home range size variation was best modeled to include effects of seasonal and semi-permanent wetlands (β = -0.06 ± 0.01 SE) and wood-shrub habitat (β = -0.03 ± 0.01 SE). Contrary to predictions, I obtained no support for a positive association between home range size and female body size or a negative relationship between home range size and female age. After controlling effects of wetland density, mean home range sizes were larger on study areas with lower mallard breeding pair densities. I suspect that individual home ranges were smaller in areas of high pair density because of increased intraspecific competition for breeding space. A higher proportion of wood-shrub habitat may have contributed to smaller individual home range sizes because of greater relative availability of preferred nesting habitat. Likewise, a high proportion of wetlands in home ranges could enhance access to important resources such as food, leading to smaller home range sizes.<p> Reproductive and survival consequences were investigated using 8 variables to distinguish between three reproductive categories (females that either did not nest, nested but failed, or nested successfully) and two survival categories (dead versus alive) with discriminant function analysis. Successful females were clearly separated from non-nesting females by having smaller home ranges (95% kernel estimate) with higher percentages of wood-shrub and habitat treatment but lower percentages of seasonal and semi-permanent wetlands. Females that did not nest were further distinguished from nesting females by being younger, structurally smaller and having larger home ranges composed of higher percentages of seasonal and semi-permanent wetlands. Date of first nesting (standardized by study area) was not associated with home range composition. Survival was also unrelated to either home range composition or female attributes. Overall, breeding performance was better described by variation in landscape characteristics than by female attributes, a finding that is consistent with other recent evidence from breeding ducks.
342

Variation in mallard home range size and composition in the prairie parkland region of Canada : correlates and consequences for breeding females

Mack, Glenn G. 25 August 2003 (has links)
Wetland density is believed to be an important determinant of home range size variation in mallards (Anas platyrhynchos), but hypothesized effects of upland habitat and female size and age have not been adequately evaluated. Thus, I investigated correlates and consequences of home range size variation using radio-tracking data for 131 female mallards studied on 12 Canadian prairie parkland sites, 1995-1998. Home range size and habitat composition varied within and among study areas; overall, home range size variation was best modeled to include effects of seasonal and semi-permanent wetlands (β = -0.06 ± 0.01 SE) and wood-shrub habitat (β = -0.03 ± 0.01 SE). Contrary to predictions, I obtained no support for a positive association between home range size and female body size or a negative relationship between home range size and female age. After controlling effects of wetland density, mean home range sizes were larger on study areas with lower mallard breeding pair densities. I suspect that individual home ranges were smaller in areas of high pair density because of increased intraspecific competition for breeding space. A higher proportion of wood-shrub habitat may have contributed to smaller individual home range sizes because of greater relative availability of preferred nesting habitat. Likewise, a high proportion of wetlands in home ranges could enhance access to important resources such as food, leading to smaller home range sizes.<p> Reproductive and survival consequences were investigated using 8 variables to distinguish between three reproductive categories (females that either did not nest, nested but failed, or nested successfully) and two survival categories (dead versus alive) with discriminant function analysis. Successful females were clearly separated from non-nesting females by having smaller home ranges (95% kernel estimate) with higher percentages of wood-shrub and habitat treatment but lower percentages of seasonal and semi-permanent wetlands. Females that did not nest were further distinguished from nesting females by being younger, structurally smaller and having larger home ranges composed of higher percentages of seasonal and semi-permanent wetlands. Date of first nesting (standardized by study area) was not associated with home range composition. Survival was also unrelated to either home range composition or female attributes. Overall, breeding performance was better described by variation in landscape characteristics than by female attributes, a finding that is consistent with other recent evidence from breeding ducks.
343

Modulation of Intracrine Estrogen in Menopausal Women: Implications for Women’s Reproductive Health and Breast Cancer Risk

Mousa, Noha 17 February 2011 (has links)
Extensive research and clinical observations in the past 20 years confirmed that the cessation of ovarian function at menopause does not stop the process of sex steroid hormone synthesis in females. Indeed, multiple extra-ovarian tissues contain the same enzymatic machinery the ovary uses which can maintain a significant rate of local hormonal synthesis sufficient to cause pathological outcomes. This is commonly termed “intracrine”. However, two obstacles face intracrinology. Firstly, wide clinical appreciation of this mechanism in causing disease and in targeting it with therapy does not currently exist. Secondly, blood hormonal assays are used in the clinic to diagnose and manage intracrine based disorders. This could be entirely misleading, since hormonal synthesis, action and metabolism occur within the tissue and, therefore, measuring blood levels is not reflective of the actual disease environment. This thesis presents evidence of significant intracrine based disorders in menopausal women that could be effectively managed by tackling the core intracrine mechanism. Three protocols are investigated emphasizing the usefulness of menopausal intracrine estrogen inhibition. The first presents a joint objective of treating menopausal symptoms using estrogenic replacement therapy while reducing breast cancer risk using long-term aromatase inhibitors. Aromatase inhibition is used to suppress the local estrogen synthesis in the breast. The second protocol is a new method of acute inhibition of breast estrogens to improve the accuracy of breast imaging techniques. This method showed a benefit in reducing the benign parenchymal enhancement during breast MRI indicating a potential improvement in specificity. The third protocol involves using aromatase inhibitors in the treatment of severe endometriosis that did not respond to oophorectomy. The pathogenesis of breast cancer, endometriosis and fibroids are believed to involve intracrine estrogen activity. Another significant contribution presented in this thesis is the development of a new technique that enables minimally invasive tissue assays of hormones in their genuine site of synthesis rather than indirectly in the blood. The new assay requires only microliter volumes of sample and employs a novel digital microfluidics technology. Estrogen and other sex steroids were extracted from droplet-scale breast tissue and blood samples.
344

The effects of chronic exposure to environmentally relevant levels of water-borne cadmium on reproduction in fathead minnows

2013 October 1900 (has links)
Cadmium (Cd) is a priority pollutant in ecosystems worldwide. It is highly toxic to aquatic organisms including fish at fairly low concentrations. Numerous studies have investigated the influence of Cd exposure on fish, but few of them have considered how environmentally relevant levels of Cd affect reproduction, particularly reproductive behaviour. To assess the toxicity of Cd on fish reproduction, breeding fathead minnows (Pimephales promelas) were exposed to water-borne Cd for 21 days at four different concentrations (0, 1, 2.5 and 5 µg/L, respectively) based on a standard short-term reproductive assay and reproductive performance as well as behaviour were examined during or at the end of the exposure period. The results showed that Cd accumulated in a dose-dependent manner in the livers and ovaries of female fish. Brood size and mean egg production were significantly reduced in Cd-exposure treatment groups. When fertilized eggs were incubated in the water containing 2.5 µg/L or higher Cd, there was delayed hatching, but at the same time there was greater synchronous hatching after hatching started. Hatching success of Cd-exposed eggs also declined compared to the control. No significant difference was observed among treatments in adult fish survival, the number of breeding attempts, fertilization success, egg size, plasma β-estradiol levels of female, larval deformities, reproductive behaviour, gonadosomatic index or liver somatic index. The results of this study demonstrate that Cd is able to impair reproduction of fathead minnow at the concentration as low as 0.64 µg/L. It is harmful to both breeding fish and their offspring. The traditional endpoints used in standard reproduction assay (e.g. egg production and brood size) are probably more sensitive than behavioural endpoints, but the traditional method of interpreting reproductive impairment may underestimate toxic effects. The findings of this study have important implications for understanding the effects of chronic Cd exposure in metal-impacted feral fish populations. It can be applied to the protection or restoration of fish populations in Cd contaminated aquatic systems.
345

Från pre-human till post-human : Embryots reproduktiva status i skärningspunkten mellan stat och medicin

Orrmalm Auran, Alex January 2013 (has links)
The aim of the thesis is twofold: the first aim is to identify a number of reproductive logics that are used to construct Swedish regulation of embryo donation for reproductive use as either ethical or unethical in the governmental – and medical discussions – and to examine how these logics are interconnected with notions of gender and parenthood. The second aim is to identify a number of tensions that arise in the application of the governmental ethical logic on the embryo and embryo donation and discuss how these tensions can be solved with a feminist material approach. I argue that the terminology used to distinguish between genetic, biological, social and legal parenthood in my material is insufficient for understanding the value of the embryo outside its pre-human status. I therefore argue for an embryonic feminist bioethics that is attentive to the embryos post-human status, and for a reformulation of the parenthood terminology in line with what I call „reproductive ties‟.
346

EFFECTS OF UTILIZING CROP RESIDUES IN WINTER FEEDING SYSTEMS ON BEEF COW PERFORMANCE, REPRODUCTIVE EFFICIENCY AND ECONOMICS

2013 June 1900 (has links)
Over 2 years (Year 1, 2009-2010; Year 2, 2010-2011), two separate experiments were conducted to evaluate the effects of winter feeding system (n=3) on beef cow performance, reproductive performance, economics and forage degradability. The three systems (treatments) were grazing pea crop residue (PEA) cv. ‘Performance 40-10’ (Year 1, TDN = 50.2%, CP = 7.3%; Year 2, TDN = 56.9%, CP = 8.9%) in field paddocks, grazing oat crop residue (OAT) cv. ‘Baler’ (Year 1, TDN = 59.1%, CP = 2.9%; Year 2, TDN = 66.9%, CP = 5.3%) in field paddocks, and feeding mixed grass-legume hay in drylot pens (DL) (Year 1, TDN = 61.4%; CP = 8.8%; Year 2, TDN = 52.3%, CP = 12.3%). In the first experiment, 90 dry, pregnant Black Angus cows (Year 1, 629 kg ± 74 kg; Year 2, 665 ± 69 kg) stratified by body weight (BW) and days pregnant were randomly allocated to 1 of the 3 systems. Cows were allocated feed in the field or pen on a 3 d basis and supplemented oat grain daily at 0.4-0.6% BW depending on environmental conditions. Dry matter intake (DMI) was estimated for each system using the herbage weight disappearance method. Cow BW, body condition score (BCS), and rib and rump fat were measured at start and end of trial and cow BW was corrected for conceptus gain based on calving data. When data from the first 20 d were pooled over 2 years, initial cow BW was greater (P < 0.01) for the DL and OAT cows compared to the PEA cows and final cow BW was different (P < 0.01) between all 3 winter feeding systems. The change in BW was also greater (P < 0.01) for DL cows compared to cows on the OAT and PEA treatments. Analysis of the first 20 d of Year 1 study period and the total Year 2 study period, showed a significant (P < 0.01) year by treatment interaction for final BW and BW change. The differences (P < 0.01) in initial BW, final BW and BW change between the first 20 d of Year 1 study period and the total Year 2 study period (20 d) suggest feed quality, animal preference and weather conditions may cause difficulties when grazing residues in winter grazing systems. Analysis of the entire trial period in Year 1 (62 d) indicates differences (P < 0.01) for final BW and BW change between cows on all three systems. The change in rib and rump fat was also different (P < 0.01) between cows in all 3 systems. In Year 2 (20 d), initial BW, final BW and BW change were different (P < 0.01) between DL and PEA cows, and between (P < 0.01) OAT and PEA cows. No difference (P > 0.05) was found for cow rib and rump fat in Year 2 and no difference (P > 0.05) was found for BCS in either Year 1 or Year 2 for cows managed in all 3 systems. Differences (P < 0.05) were observed for calving rate and calf birth weight between the DL and OAT system cows, but not between (P > 0.05) cows managed in the DL and PEA or OAT and PEA systems. Costs per cow per day were $1.22, $1.01 and $2.77 for PEA, OAT and DL systems in Year 1, respectively. In Year 2, cow costs per day were $1.59, $1.44 and $1.84 for PEA, OAT and DL systems, respectively. In experiment 2, three ruminally cannulated, dry Holstein cows were fed a silage based total mixed ration (TMR) of 22 kg barley silage, 7 kg chopped alfalfa hay and 1 kg energy supplement (DAC-485). In-situ degradability was studied to determine the extent of degradation of pea, oat and grass-legume hay collected at start (SOT) and end of test (EOT) in experiment one. Rate of degradation (Kd) of DM was greater (P < 0.01) for PEA EOT compared to HAY, OAT SOT and OAT EOT. Dry matter rate of degradation for PEA SOT was greater (P < 0.05) compared to OAT SOT and OAT EOT. The effectively degradable fraction of CP was greater (P = 0.03) for HAY compared to PEA EOT. The ruminally undegradable fraction of CP was greater (P = 0.03) for PEA EOT compared to HAY. Acid detergent fiber rate of degradation (Kd) was greater (P = 0.01) for PEA EOT compared to HAY, OAT SOT and OAT EOT. Acid detergent fiber rate of degradation for PEA SOT was greater (P < 0.05) compared to OAT SOT and OAT EOT. No differences (P > 0.05) were observed between either OAT SOT and OAT EOT or PEA SOT and PEA EOT for S, D, U, ED or RU suggesting that weathering did not have an effect on the degradability of the forages. The results of these experiments show that it is possible to maintain cow BW through the winter months in Western Canada by grazing oat crop residues, which have the potential to reduce winter feeding costs.
347

Measuring the effect of inbreeding on reproductive success in population of friute flies (Raleigh LINES)

Mohebbi, Sara January 2012 (has links)
No description available.
348

The Genetic Architecture of Hybrid Male Sterility in the Drosophila Pseudoobscura Species Group

Chang, Audrey Showhuey January 2009 (has links)
<p>Biodiversity is generated by the process of speciation. Because biological species are defined as populations that are unable to exchange genes with one another, the study of the evolution of reproductive isolation occupies the center of speciation research. A key to deciphering how reproductive isolation evolves is to understand the genetic changes that underlie these barriers to gene flow. Intrinsic postzygotic barriers, such as hybrid sterility or inviability, are known to impede gene flow and especially lend themselves to genetic analysis because of their ease of study in a laboratory setting. Because hybrid sterility likely evolves before hybrid inviability, it potentially plays an important role in the cessation of gene flow. Yet, while their X-linked counterparts have been precisely localized, we remain ignorant of the numbers of and interactions among dominant autosomal loci that are predicted to contribute to F1 hybrid male sterility. </p><p> To address this conceptual void, I examine the genetic architecture of hybrid male sterility between the allopatric sister species Drosophila persimilis and D. pseudoobscura bogotana. First, using a large-scale backcross analysis, I fine-map autosomal QTL from D. persimilis that confer sterility in male hybrids. This fine-mapping shows that loci contributing to hybrid male sterility reside outside chromosomal rearrangements (i.e., regions of reduced recombination) in this allopatric species pairs. In contrast, these QTL do not contribute to hybrid male sterility in the comparable sympatric hybridizing species D. persimilis and D. pseudoobscura, as predicted by models that suggest that hybridizing species persist because of broad regions of reduced recombination. Next, I use a serial backcross design to introgress these sterility-conferring QTL from D. persimilis into a D. p. bogatana genetic background devoid of other alleles from D. persimilis. This introgression study tested a prediction of the dominance theory proposed to explain Haldane's rule: dominant-acting autosomal loci should interact with recessive-acting X-linked loci to produce sterile hybrid males. Surprisingly, the results demonstrated that the "composite" dominance of the autosomal QTL is more important than the dominance of individual QTL for producing Haldane's rule: epistasis among loci elevated their dominant effects on sterility such that individually-recessive-acting autosomal QTL can contribute to F1 male infertility. Finally, using recombination to generate independent lines bearing only small segments of the identified QTL regions, I examine whether single or multiple loci within these regions contribute to the overall effect of hybrid sterility. While the effect of one QTL depends on epistasis between several loci within that small region, the effect of the other QTL appears to derive from a single genetic factor. These results suggest that estimates of the number of genes that contribute to reproductive isolation are at best, likely too low and, at worst, unattainable with the mapping resolution attainable by standard backcross and introgression approaches.</p><p> This dissertation addresses both evolutionary and genetic hypotheses of intrinsic postzygotic isolation. Hybrid male sterility between D. persimilis and D. p. bogotana clearly involves highly specific and complex interactions between homoospecific loci. The mapping results presented here also lay the foundation for the identification and cloning of multiple autosomal sterility-conferring "speciation genes."</p> / Dissertation
349

Avian Response to Road Construction Noise with Emphasis on the Endangered Golden-cheeked Warbler

Lackey, Melissa A. 2010 May 1900 (has links)
Noise pollution can mask or distort bird songs, which inhibits mating success, predator detection, and parental response to begging calls. Road noise can cause lowered density and reproductive success in songbirds. I examined the impact of construction noise on reproductive success and territory selection of golden-cheeked warblers (Dendroica chrysoparia) at 3 sites: adjacent to road construction, adjacent to road-noise only, and a control with no noise or construction activity. I also examined birds' responses to experimental playback of construction noise to determine if warblers alter behavior in the presence of introduced road construction noise, if they have habituated to construction noise, and whether habituation is hindering their reproductive success. I used the Vickery reproductive index to evaluate productivity and automatic recording units to assess the levels of ambient noise in each site. From 2007-2009, productivity was stable in the road-noise only site and showed more annual variation in the construction and control sites; productivity was nearly identical in the latter 2 sites in 2008 and 2009. There was no significant difference in productive territory locations based on distance from road. Ambient noise was similar in the construction and roadnoise only sites but significantly different from the control. To examine habituation and territory placement, I (1) used construction noise playback to individual birds and evaluated occurrence of behavioral response as a function of distance from the roadway, and (2) established broadcast stations that simulate construction noise to determine impacts on territory selection. Of 88 surveys, 6 birds responded to construction noise playback. I conducted 18 control surveys and observed 1 behavioral response. All birds that responded were located greater than or equal to 140 m from the road. I established 3 broadcast stations per season in 2008 and 2009. In each year I placed broadcast units on the edges of randomly chosen territories identified during the previous field season. There was not a significant difference in mean territory shifts for broadcast and non-broadcast unit territories, and territory shifts did not show patterns in directionality or in reproductive success. Results suggest that construction noise does not appear to affect behavior or reproductive success of golden-cheeked warblers.
350

Abnormal reproductive function in female homozygous leaner mice

Serpedin, Nesrin 30 September 2004 (has links)
The leaner mouse carries an autosomal recessive mutation in the α1A subunit of neuronal P/Q-type voltage gated calcium ion channels. Due to this mutation, the leaner mouse exhibits severe ataxia, absence seizures and paroxysmal dyskinesia. Mutations in this same gene in humans cause: episodic ataxia type 2, familial hemiplegic migraine, spinocerebellar ataxia type 6 and probably the newly recognized form of human inherited epilepsy. Decreased amplitude of calcium current in cerebellar Purkinje cells and decreased calcium buffering capacity suggest that failure of calcium homeostasis may lead to the neurodegeneration observed in these mutant mice. Both sexes are affected. Despite their neurological dysfunction, homozygous leaner mice are able to breed and produce viable offspring. The survival rate for these pups is highly correlated with early fostering to normal lactating dams. This thesis studies the reproductive dysfunction observed in female homozygous leaner mice and is divided into four parts: onset of puberty, estrous cycle, pregnancy and litter assessment, and hormone levels. We have discovered that the onset of puberty is precocious in leaner females compared to age-matched wild type females, and leaner mice spend more time in estrous than age-matched wild type females. Also, we have observed that leaner mice became pregnant less readily than wild type mice, but once pregnant, female leaner mice produced more pups per litter compared with wild type mice. The number of corpora lutea observed in leaner mice is greater than in wild type mice. In leaner mice, the number of corpora lutea in the ovary corresponding to the uterine horn with the highest number of offspring is larger than the number of corpora lutea found in the ovary corresponding to the other uterine horn. Radioimmunoassays of estradiol hormone levels at postnatal day 28 shows higher levels in leaner compared to age-matched wild type mice. However, at postnatal day 28, the luteinizing hormone levels are similar in both categories of mice. This study of reproductive dysfunction in leaner mice was performed to gain further understanding about the role of intracellular calcium ion signaling in neuronal regulation of reproductive processes in females.

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