Only One Species (only + one_species)

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Life Sciences


Selected Abstracts


Comparative life-history traits in a fig wasp community: implications for community structure

ECOLOGICAL ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 2 2010
MAHUA GHARA
1. Whether life-history traits can determine community composition and structure is an important question that has been well explored theoretically, but has received scant empirical attention. Life-history traits of a seven-member community of galler and parasitoid fig wasp species (Chalcidoidea), developing within the inflorescences (syconia) of Ficus racemosa (Moraceae) in India, were determined and used to examine community structure and ecology. 2. Gallers were pro-ovigenic (all eggs are mature upon adult emergence) whereas parasitoids were synovigenic (eggs mature progressively during adult lifespan). Initial egg load was correlated with body size for some species, and there was a trade-off between egg number and egg size across all species. Although all species completed their development and left the syconium concurrently, they differed in their adult and pre-adult lifespans. Providing sucrose solutions increased parasitoid lifespan but had no effect on the longevity of some galler species. While feeding regimes and body size affected longevity in most species, an interaction effect between these variables was detected for only one species. 3. Life-history traits of wasp species exhibited a continuum in relation to their arrival sequence at syconia for oviposition during syconium development, and therefore reflected their ecology. The largest number of eggs, smallest egg sizes, and shortest longevities were characteristic of the earliest-arriving galling wasps at the smallest, immature syconia; the converse characterised the later-arriving parasitoids at the larger, already parasitised syconia. Thus life history is an important correlate of community resource partitioning and can be used to understand community structure. 4. This is the first comprehensive study of life-history traits in a fig wasp community. The comparative approach revealed constraints and flexibility in trait evolution. [source]


Systematic study of the genus Cyphononyx (Hymenoptera: Pompilidae) occurring in Japan

ENTOMOLOGICAL SCIENCE, Issue 2 2004
Akira SHIMIZU
Abstract Generic characteristics and phylogenetic relationships of the genus Cyphononyx are presented, together with a brief review of the biology of the genus. It is shown that only one species of the genus, C. fulvognathus (Rohwer), occurs in Japan. This species is distributed also in Taiwan and south China, and has hitherto been recognized under the name of C. dorsalis. In addition, two new combinations are presented: Cyphononyx hirtus (Haupt, 1935) (= Cryptochilus hirtus Haupt) and Cyphononyx plebejus (de Saussure, 1867) (= Agenia plebeja de Saussure), both of which were recorded from the Oriental Region. [source]


Spatial scale affects bioclimate model projections of climate change impacts on mountain plants

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, Issue 5 2008
MANDAR R. TRIVEDI
Abstract Plant species have responded to recent increases in global temperatures by shifting their geographical ranges poleward and to higher altitudes. Bioclimate models project future range contractions of montane species as suitable climate space shifts uphill. The species,climate relationships underlying such models are calibrated using data at either ,macro' scales (coarse resolution, e.g. 50 km × 50 km, and large spatial extent) or ,local' scales (fine resolution, e.g. 50 m × 50 m, and small spatial extent), but the two approaches have not been compared. This study projected macro (European) and local models for vascular plants at a mountain range in Scotland, UK, under low (+1.7 °C) and high (+3.3 °C) climate change scenarios for the 2080s. Depending on scenario, the local models projected that seven or eight out of 10 focal montane species would lose all suitable climate space at the site. However, the European models projected such a loss for only one species. The cause of this divergence was investigated by cross-scale comparisons of estimated temperatures at montane species' warm range edges. The results indicate that European models overestimated species' thermal tolerances because the input coarse resolution climate data were biased against the cold, high-altitude habitats of montane plants. Although tests at other mountain ranges are required, these results indicate that recent large-scale modelling studies may have overestimated montane species' ability to cope with increasing temperatures, thereby underestimating the potential impacts of climate change. Furthermore, the results suggest that montane species persistence in microclimatic refugia might not be as widespread as previously speculated. [source]


The genus Adriohydrobia (Hydrobiidae: Gastropoda): polytypic species or polymorphic populations?

JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGICAL SYSTEMATICS AND EVOLUTIONARY RESEARCH, Issue 4 2001
T. Wilke
In molluscs, the shell characters have historically played an important role in discrimination among species. However, because of the paucity, variability and degree of homoplasy of shell characters, their sole use for taxonomic and systematic studies is controversial in many groups. In the present paper the genus AdriohydrobiaRadoman, 1973 is used as a paradigm to test relationships of taxa that were considered to be species, mainly on the basis of the shell size variations. We tested whether the genus consists of several sympatric and polytypic species or a single species with polymorphic populations and whether the reported shell size differences, on which the description of three putative species is mainly based, are intrinsic or extrinsic. A fragment of the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I (COI) gene was used as an independent genetic marker. We found very little genetic variability in 40 specimens from four populations studied. The nucleotide-sequence diversity (,) within populations ranges from 0.0017 to 0.0056 and the nucleotide-sequence divergence (Dxy) between populations from 0.0018 to 0.0051. The phylogenetic network is very compact with two ,groups' of haplotypes that are separated by only two nucleotide positions. A plot of pairwise nucleotide differences against pairwise shell size differences did not reveal any distinct clusters and a Mantel test did not show any significant associations between the two matrices. Based on the very low genetic diversity, the lack of distinct clusters in the phylogenetic network and the lack of concordance between morphological and genetic differentiation it is concluded that only one species is involved, Adriohydrobia gagatinella. The previously reported morphogroups within Adriohydrobia are probably due to a discrete age structure in these population and/or due to the effect of trematode-induced gigantism. The observed genetic patterns in Adriohydrobia indicate a rapid population growth from an ancestral population of small evolutionary-effective size. The present study stresses the importance of testing species-level hypotheses based on shell characters using one or more independent markers. Die Gattung Adriohydrobia (Hydrobiidae: Gastropoda): polytypische Arten oder polymorphe Populationen? Schalenmerkmale spielen historisch eine wichtige Rolle bei der Bestimmung von Molluskenarten. Die alleinige Nutzung von Schalenmerkmalen für systematische und taxonomische Arbeiten ist jedoch in vielen Gruppen umstritten, da die relativ wenigen Schalenmerkmale oft sehr variabel und durch einen hohen Grad von Homoplasie gekennzeichnet sind. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde die Gattung AdriohydrobiaRadoman, 1973 als Fallbeispiel genutzt, um Beziehungen von Arten innerhalb einer Gattung zu untersuchen, die hauptsächlich anhand ihrer Schalengröße unterschieden werden. Es wurde getestet, ob die Gattung mehrere sympatrische und polytypische Arten oder nur eine Art mit polymorphen Populationen umfasst. Darüber hinaus wurde untersucht, ob die dokumentierten Unterschiede in der Schalenhöhe, auf welchen die Beschreibung der drei potentiellen Arten der Gattung hauptsächlich beruhte, intrinsisch oder extrinsisch sind. Als unabhängiger genetischer Marker wurde ein Fragment des mitochondrialen Gens für Cytochromoxidase I (COI) verwendet. Die untersuchten 40 Individuen von vier Populationen zeichneten sich durch eine nur sehr geringe genetische Variabilität aus. Die Nukleotidsequenz-Diversität (,) innerhalb der Populationen variiert zwischen 0.0017 und 0.0056; die Nukleotidsequenz-Divergenz (Dxy) zwischen den Populationen reicht von 0.0018 bi 0.0051. Das phylogenetische Netzwerk ist sehr kompakt und umfasst zwei ,Gruppen' von Haplotypen, welche durch nur zwei Nukleotidpositionen getrennt sind. Die graphische Darstellung von paarweisen Nukleotid-Differenzen gegen paarweise Gehäusegröße-Differenzen lässt keine diskreten Gruppen erkennen und ein Mantel-Test zeigt keine signifikanten Beziehungen zwischen den Matrices. Aufgrund der geringen genetischen Differenzierung, des Fehlens von diskreten Gruppen im phylogenetischen Netzwerk und des nicht-signifikanten Zusammenhanges von morphologischer and genetischer Differenzierung wird geschlussfolgert, dass nur eine Art involviert ist, Adriohydrobia gagatinella. Die in der Literatur dokumentierten Morpho-Gruppen beruhen vermutlich auf einer diskreten Altersstruktur in diesen Populationen und/oder auf den Auswirkungen von trematoden-induziertem Gigantismus. Die festgestellten genetischen Muster in Adriohydrobia lassen das schnelle Wachstum einer Stammpopulation von geringer evolutionär-effektiver Größe vermuten. Die vorliegende Studie ist ein Beispiel dafür, wie wichtig es sein kann, auf Schalenmerkmale beruhende Arthypothesen mit unabhängigen Markern zu verifizieren. [source]


Impact of a new invasive ctenophore (Mnemiopsis leidyi) on the zooplankton community of the Southern Caspian sea

MARINE ECOLOGY, Issue 4 2008
Abolghasem Roohi
Abstract The invasive ctenophore Mnemiopsis leidyi (Agassiz), which was transported from the Black Sea into the Caspian Sea at the end of the 1990s, has negatively affected the ecosystem of the Caspian Sea. Zooplankton abundance, biomass and species composition were evaluated on the Iranian coast of the Caspian Sea during 2001,2006. A total of 18 merozooplankton (13 species composed of larvae of benthic animals) and holozooplankton (four Copepoda and one Cladocera) species were identified. The total number of zooplankton species found here was 50% less than in a previous investigation performed in the same region in 1996 before the introduction of Mnemiopsis leidyi into the Caspian Sea. Cladocera species seemed to be highly affected by the invasion of Mnemiopsis leidyi; only one species, Podon polyphemoides, remained in the study area, whereas 24 Cladocera species were found in the study carried out in 1996. Whereas among the Copepoda Eurytemora minor, Eurytemora grimmi, Calanipeda aquae dulcis and Acartia tonsa that were abundant before the Mnemiopsis leidyi invasion, only A. tonsa (copepodites and adults) dominated the inshore and offshore waters after the invasion. The maximum in zooplankton abundance (22,088 ± 24,840 ind·m,3) and biomass (64.1 ± 56.8 mg·m,3) were recorded in December 2001 and August 2004, respectively. The annual mean zooplankton abundance during 2001,2006 was in the range of 3361,8940 ind·m,3; this was two- to five-fold less than the zooplankton abundance in 1996. During 2001,2006, the highest abundance and biomass of Mnemiopsis leidyi were observed during summer-autumn months coincident with warm temperatures and generally when the abundance of other zooplankton organisms was low. [source]


Revision of the genus Acrochordiceras Hyatt, 1877 (Ammonoidea, Middle Triassic): morphology, biometry, biostratigraphy and intra-specific variability

PALAEONTOLOGY, Issue 5 2010
CLAUDE MONNET
Abstract:, The family Acrochordiceratidae Arthaber, 1911 ranges in age from latest Spathian to the middle/late Anisian boundary, and it represents a major component of ammonoid faunas during that time. The middle Anisian genus Acrochordiceras Hyatt, 1877 is the most widespread taxon of the family and occurs abundantly worldwide within the low paleolatitude belt. However, there is a profusion of species names available for Acrochordiceras. This excessive diversity at the species level essentially results from the fact that sufficiently large samples were not available, thus leading to a typological approach to its taxonomy. Based on new extensive collections obtained from the Anisian (Middle Triassic) Fossil Hill Member (Star Peak Group, north-west Nevada) for which a high resolution biostratigraphic frame is available, the taxonomy and biostratigraphy of the genus Acrochordiceras Hyatt, 1877 is herein revised with respect to its intra-specific variation. Morphological and biometric studies (c. 550 bedrock-controlled specimens were measured) show that only one species occurs in each stratigraphic level. Continuous ranges of intra-specific variation of studied specimens enable us to synonymize Haydenites Diener, 1907, Silesiacrochordiceras Diener, 1916 and Epacrochordiceras Spath, 1934 with Acrochordiceras Hyatt, 1877. Three stratigraphically successive species are herein recognized in the low paleolatitude middle Anisian faunas from Nevada: A. hatschekii (Diener, 1907), A. hyatti Meek, 1877 and A. carolinae Mojsisovics, 1882. Moreover, an assessment of intra-specific variation of the adult size range does not support recognition of a dimorphic pair (Acrochordiceras and Epacrochordiceras) as previously suggested by other workers (Epacrochordiceras is the compressed and weakly ornamented end-member variant of Acrochordiceras). The successive middle Anisian species of Acrochordiceras form an anagenetic lineage characterized by increasing involution, adult size and intra-specific variation. This taxonomic revision based on new bedrock-controlled collections is thus an important prerequisite before studying the evolution of the group. [source]


The transmembrane homotrimer of ADAM 1 in model lipid bilayers

PROTEIN SCIENCE, Issue 2 2007
Siok Wan Gan
Abstract Fertilin is a transmembrane protein heterodimer formed by the two subunits fertilin , and fertilin , that plays an important role in sperm,egg fusion. Fertilin , and , are members of the ADAM family, and contain each one transmembrane ,-helix, and are termed ADAM 1 and ADAM 2, respectively. ADAM 1 is the subunit that contains a putative fusion peptide, and we have explored the possibility that the transmembrane ,-helical domain of ADAM 1 forms homotrimers, in common with other viral fusion proteins. Although this peptide was found to form various homooligomers in SDS, the infrared dichroic data obtained with the isotopically labeled peptide at specific positions is consistent with the presence of only one species in DMPC or POPC lipid bilayers. Comparison of the experimental orientational data with molecular dynamics simulations performed with sequence homologues of ADAM 1 show that the species present in lipid bilayers is only consistent with an evolutionarily conserved homotrimeric model for which we provide a backbone structure. These results support a model where ADAM 1 forms homotrimers as a step to create a fusion active intermediate. [source]


Seed mass and seedling establishment after fire in Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park, Sydney, Australia

AUSTRAL ECOLOGY, Issue 4 2004
ANGELA T. MOLES
Abstract Relationships between seed mass and several aspects of plant regeneration ecology were investigated in a post-fire environment in Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park near Sydney, Australia. We found a significant positive relationship between seed mass and time to seedling emergence (P < 0.001) and a strong negative relationship between seed mass and time between emergence and production of the first true leaf (P < 0.001). Surprisingly, we found no relationship between seed mass and seedling establishment (P = 0.21). It seems most likely that this lack of relationship is a result of the many stochastic factors affecting seedling establishment during any given recruitment episode at any given site. A cause of mortality was assigned to 56% of the 781 seedlings that died during the present study. There was no relationship between cause of death and seed mass (P = 0.28). Of the seedlings for which the cause of death was known, 57% were killed by herbivory and 21% were killed by drought. Seedling,seedling competition affected only one species. [source]


Amphistemon and Thamnoldenlandia, two new genera of Rubiaceae (Spermacoceae) endemic to Madagascar

BOTANICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY, Issue 4 2010
INGE GROENINCKX
Amphistemon and Thamnoldenlandia are described as two new genera of Rubiaceae endemic to Madagascar. The two novelties belong to the predominantly herbaceous tribe Spermacoceae. Amphistemon is unique within the tribe in having its stamens inserted at two levels in the corolla tube. The genus includes two species: the subshrub A. humbertii and the geoxylic herb A. rakotonasolianus. Thamnoldenlandia includes only one species, T. ambovombensis, which differs from most other Spermacoceae in being a medium-sized shrub with winged seeds. We present a detailed description of Amphistemon and Thamnoldenlandia, including observations of pollen and seeds. A molecular phylogenetic study based on atpB - rbcL, petD, rps16 and trnL - trnF sequences demonstrates that the two new genera belong to the Hedyotis,Oldenlandia complex of tribe Spermacoceae. Amphistemon and Thamnoldenlandia are sister taxa and share a common ancestor with the Madagascan endemic genus Astiella. A second, but not closely related, Madagascan clade includes the endemic genera Lathraeocarpa and Gomphocalyx and the Afro-Madagascan genus Phylohydrax. This indicates that the Madagascan endemic members of Spermacoceae are the result of at least two independent colonization events, most likely by long-distance dispersal from the African mainland. © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 163, 447,472. [source]


Seedcoat micromorphology of Impatiens (Balsaminaceae) from China

BOTANICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY, Issue 2 2005
YI SONG
Seeds of 38 species of Impatiens mostly from south-western China were observed by scanning electron microscopy. High diversity was found in seedcoat micromorphology. Based on the structure and ornamentation of epidermal cells of the seedcoat, particularly the pattern of the arrangement of the cells and the degree of elevation of the anticlinal cell walls, four morphological types can be distinguished, viz, laevigate, granulate, reticulate and protrusive. The laevigate type and granulate type are unique, each occurring in only one species. The other two types are common and can be further divided into subdivisions according to the shape of the epidermal ornamentation of the seedcoat. Descriptions of seed size, shape and seedcoat types are summarized for the genus. Taxonomic and phylogenetic implications of the seedcoat micromorphology are also discussed, in comparison with the available gross morphological and molecular data. © 2005 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2005, 149, 195,208. [source]