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The effect of T. aestivum L. chromosomes 1A and 1D on fertility of recombinant bread wheat allolines of the same origin carrying the cytoplasm of barley H. vulgare L. and different levels of cytonuclear compatibility was studied. Alloline L-56 included mainly fully sterile (FS) and partially sterile (PS) plants, alloline L-57 included partially fertile (PF) plants and line L-58 included fertile (F) ones. Analysis of morphobiological traits and pollen painting indicated complete or partial male sterility in plants of allolines L-56 and L-57. To differentiate genotypes with cytonuclear coadaptation and genotypes with cytonuclear incompatibility, PCR analysis of the 18S/5S mitochondrial (mt) repeat was performed. Heteroplasmy (simultaneous presence of barley and wheat mtDNA copies) was found in FS, PS, PF and some F plants, which was associated with a violation of cytonuclear compatibility. Wheat-type homoplasmy (hm) was detected in the majority of the fertile plants, which was associated with cytonuclear coadaptation. The allolines used as maternal genotypes were crossed with wheat-rye substitution lines 1R(1A) and 1R(1D). In F1, all plants of PF×1R(1A) and PF×1R(1D) combinations were fertile, and in F2, a segregation close to 3 (fertile) : 1 (sterile) was observed. These results showed for the first time that chromosomes 1A and 1D carry one dominant Rf gene, which controls the restoration of male fertility of bread wheat carrying the cytoplasm of H. vulgare. All plants of F1 combinations FS×1R(1A), FS×1R(1D), PS×1R(1A), PS×1R(1D) were sterile, which indicates that a single dose of genes localized on wheat chromosomes 1A or 1D is not enough to restore male fertility in FS and PS plants. All plants of hybrid combinations F(hm)×1R(1A) and F(hm)×1R(1D) in both F1 and F2 were fertile, that is, fertility of allolines with cytonuclear coadaptation does not depend on wheat chromosomes 1A and 1D.
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Inspired by animals that co-adapt their brain and body to interact with the environment, we present a tendon-driven and over-actuated (i.e.njoint,n+1 actuators) bipedal robot that (i) exploits its backdrivable mechanical properties to manage body-environment interactions without explicit control,and(ii) uses a simple 3-layer neural network to learn to walk after only 2 min of 'natural' motor babbling (i.e. an exploration strategy that is compatible with leg and task dynamics; akin to childsplay). This brain-body collaboration first learns to produce feet cyclical movements 'in air' and, without further tuning, can produce locomotion when the biped is lowered to be in slight contact with the ground. In contrast, training with 2 min of 'naïve' motor babbling (i.e. an exploration strategy that ignores leg task dynamics), does not produce consistent cyclical movements 'in air', and produces erratic movements and no locomotion when in slight contact with the ground. When further lowering the biped and making the desired leg trajectories reach 1 cm below ground (causing the desired-vs-obtained trajectories error to be unavoidable), cyclical movements based on either natural or naïve babbling presented almost equally persistent trends, and locomotion emerged with naïve babbling. Therefore, we show how continual learning of walking in unforeseen circumstances can be driven by continual physical adaptation rooted in the backdrivable properties of the plant and enhanced by exploration strategies that exploit plant dynamics. Our studies also demonstrate that the bio-inspired co-design and co-adaptations of limbs and control strategies can produce locomotion without explicit control of trajectory errors.
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Robótica , Caminhada , Robótica/métodos , Caminhada/fisiologia , Encéfalo/fisiologia , Animais , Humanos , Aprendizagem/fisiologia , Redes Neurais de Computação , Adaptação Fisiológica/fisiologia , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Velocidade de Caminhada/fisiologiaRESUMO
Monogenea (Platyhelminthes), mainly gill and fin ectoparasites of fish, are often recognized as host specific and morphologically and ecologically diverse. These parasites exhibit high species diversity at the level of host species or individual fish specimens. Using case studies, especially those widely performed in Dactylogyrus parasitizing cyprinoid fish, this article presents current knowledge on the ecology and evolution of congeneric gill monogeneans. The important aspects of the ecology of congeneric monogeneans are highlighted, in particular: host specificity expressed at several host levels (from strict specificity to phylogenetic specificity), microhabitat specificity expressed by restricted positions on fish gills to facilitate intraspecific mating, and the link between microhabitat preference and morphological adaptation (i.e., sclerotized structures of the haptor) or reproductive isolation. From the evolutionary perspective, this study focused on the processes of the speciation and diversification of congeneric monogeneans, highlighting the role of host switch as the most prominent coevolutionary event, accompanied in some cases mostly by intrahost speciation or cospeciation, as revealed by cophylogenetic studies. Here, important knowledge on evolutionary patterns of host specificity, microhabitat specificity, and morphological adaptation is presented. Host-specific monogeneans may represent an important tool for studying the historical biogeography of their hosts. Specifically, in the case of freshwater fish hosts exhibiting disjunctive distribution, they reflect both historical and contemporary contacts. The role of host-specific congeneric monogeneans in revealing historical intercontinental and intracontinental contacts between freshwater fish is highlighted. Finally, the importance of the role of genetic coadaptation, limiting the presence of host-specific monogeneans in hybrid fish, is emphasized.
Title: Monogènes spécifiques à leur hôte parasitant les poissons d'eau douce : écologie et évolution des associations hôtes-parasites. Abstract: Les Monogènes (Plathelminthes), principalement ectoparasites des branchies et des nageoires des poissons, sont souvent reconnus comme spécifiques à leur hôte et diversifiés morphologiquement et écologiquement. Ces parasites présentent une grande diversité d'espèces au niveau des espèces hôtes ou des spécimens individuels de poissons. À l'aide d'études de cas (en particulier celles largement réalisées chez les Dactylogyrus parasitant les poissons cyprinoïdes), les connaissances actuelles sur l'écologie et l'évolution des monogènes branchiaux congénères sont présentées. Les aspects importants de l'écologie des monogènes congénères sont mis en évidence, en particulier la spécificité à l'hôte exprimée à plusieurs niveaux de l'hôte (de la spécificité stricte à la spécificité phylogénétique), la spécificité du microhabitat exprimée par des positions restreintes sur les branchies des poissons pour faciliter l'accouplement intraspécifique, et le lien entre la préférence du microhabitat et l'adaptation morphologique (c'est-à-dire les structures sclérifiées du hapteur) ou l'isolement reproductif. Du point de vue évolutif, l'étude a été concentrée sur les processus de spéciation et de diversification des monogènes congénères, soulignant le rôle du changement d'hôte comme l'événement coévolutif le plus important, accompagné surtout dans certains cas de spéciation ou de cospéciation intra-hôte, comme le révèlent les études cophylogénétiques. Des connaissances importantes sont présentées ici sur les modèles évolutifs de spécificité d'hôte, de spécificité de microhabitat et d'adaptation morphologique. Les monogènes spécifiques à l'hôte peuvent représenter un outil important pour étudier la biogéographie historique de leurs hôtes. Plus précisément, dans le cas des poissons d'eau douce hôtes présentant une distribution disjonctive, ils reflètent à la fois des contacts historiques et contemporains. Le rôle des monogènes congénères spécifiques à leur hôte dans la révélation des contacts intercontinentaux et intracontinentaux historiques entre poissons d'eau douce est mis en évidence. Enfin, l'importance du rôle de la coadaptation génétique limitant la présence de monogènes spécifiques à l'hôte chez les poissons hybrides est soulignée.
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Evolução Biológica , Doenças dos Peixes , Água Doce , Brânquias , Especificidade de Hospedeiro , Interações Hospedeiro-Parasita , Animais , Doenças dos Peixes/parasitologia , Brânquias/parasitologia , Água Doce/parasitologia , Platelmintos/fisiologia , Platelmintos/classificação , Platelmintos/genética , Platelmintos/isolamento & purificação , Infecções por Trematódeos/veterinária , Infecções por Trematódeos/parasitologia , Peixes/parasitologia , Filogenia , Ecossistema , Trematódeos/fisiologia , Trematódeos/classificação , Trematódeos/genética , Especificidade da EspécieRESUMO
BACKGROUND: The integration of smart technologies, including wearables and voice-activated devices, is increasingly recognized for enhancing the independence and well-being of older adults. However, the long-term dynamics of their use and the coadaptation process with older adults remain poorly understood. This scoping review explores how interactions between older adults and smart technologies evolve over time to improve both user experience and technology utility. OBJECTIVE: This review synthesizes existing research on the coadaptation between older adults and smart technologies, focusing on longitudinal changes in use patterns, the effectiveness of technological adaptations, and the implications for future technology development and deployment to improve user experiences. METHODS: Following the Joanna Briggs Institute Reviewer's Manual and PRISMA-ScR (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses Extension for Scoping Reviews) guidelines, this scoping review examined peer-reviewed papers from databases including Ovid MEDLINE, Ovid Embase, PEDro, Ovid PsycINFO, and EBSCO CINAHL from the year 2000 to August 28, 2023, and included forward and backward searches. The search was updated on March 1, 2024. Empirical studies were included if they involved (1) individuals aged 55 years or older living independently and (2) focused on interactions and adaptations between older adults and wearables and voice-activated virtual assistants in interventions for a minimum period of 8 weeks. Data extraction was informed by the selection and optimization with compensation framework and the sex- and gender-based analysis plus theoretical framework and used a directed content analysis approach. RESULTS: The search yielded 16,143 papers. Following title and abstract screening and a full-text review, 5 papers met the inclusion criteria. Study populations were mostly female participants and aged 73-83 years from the United States and engaged with voice-activated virtual assistants accessed through smart speakers and wearables. Users frequently used simple commands related to music and weather, integrating devices into daily routines. However, communication barriers often led to frustration due to devices' inability to recognize cues or provide personalized responses. The findings suggest that while older adults can integrate smart technologies into their lives, a lack of customization and user-friendly interfaces hinder long-term adoption and satisfaction. The studies highlight the need for technology to be further developed so they can better meet this demographic's evolving needs and call for research addressing small sample sizes and limited diversity. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings highlight a critical need for continued research into the dynamic and reciprocal relationship between smart technologies and older adults over time. Future studies should focus on more diverse populations and extend monitoring periods to provide deeper insights into the coadaptation process. Insights gained from this review are vital for informing the development of more intuitive, user-centric smart technology solutions to better support the aging population in maintaining independence and enhancing their quality of life. INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): RR2-10.2196/51129.
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Dispositivos Eletrônicos Vestíveis , Humanos , Idoso , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Feminino , Masculino , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Voz , Estudos LongitudinaisRESUMO
Female and male hosts may maximise their fitness by evolving different strategies to compensate for the costs of parasite infections. The resulting sexual dimorphism might be apparent in differential relationships between parasite load and body condition, potentially reflecting differences in energy allocation to anti-parasitic defences. For example, male lacertids with high body condition may produce many offspring while being intensely parasitised. In contrast, female lacertids may show a different outcome of the trade-offs between body condition and immunity, aiming to better protect themselves from the harm of parasites. We predicted that females would have fewer parasites than males and a lower body condition across parasitaemia levels because they would invest resources in parasite defence to mitigate the costs of infection. In contrast, the male strategy to maximise access to females would imply some level of parasite tolerance and, thus, higher parasitaemia. We analysed the relationship between the body condition of lizards and the parasitemias of Karyolysus and Schellackia, two genera of blood parasites with different phylogenetic origins, in 565 females and 899 males belonging to 10 species of the Lacertidae (Squamata). These lizards were sampled over a period of 12 years across 34 sampling sites in southwestern Europe. The results concerning the Karyolysus infections were consistent with the predictions, with males having similar body condition across parasitaemia levels even though they had higher infection intensities than females. On the other hand, females with higher levels of Karyolysus parasitaemia had lower body condition. This is consistent with the prediction that different life strategies of male and female lacertids can explain the infection patterns of Karyolysus. In contrast, the parasitaemia of Schellackia was consistently low in both male and female hosts, with no significant effect on the body condition of lizards. This suggests that lizards of both sexes maintain this parasite below a pathogenic threshold.
Los machos y hembras pueden maximizar su eficacia biológica mediante la evolución diferencial de estrategias que compensen los costes asociados con las infecciones parasitarias. Por ejemplo, los machos con una alta condición corporal pueden producir muchas crías aun estando altamente parasitados. Mientras que es común que las hembras inviertan más energía en protegerse frente a los parásitos, lo que podría comprometer el mantenimiento de su condición corporal. Nuestra hipótesis es que las diferencias sexuales en la asignación de energía pueden quedar de manifiesto al analizar la relación entre la intensidad de infección con la condición corporal. También esperamos que las hembras tengan menos parásitos que los machos y que su condición corporal esté correlacionada negativamente con su carga parasitaria. Por el contrario, esperamos que los machos tengan más parásitos en parte porque su estrategia implicaría cierto nivel de tolerancia si con ello pueden incrementar su inversión reproductiva. Hemos analizado la relación entre la condición corporal y las parasitemias de Schellackia y Karyolysus, dos parásitos sanguíneos, en 565 hembras y 899 machos de 10 especies de la familia Lacertidae (Squamata) durante 12 años en 34 localidades en el suroeste de Europa. El patrón para Karyolysus fue coherente con las predicciones, ya que la condición corporal de los machos no se correlacionó con su parasitemia, a pesar de que estas fueron mayores que en las hembras. Mientras que la relación fue negativa en las hembras. Por lo que el patrón de infección de Karyolysus concuerda con las diferentes estrategias de inversión energética en machos y hembras. Sin embargo, en el caso de Schellackia las parasitemias fueron más bajas en hospedadores de ambos sexos y su parasitemia no se correlacionó con la condición corporal. Este resultado sugiere que Schellackia es mantenido en umbrales subpatogénicos.
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The concept of 'co-culture' is introduced as a novel framework for understanding the mutual cultural evolution between animal species, including, but not only, humans. It explores the dynamics of interspecies interactions, particularly in how different species influence each other's behavioural and cognitive adaptations. Various instances of interspecies cultural exchange are highlighted, such as the acquisition of medicinal plants from animals resulting in a shared medicinal culture, adaptive behaviours of urban wildlife, and cooperative behaviours between animal species. Co-culture challenges the notion of species-specific culture, underscoring the complexity and interconnectedness of human and animal societies, and between animal societies. Further research into co-culture is advocating and emphasising its implications for conservation, urban planning, and a deeper understanding of animal cognition and behaviour.
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Comportamento Animal , Animais , Humanos , Comportamento Cooperativo , Interação Humano-Animal , Especificidade da EspécieRESUMO
Growing crops in more diverse crop systems (i.e., intercropping) is one way to produce food more sustainably. Even though intercropping, compared to average monocultures, is generally more productive, the full yield potential of intercropping might not yet have been achieved as modern crop cultivars are bred to be grown in monoculture. Breeding plants for more familiarity in mixtures, i.e., plants that are adapted to more diverse communities (i.e., adaptation) or even to coexist with each other (i.e., coadaptation) might have the potential to sustainably enhance productivity. In this study, the productivity benefits of familiarity through evolutionary adaptation and coevolutionary coadaptation were disentangled in a crop system through an extensive common garden experiment. Furthermore, evolutionary and coevolutionary effects on species-level and community-level productivity were linked to corresponding changes in functional traits. We found evidence for higher productivity and trait convergence with increasing familiarity with the plant communities. Furthermore, our results provide evidence for the coevolution of plants in mixtures leading to higher productivity of coadapted species. However, with the functional traits measured in our study, we could not fully explain the productivity benefits found upon coevolution. Our study investigated coevolution among randomly interacting plants and was able to demonstrate that coadaptation through coevolution of coexisting species in mixtures occurs and promotes ecosystem functioning (i.e., higher productivity). This result is particularly relevant for the diversification of agricultural and forest ecosystems, demonstrating the added value of artificially selecting plants for the communities they are familiar with.
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Ecossistema , Melhoramento Vegetal , Agricultura/métodos , Produtos Agrícolas , Evolução BiológicaRESUMO
BACKGROUND: The Internet of Things (IoT) has gained significant attention due to advancements in technology and has potential applications in meeting the needs of an aging population. Smart technologies, a subset of IoT, can support older adults in aging in place, promoting independent living and improving their quality of life. However, there is a lack of research on how older adults and smart technologies coadapt over time to maximize their benefits and sustain adoption. OBJECTIVE: We will aim to comprehensively review and analyze the existing scientific literature pertaining to the coadaptation between smart technologies and older adults. The primary focus will be to investigate the extent and nature of this coadaptation process and explore how older adults and technology coevolve over time to enhance older adults' experience with technology. METHODS: This scoping review will follow the methodology outlined in the Joanna Briggs Institute Reviewer's Manual and adhere to the PRISMA-ScR (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis Extension for Scoping Reviews) guidelines for reporting. Peer-reviewed articles will be searched in databases like Ovid MEDLINE, OVID Embase, PEDro, OVID PsycINFO, EBSCO CINAHL, the Cochrane Library, Scopus, IEEE Xplore, Web of Science, and Global Index Medicus. The research team will create a data extraction form covering study characteristics, participant characteristics, underlying models and frameworks, research findings, implications for technology coadaptation, and any identified study limitations. A directed content analysis approach will be used, incorporating the Selection, Optimization, and Compensation framework and Sex- and Gender-Based Analysis Plus theoretical framework. RESULTS: The results of this study are expected in January 2024. CONCLUSIONS: This scoping review endeavors to present a thorough overview of the available evidence concerning how smart technologies interact with older adults over an extended period. The insights gained from this review will lay the groundwork for a research program that explores how older adults adapt to and use smart technologies throughout their lives, ultimately leading to improved user satisfaction and experience and facilitating aging in place with tailored support and user-centered design principles. INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): PRR1-10.2196/51129.
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Introduction: Wearable I robots such as exoskeletons combine the strength and precision of intelligent machines with the adaptability and creativity of human beings. Exoskeletons are unique in that humans interact with the technologies on both a physical and cognitive level, and as such, involve a complex, interdependent relationship between humans and robots. The aim of this paper was to explore the concepts of agency and adaptation as they relate to human-machine synchrony, as human users learned to operate a complex whole-body powered exoskeleton. Methods: Qualitative interviews were conducted with participants over multiple sessions in which they performed a range of basic functional tasks and simulated industrial tasks using a powered exoskeleton prototype, to understand their expectations of the human-technology partnership, any challenges that arose in their interaction with the device, and what strategies they used to resolve such challenges. Results: Analysis of the data revealed two overarching themes: 1) Participants faced physical, cognitive, and affective challenges to synchronizing with the exoskeleton; and 2) they engaged in sensemaking strategies such as drawing analogies with known prior experiences and anthropomorphized the exoskeleton as a partner entity in order to adapt and address challenges. Discussion: This research is an important first step to understanding how humans make sense of and adapt to a powerful and complex wearable robot with which they must synchronize in order to perform tasks. Implications for our understanding of human and machine agency as well as bidirectional coadaptation principles are discussed.
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A population encounters a variety of environmental stresses, so the full source of its resilience can only be captured by collecting all the signatures of adaptation to the selection of the local environment in its population history. Based on the multiomic data of Arabidopsis thaliana, we constructed a database of phenotypic adaptations (p-adaptations) and gene expression (e-adaptations) adaptations in the population. Through the enrichment analysis of the identified adaptations, we inferred a likely scenario of adaptation that is consistent with the biological evidence from experimental work. We analyzed the dynamics of the allele frequencies at the 23,880 QTLs of 174 traits and 8,618 eQTLs of 1,829 genes with respect to the total SNPs in the genomes and identified 650 p-adaptations and 3,925 e-adaptations [false discovery rate (FDR) = 0.05]. The population underwent large-scale p-adaptations and e-adaptations along 4 lineages. Extremely cold winters and short summers prolonged seed dormancy and expanded the root system architecture. Low temperatures prolonged the growing season, and low light intensity required the increased chloroplast activity. The subtropical and humid environment enhanced phytohormone signaling pathways in response to the biotic and abiotic stresses. Exposure to heavy metals selected alleles for lower heavy metal uptake from soil, lower growth rate, lower resistance to bacteria, and higher expression of photosynthetic genes were selected. The p-adaptations are directly interpretable, while the coadapted gene expressions reflect the physiological requirements for the adaptation. The integration of this information characterizes when and where the population has experienced environmental stress and how the population responded at the molecular level.
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Proteínas de Arabidopsis , Arabidopsis , Arabidopsis/metabolismo , Frequência do Gene , Proteínas de Arabidopsis/genética , Solo , FenótipoRESUMO
Trait matching between mutualistic species is usually expected to maintain mutualism, but empirical studies of trait complementarity and coadaptation in multi-species assemblages-which represent the reality of most interactions in nature-are few. Here, we studied trait matching between the leafflower shrub Kirganelia microcarpa and three associated seed-predatory leafflower moths (Epicephala spp.) across 16 populations. Behavioral and morphological observations suggested that two moths (E. microcarpa and E. tertiaria) acted as pollinators while a third (E. laeviclada) acted as a cheater. These species differed in ovipositor morphology but showed trait complementarity between ovipositor length and floral traits at both species level and population level, presumably as adaptations to divergent oviposition behaviors. However, this trait matching varied among populations. Comparisons of ovipositor length and floral traits among populations with different moth assemblages suggested an increase of ovary wall thickness where the locular-ovipositing pollinator E. microcarpa and cheater E. laeviclada were present, while stylar pit depth was less in populations with the stylar pit-ovipositing pollinator E. tertiaria. Our study indicates that trait matching between interacting partners occurs even in extremely specialized multi-species mutualisms, and that although these responses vary, sometimes non-intuitively, in response to different partner species. It seems that the moths can track changes in host plant tissue depth for oviposition.
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The genus Karyolysus was originally proposed to accommodate blood parasites of lacertid lizards in Western Europe. However, recent phylogenetic analyses suggested an inconclusive taxonomic position of these parasites of the order Adeleorina based on the available genetic information. Inconsistencies between molecular phylogeny, morphology, and/or life cycles can reflect lack of enough genetic information of the target group. We therefore surveyed 28 localities and collected blood samples from 828 lizards of 23 species including lacertids, skinks, and geckoes in the western Mediterranean, North Africa, and Macaronesia, where species of Karyolysus and other adeleorine parasites have been described. We combined molecular and microscopic methods to analyze the samples, including those from the host type species and the type locality of Karyolysus bicapsulatus. The phylogenetic relationship of these parasites was analyzed based on the 18S rRNA gene and the co-phylogenetic relationship with their vertebrate hosts was reconstructed. We molecularly detected adeleorine parasites in 37.9% of the blood samples and found 22 new parasite haplotypes. A phylogenetic reconstruction with 132 sequences indicated that 20 of the newly detected haplotypes clustered in a well-supported clade with another 18 sequences that included Karyolysus galloti and Karyolysus lacazei. Morphological evidence also supported that K. bicapsulatus clustered in this monophyletic clade. These results supported the taxonomic validity of the genus. In addition, we found some parasite haplotypes that infected different lizard host genera with ancient diverging histories, which suggested that Karyolysus is less host-specific than other blood parasites of lizards in the region. A co-phylogenetic analysis supported this interpretation because no significant co-speciation signal was shown between Karyolysus and lizard hosts.
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Eucoccidiida , Lagartos , Parasitos , Animais , Filogenia , Lagartos/parasitologia , Eucoccidiida/genética , Variação GenéticaRESUMO
Most terrestrial animals are constrained by extreme heat conditions such as midday desert environments, while a few terrestrial ectothermic insects are active in such ecological niches. Sexually mature males of the desert locust (Schistocerca gregaria) in the Sahara Desert remain on the open ground, despite the ground temperatures exceeding their lethal limit, to form leks and to mate incoming gravid females during the daytime. Lekking male locusts apparently suffer from extreme heat stress and greatly fluctuating thermal conditions. The present study examined the thermoregulatory strategies of the lekking male S. gregaria. Our field observations showed that lekking males changed their body orientation toward the sun depending on the temperature and time of day. In the relatively cool morning, males basked by orienting perpendicular to the sun's rays, maximizing the area of body surface exposed to the sun's rays. In contrast, around midday, when the ground surface temperature exceeded lethal high temperatures, some males tended to shelter inside the plants or remain in the shade. However, the remainder stayed on the ground, stilted (i.e., extending their legs to raise their bodies off the hot ground) and oriented parallel to the sun's rays, which minimized radiative heating. Measurements of body temperature throughout the hot middle period of the day confirmed that the stilting posture prevented overheating. Their critical lethal body temperature was as high as 54.7 °C. In this lekking system, gravid females enter male leks by flying. These incoming females usually landed on open ground, whereupon nearby males immediately approached, mounted, and mated the female, implying that males with greater heat-tolerance can increase mating chance. These results suggest that behavioral thermoregulation and physiologically high heat tolerance of male desert locusts allows them to endure extreme thermal conditions for lekking.
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Gafanhotos , Feminino , Animais , Masculino , Gafanhotos/fisiologia , Reprodução , Regulação da Temperatura Corporal , África do NorteRESUMO
Balancing the competing, and often conflicting, needs of people and wildlife in shared landscapes is a major challenge for conservation science and policy worldwide. Connectivity is critical for wildlife persistence, but dispersing animals may come into conflict with people, leading to severe costs for humans and animals and impeding connectivity. Thus, conflict mitigation and connectivity present an apparent dilemma for conservation. We present a framework to address this dilemma and disentangle the effects of barriers to animal movement and conflict-induced mortality of dispersers on connectivity. We extend random-walk theory to map the connectivity-conflict interface, or areas where frequent animal movement may lead to conflict and conflict in turn impedes connectivity. We illustrate this framework with the endangered Asian elephant Elephas maximus, a species that frequently disperses out of protected areas and comes into conflict with humans. We mapped expected movement across a human-dominated landscape over the short- and long-term, accounting for conflict mortality. Natural and conflict-induced mortality together reduced expected movement and connectivity among populations. Based on model validation, our conflict predictions that explicitly captured animal movement better explained observed conflict than a model that considered distribution alone. Our work highlights the interaction between connectivity and conflict and enables identification of location-specific conflict mitigation strategies that minimize losses to people, while ensuring critical wildlife movement between habitats. By predicting where animal movement and humans collide, we provide a basis to plan for broad-scale conservation and the mutual well-being of wildlife and people in shared landscapes.
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Conservação dos Recursos Naturais , Elefantes , Animais , Humanos , Ecossistema , Animais Selvagens , MovimentoRESUMO
This paper aims to contribute to the existing literature on normative cognition by providing a lineage explanation of human social norm psychology. This approach builds upon theories of goal-directed behavioral control in the reinforcement learning and control literature, arguing that this form of control defines an important class of intentional normative mental states that are instrumental in nature. I defend the view that great ape capacities for instrumental reasoning and our capacity (or family of capacities) for shared intentionality coadapted to each other and argue that the evolution of this capacity has allowed the representation of social norms and the emergence of our capacity for normative guidance.
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BACKGROUND: Social integration, shared decision-making and personalised care are key elements of mental health and social care policy. Although these elements have been shown to improve service user and service-level outcomes, their translation into practice has been inconsistent and social isolation amongst service users persists. AIM: To co-adapt, with service users, carers/supporters and health professionals, a web-based social network intervention, GENIE™, for use in secondary mental health services. The intervention is designed to support social activity and preference discussions between mental healthcare professionals and service users as a means of connecting individuals to local resources. METHODS: In Phase 1 (LEARN), we completed two systematic reviews to synthesise the existing evidence relating to the i) effectiveness and ii) the implementation of social network interventions for people with mental health difficulties. We undertook semi-structured interviews with a convenience sample of 15 stakeholders previously involved in the implementation of the intervention in physical healthcare settings. Interviews were also conducted with 5 national key stakeholders in mental health (e.g., policy makers, commissioners, third sector leads) to explore wider implementation issues. In Phase 2 (ADAPT), we worked iteratively with eight service users, nine carers, six professionals/volunteers and our patient and public advisory group. We drew on a framework for experience-based co-design, consisting of a series of stakeholder consultation events, to discuss the use of the social network intervention, in mental health services. Participants also considered factors that could serve as enablers, barriers, and challenges to local implementation. RESULTS: Across the stakeholder groups there was broad agreement that the social network intervention had potential to be useful within mental health services. In terms of appropriate and effective implementation, such an intervention was predicted to work best within the care planning process, on discharge from hospital and within early intervention services. There were indications that the social connection mapping and needs assessment components were of most value and feasible to implement which points to the potential utility of a simplified version compared to the one used in this study. The training provided to facilitators was considered to be more important than their profession and there were indications that service users should be offered the opportunity to invite a carer, friend, or family member to join them in the intervention. CONCLUSION: The GENIE™ intervention has been co-adapted for use in mental health services and a plan for optimal implementation has been co-produced. The next phase of the programme of work is to design and implement a randomised controlled trial to evaluate clinical and cost effectiveness of a simplified version of the intervention.
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Cuidadores , Serviços de Saúde Mental , Cuidadores/psicologia , Pessoal de Saúde/psicologia , Humanos , Rede Social , Reino UnidoRESUMO
The unavailability of tractable reverse genetic analysis approaches represents an obstacle to a better understanding of mitochondrial DNA replication. Here, we used CRISPR-Cas9 mediated gene editing to establish the conditional viability of knockouts in the key proteins involved in mtDNA replication. This observation prompted us to develop a set of tools for reverse genetic analysis in situ, which we called the GeneSwap approach. The technique was validated by identifying 730 amino acid (aa) substitutions in the mature human TFAM that are conditionally permissive for mtDNA replication. We established that HMG domains of TFAM are functionally independent, which opens opportunities for engineering chimeric TFAMs with customized properties for studies on mtDNA replication, mitochondrial transcription, and respiratory chain function. Finally, we present evidence that the HMG2 domain plays the leading role in TFAM species-specificity, thus indicating a potential pathway for TFAM-mtDNA evolutionary co-adaptations.
Assuntos
Proteínas de Ligação a DNA , Fatores de Transcrição , DNA Mitocondrial/genética , Proteínas de Ligação a DNA/genética , Proteínas de Ligação a DNA/metabolismo , Humanos , Proteínas Mitocondriais/genética , Proteínas Mitocondriais/metabolismo , Genética Reversa , Fatores de Transcrição/genética , Fatores de Transcrição/metabolismoRESUMO
Thermal ecology and mate competition are both pervasive features of ecological adaptation. A surge of recent work has uncovered the diversity of ways in which temperature affects mating interactions and sexual selection. However, the potential for thermal biology and reproductive ecology to evolve together as organisms adapt to their thermal environment has been underappreciated. Here, we develop a series of hypotheses regarding (1) not only how thermal ecology affects mating system dynamics, but also how mating dynamics can generate selection on thermal traits; and (2) how the thermal consequences of mate competition favour the reciprocal co-adaptation of thermal biology and sexual traits. We discuss our hypotheses in the context of both pre-copulatory and post-copulatory processes. We also call for future work integrating experimental and phylogenetic comparative approaches to understand evolutionary feedbacks between thermal ecology and sexual selection. Overall, studying reciprocal feedbacks between thermal ecology and sexual selection may be necessary to understand how organisms have adapted to the environments of the past and could persist in the environments of the future.
Assuntos
Preferência de Acasalamento Animal , Seleção Sexual , Animais , Evolução Biológica , Filogenia , Reprodução , Comportamento Sexual AnimalRESUMO
Languages vary considerably in syntactic structure. About 40% of the world's languages have subject-verb-object order, and about 40% have subject-object-verb order. Extensive work has sought to explain this word order variation across languages. However, the existing approaches are not able to explain coherently the frequency distribution and evolution of word order in individual languages. We propose that variation in word order reflects different ways of balancing competing pressures of dependency locality and information locality, whereby languages favor placing elements together when they are syntactically related or contextually informative about each other. Using data from 80 languages in 17 language families and phylogenetic modeling, we demonstrate that languages evolve to balance these pressures, such that word order change is accompanied by change in the frequency distribution of the syntactic structures that speakers communicate to maintain overall efficiency. Variability in word order thus reflects different ways in which languages resolve these evolutionary pressures. We identify relevant characteristics that result from this joint optimization, particularly the frequency with which subjects and objects are expressed together for the same verb. Our findings suggest that syntactic structure and usage across languages coadapt to support efficient communication under limited cognitive resources.