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1.
BJOG ; 123(5): 831-6, 2016 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26853525

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To compare primiparous and multiparous women who develop obstetric fistula (OF) and to assess predictors of fistula location. DESIGN: Cross-sectional study. SETTING: Fistula Care Centre at Bwaila Hospital, Lilongwe, Malawi. POPULATION: Women with OF who presented between September 2011 and July 2014 with a complete obstetric history were eligible for the study. METHODS: Women with OF were surveyed for their obstetric history. Women were classified as multiparous if prior vaginal or caesarean delivery was reported. The location of the fistula was determined at operation: OF involving the urethra, bladder neck, and midvagina were classified as low; OF involving the vaginal apex, cervix, uterus, and ureters were classified as high. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Demographic information was compared between primiparous and multiparous women using chi-squared and Mann-Whitney U-tests. Multivariate logistic regression models were implemented to assess the relationship between variables of interest and fistula location. RESULTS: During the study period, 533 women presented for repair, of which 452 (84.8%) were included in the analysis. The majority (56.6%) were multiparous when the fistula formed. Multiparous women were more likely to have laboured <1 day (62.4 versus 44.5%, P < 0.001), delivered a live-born infant (26.8 versus 17.9%, P = 0.026), and have a high fistula location (37.5 versus 11.2%, P < 0.001). Multiparity [adjusted odds ratio (aOR) = 4.55, 95% confidence interval (CI) 2.27-9.12)] and history of caesarean delivery (aOR = 4.11, 95% CI 2.45-6.89) were associated with development of a high fistula. CONCLUSIONS: Multiparity was common in our cohort, and these women were more likely to have a high fistula. Additional research is needed to understand the aetiology of high fistula including potential iatrogenic causes. TWEETABLE ABSTRACT: Multiparity and caesarean delivery were associated with a high tract fistula in our Malawian cohort.


Subject(s)
Parity , Urinary Fistula/etiology , Uterine Diseases/etiology , Vaginal Fistula/etiology , Adult , Cesarean Section/adverse effects , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Humans , Logistic Models , Malawi , Multivariate Analysis , Odds Ratio , Pregnancy , Risk Factors , Urinary Fistula/diagnosis , Uterine Diseases/diagnosis , Vaginal Fistula/diagnosis
2.
J Fish Biol ; 88(3): 1125-42, 2016 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26806153

ABSTRACT

This study validated a technique for non-invasive hormone measurements in California killifish Fundulus parvipinnis, and looked for associations between cortisol (a stress hormone) and 11-ketotestosterone (KT, an androgen) release rates and the density or intensity of the trematode parasites Euhaplorchis californiensis (EUHA) and Renicola buchanani (RENB) in wild-caught, naturally infected F. parvipinnis. In experiment 1, F. parvipinnis were exposed to an acute stressor by lowering water levels to dorsal-fin height and repeatedly handling the fish over the course of an hour. Neither parasite was found to influence cortisol release rates in response to this acute stressor. In experiment 2, different F. parvipinnis were exposed on four consecutive days to the procedure for collecting water-borne hormone levels and release rates of 11-KT and cortisol were quantified. This design examined whether F. parvipinnis perceived the water-borne collection procedure to be a stressor, while also exploring how parasites influenced hormone release rates under conditions less stressful than those in experiment 1. No association was found between RENB and hormone release rates, or between EUHA and 11-KT release rates. The interaction between EUHA density and handling time, however, was an important predictor of cortisol release rates. The relationship between handling time and cortisol release rates was negative for F. parvipinnis harbouring low or intermediate density infections, and became positive for fish harbouring high densities of EUHA.


Subject(s)
Brain/parasitology , Fish Diseases/physiopathology , Handling, Psychological , Hydrocortisone/metabolism , Killifishes , Testosterone/analogs & derivatives , Trematode Infections/veterinary , Animals , Blood Chemical Analysis/standards , California , Killifishes/parasitology , Killifishes/physiology , Parasite Load , Reproducibility of Results , Testosterone/metabolism , Time Factors , Trematoda/physiology , Trematode Infections/physiopathology
4.
J Fish Biol ; 78(2): 395-435, 2011 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21284626

ABSTRACT

This review examines the contribution of research on fishes to the growing field of behavioural syndromes. Current knowledge of behavioural syndromes in fishes is reviewed with respect to five main axes of animal personality: (1) shyness-boldness, (2) exploration-avoidance, (3) activity, (4) aggressiveness and (5) sociability. Compared with other taxa, research on fishes has played a leading role in describing the shy-bold personality axis and has made innovative contributions to the study of the sociability dimension by incorporating social network theory. Fishes are virtually the only major taxon in which behavioural correlations have been compared between populations. This research has guided the field in examining how variation in selection regime may shape personality. Recent research on fishes has also made important strides in understanding genetic and neuroendocrine bases for behavioural syndromes using approaches involving artificial selection, genetic mapping, candidate gene and functional genomics. This work has illustrated consistent individual variation in highly complex neuroendocrine and gene expression pathways. In contrast, relatively little work on fishes has examined the ontogenetic stability of behavioural syndromes or their fitness consequences. Finally, adopting a behavioural syndrome framework in fisheries management issues including artificial propagation, habitat restoration and invasive species, may promote restoration success. Few studies, however, have examined the ecological relevance of behavioural syndromes in the field. Knowledge of how behavioural syndromes play out in the wild will be crucial to incorporating such a framework into management practices.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal , Fisheries , Fishes/physiology , Animals , Ecology , Fishes/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation , Neurosecretory Systems/physiology , Personality
5.
Behav Ecol ; 32(4): 780, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34421365

ABSTRACT

[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1093/beheco/araa083.].

6.
Behav Ecol ; 32(1): 1-17, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33708004

ABSTRACT

Studies of eusocial insects have extensively investigated two components of task allocation: how individuals distribute themselves among different tasks in a colony and how the distribution of labor changes to meet fluctuating task demand. While discrete age- and morphologically-based task allocation systems explain much of the social order in these colonies, the basis for task allocation in non-eusocial organisms and within eusocial castes remains unknown. Building from recent advances in the study of among-individual variation in behavior (i.e., animal personalities), we explore a potential mechanism by which individuality in behaviors unrelated to tasks can guide the developmental trajectories that lead to task specialization. We refer to the task-based behavioral syndrome that results from the correlation between the antecedent behavioral tendencies and task participation as a task syndrome. In this review, we present a framework that integrates concepts from a long history of task allocation research in eusocial organisms with recent findings from animal personality research to elucidate how task syndromes and resulting task allocation might manifest in animal groups. By drawing upon an extensive and diverse literature to evaluate the hypothesized framework, this review identifies future areas for study at the intersection of social behavior and animal personality.

7.
Science ; 210(4473): 1041-3, 1980 Nov 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17797495

ABSTRACT

According to much current theory, organisms should be able to balance the conflicting demands of the need to feed efficiently and the need to avoid preadtors while feeding. In an experimental conflict situation, it was possible to evaluate the relative fitnesses associated with the available choices and to compare the observed behaviors with predictions derived from fitness considerations. A backswimmer, Notonecta hoffmanni, was capable of balancing these two conflicting factors adaptively.

8.
J Fish Biol ; 75(6): 1410-26, 2009 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20738622

ABSTRACT

Behavioural assays were conducted on newly emerged steelhead Oncorhynchus mykiss to investigate the presence of behavioural syndromes and to determine whether behavioural type in young fish predicts growth rate in a conventional hatchery rearing environment. Individual fry were consistent in their position choice and activity behaviours across safe and unsafe contexts, as well as among assays conducted on different days. Position choice and activity behaviours, however, were not necessarily correlated to each other. Both behaviours predicted feeding rates during behavioural assays, but there was no relationship between fry behaviour and subsequent growth rate or survival during the first 3 months of hatchery rearing. These results support the hypothesis that selection in captivity may be relaxed with respect to behavioural type rather than directional, allowing for increased behavioural variance in domesticated populations. Modest magnitudes of correlations among fry behaviours, however, suggest that behavioural type may be unstable at the onset of the juvenile feeding stage.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal/physiology , Environment , Fisheries , Oncorhynchus mykiss/physiology , Aggression/physiology , Animals , Oncorhynchus mykiss/growth & development , Principal Component Analysis , Survival Analysis
9.
Behav Processes ; 141(Pt 2): 205-219, 2017 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27894933

ABSTRACT

It is well established that parasites can have profound effects on the behaviour of host organisms, and that individual differences in behaviour can influence susceptibility to parasite infections. Recently, two major themes of research have developed. First, there has been a growing interest in the proximate, mechanistic processes underpinning parasite-associated behaviour change, and the interactive roles of the neuro-, immune, and other physiological systems in determining relationships between behaviour and infection susceptibility. Secondly, as the study of behaviour has shifted away from one-off measurements of single behaviours and towards a behavioural syndromes/personality framework, research is starting to focus on the consequences of parasite infection for temporal and contextual consistency of behaviour, and on the implications of different personality types for infection susceptibility. In addition, there is increasing interest in the potential for relationships between cognition and personality to also have implications for host-parasite interactions. As models well-suited to both the laboratory study of behaviour and experimental parasitology, teleost fish have been used as hosts in many of these studies. In this review we provide a broad overview of the range of mechanisms that potentially generate links between fish behaviour, personality, and parasitism, and illustrate these using examples drawn from the recent literature. In addition, we examine the potential interactions between cognition, personality and parasitism, and identify questions that may be usefully investigated with fish models.


Subject(s)
Cognition/physiology , Fishes/physiology , Fishes/parasitology , Host-Parasite Interactions , Personality/physiology , Symbiosis/physiology , Animals
10.
Oecologia ; 71(4): 624-630, 1987 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28312239

ABSTRACT

A stream-breeding race of small-mouthed salamanders (Ambystoma texanum) in central Kentucky produces ova that are twice as large as those of a pond-breeding race found nearby. Embryos of stream-breeders also hatch at a more advanced developmental stage than those of pond-breeders. Morphological evidence indicates that stream-breeders were derived from pond-breeding stock. Assuming that differences between stream and pond-breeders reflect evolutionary change, and that the ancestral pond stock that invaded streams was similar to extant pond-breeders, we examined three hypotheses that might explain changes in ovum size and stage at hatching following the invasion of streams. (1) Larger ovum size evolved indirectly as a consequence of selection for rapid development which minimizes mortality risk from stream drying. (2) Increased ovum (hatchling) size and stage at hatching of stream-breeders are adaptations to resist stream current. (3) Increased ovum (hatchling) size and stage at hatching are adaptations to reduce predation on hatchlings from stream invertebrates. The results of field and laboratory studies only support hypotheses (2) and (3). Hatchlings that were relatively large or at a more advanced developmental stage had slower drift rates and were less vulnerable to predation by Phagocata gracilis, a flatworm abundant in streams in central Kentucky. Developmental and growth parameters were not correlated significantly with ovum size in populations of either geographic race. Differences in degree of parental care among races also cannot explain variation in ovum size since both races abandon their eggs immediately after oviposition.

11.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci ; 365(1560): 4065-76, 2010 Dec 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21078658

ABSTRACT

Dispersal is one of the most fundamental components of ecology, and affects processes as diverse as population growth, metapopulation dynamics, gene flow and adaptation. Although the act of moving from one habitat to another entails major costs to the disperser, empirical and theoretical studies suggest that these costs can be reduced by having morphological, physiological or behavioural specializations for dispersal. A few recent studies on different systems showed that individuals exhibit personality-dependent dispersal, meaning that dispersal tendency is associated with boldness, sociability or aggressiveness. Indeed, in several species, dispersers not only develop behavioural differences at the onset of dispersal, but display these behavioural characteristics through their life cycle. While personality-dependent dispersal has been demonstrated in only a few species, we believe that it is a widespread phenomenon with important ecological consequences. Here, we review the evidence for behavioural differences between dispersers and residents, to what extent they constitute personalities. We also examine how a link between personality traits and dispersal behaviours can be produced and how personality-dependent dispersal affects the dynamics of metapopulations and biological invasions. Finally, we suggest future research directions for population biologists, behavioural ecologists and conservation biologists such as how the direction and the strength of the relationship between personality traits and dispersal vary with ecological contexts.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal , Personality , Aggression , Animal Migration/physiology , Animals , Behavior, Animal/physiology , Behavioral Research , Ecological and Environmental Phenomena , Exploratory Behavior , Female , Life Cycle Stages , Male , Models, Biological , Models, Psychological , Motor Activity , Personality/genetics , Personality/physiology , Phenotype , Population Dynamics , Social Behavior
12.
Trends Ecol Evol ; 10(9): 378-82, 1995 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21237077

ABSTRACT

Evolutionary ecology focuses on optimal traits to provide a mechanistic understanding of ecological patterns. For some issues, however, It might be a mismatch to marry optimality and ecology. Given that many ecological questions involve limits (to species distributions and abundances; to species diversity), it might be useful to focus on `limiting traits' rather than optimal traits; that is, to understand ecological limits it might be useful to identify the things that organisms do poorly, and to study constraints on the evolution of these limiting traits. While a limiting-traits approach has a long history in ecology, relatively few studies have fully applied the approach, and some ecological issues have only recently been examined from this view.

13.
Am Nat ; 142(6): 947-60, 1993 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19425943

ABSTRACT

To our knowledge, this article presents the first test of the hypothesis that variation in size-dependent predation risk on hatchings can cause adaptive shifts in the timing of egg hatching and thus on the size and developmental stage of new hatchlings. Earlier field experiments documented heavy predation by flatworms (Phagocotus gracilis) on smaller, less developed hatchling salamander larvae (Ambystoma texanum and Ambystoma barbouri) but little or no predation on larger, more developmentally advanced larvae. Here, we divided sibships into groups of 12 eggs and compared hatchling traits (time, size, and stage of hatching) for eggs reared in control fresh water versus water with flatworms, flatworm chemicals, or nonpredatory isopods. Both flatworms and flatworm chemicals induced eggs to delay their hatching to a later time and thus a larger size and more advanced developmental stage. In particular, sibships that tended to hatch early in control conditions delayed hatching in response to flatworms and flatworm chemicals, while sibships that hatched late in controls showed no response to either treatment. Nonpredatory isopods did not cause a significant change in hatching traits. Adaptive plasticity in hatching traits can provide excellent, unexploited opportunities for studying the evolution and ecological consequences of a life-history switch point.

14.
Trends Ecol Evol ; 13(9): 350-5, 1998 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21238339

ABSTRACT

Although almost all prey live with many types of predator, most experimental studies of predation have examined the effects of only one predator at a time. Recent work has revealed new insights into the emergent impacts of multiple predators on prey and experimental studies have identified statistical methods for evaluating them. These studies suggest two main types of emergent effect-risk reduction caused by predator-predator interactions and risk enhancement caused by conflicting prey responses to multiple predators. Some theory and generalities are beginning to emerge concerning the conditions that tend to produce these two outcomes.

15.
Trends Ecol Evol ; 9(8): 289-93, 1994 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21236857

ABSTRACT

Two core ideas in the study of mating systems and sexual selection are (1) the existence of a conflict between the sexes over mating decisions, and (2) that variation in ecological conditions drives the evolution of adaptive mating strategies and the diversification of mating systems. A recent burst of experimental studies of mating behavior and sexual selection in water striders has focused on the interaction of these ideas and led to new insights into the evolutionary ecology of mating systems and sexual selection.

16.
Trends Ecol Evol ; 13(2): 77-81, 1998 Feb 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21238209

ABSTRACT

The costs and limits of phenotypic plasticity are thought to have important ecological and evolutionary consequences, yet they are not as well understood as the benefits of plasticity. At least nine ideas exist regarding how plasticity may be costly or limited, but these have rarely been discussed together. The most commonly discussed cost is that of maintaining the sensory and regulatory machinery needed for plasticity, which may require energy and material expenses. A frequently considered limit to the benefit of plasticity is that the environmental cues guiding plastic development can be unreliable. Such costs and limits have recently been included in theoretical models and, perhaps more importantly, relevant empirical studies now have emerged. Despite the current interest in costs and limits of plasticity, several lines of reasoning suggest that they might be difficult to demonstrate.

17.
Anim Behav ; 58(2): 397-407, 1999 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10458891

ABSTRACT

We examined relationships between individual differences in antipredator behaviour and prey morphological characters (size, shape) that influence prey vulnerability. Behavioural responses of Physa gyrina to chemical cues associated with predation by crayfish Orconectes rusticus, were assayed in the laboratory for 6 days over a 13-day period. Snails displayed consistent, individually repeatable responses to the predation cues, including hiding (refuge use) and substratum avoidance (crawling to the water surface or out of the water). We assessed shell morphology using morphometric techniques that isolate geometrically independent components of size and shape variation corresponding to aperture width and apertural obstruction. Previous studies indicate that large size, narrow apertures and obstructed apertures reduce morphological vulnerability to the shell-entry predation tactics used by crayfish. In the present study, small, and thus more vulnerable, prey tended to show stronger antipredator behaviour than large prey (i.e. behavioural compensation for morphological vulnerability). In contrast, behavioural and shape-based defences were positively correlated; snails with narrow apertures showed strong antipredator responses. We refer to this 'double defence' against predators as cospecialization. With either compensation or cospecialization, suites of correlated behavioural or morphological traits must be studied in tandem to understand the adaptive value of prey responses to predators. Copyright 1999 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour.

18.
Trends Ecol Evol ; 12(10): 375-6, 1997 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21238113
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