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1.
Integr Org Biol ; 5(1): obad036, 2023.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37867910

RESUMEN

Human activities are rapidly changing ecosystems around the world. These changes have widespread implications for the preservation of biodiversity, agricultural productivity, prevalence of zoonotic diseases, and sociopolitical conflict. To understand and improve the predictive capacity for these and other biological phenomena, some scientists are now relying on observatory networks, which are often composed of systems of sensors, teams of field researchers, and databases of abiotic and biotic measurements across multiple temporal and spatial scales. One well-known example is NEON, the US-based National Ecological Observatory Network. Although NEON and similar networks have informed studies of population, community, and ecosystem ecology for years, they have been minimally used by organismal biologists. NEON provides organismal biologists, in particular those interested in NEON's focal taxa, with an unprecedented opportunity to study phenomena such as range expansions, disease epidemics, invasive species colonization, macrophysiology, and other biological processes that fundamentally involve organismal variation. Here, we use NEON as an exemplar of the promise of observatory networks for understanding the causes and consequences of morphological, behavioral, molecular, and physiological variation among individual organisms.

2.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 3029, 2021 05 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34031384

RESUMEN

Natural sensory environments, despite strong potential for structuring systems, have been neglected in ecological theory. Here, we test the hypothesis that intense natural acoustic environments shape animal distributions and behavior by broadcasting whitewater river noise in montane riparian zones for two summers. Additionally, we use spectrally-altered river noise to explicitly test the effects of masking as a mechanism driving patterns. Using data from abundance and activity surveys across 60 locations, over two full breeding seasons, we find that both birds and bats avoid areas with high sound levels, while birds avoid frequencies that overlap with birdsong, and bats avoid higher frequencies more generally. We place 720 clay caterpillars in willows, and find that intense sound levels decrease foraging behavior in birds. For bats, we deploy foraging tests across 144 nights, consisting of robotic insect-wing mimics, and speakers broadcasting bat prey sounds, and find that bats appear to switch hunting strategies from passive listening to aerial hawking as sound levels increase. Natural acoustic environments are an underappreciated niche axis, a conclusion that serves to escalate the urgency of mitigating human-created noise.


Asunto(s)
Acústica , Conducta Animal , Aves/fisiología , Quirópteros/fisiología , Ríos , Animales , Percepción Auditiva , Ecolocación , Humanos , Insectos , Mariposas Nocturnas/fisiología , Ruido , Conducta Predatoria , Sonido
4.
Plant Physiol ; 64(6): 1000-4, 1979 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16661081

RESUMEN

Studies on the circadian rhythm of conidiation in the bd strain of Neurospora crassa Shear and Dodge have shown that temperature step-up and step-down perturbations produce phase advances and delays, respectively. Pulse-up and pulse-down treatments lead to both phase advances and delays. The resulting phase shifts can be very large, and few to no transients are observed.Small amplitude temperature cycles are capable of entraining the circadian rhythm, and holding bd at low temperatures appears to stop the circadian oscillator late in the subjective night (circadian time 2200). Aspects of the temperature responses that are somewhat unusual include the high sensivity, the lack of transients, and the phase at which the oscillator stops under low temperatures.

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