scholarly journals Inheritance of body size in the Barnacle Goose under different environmental conditions

1993 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 195-208 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kjell Larsson
Author(s):  
Henglong Xu ◽  
Yong Jiang ◽  
Wei Zhang ◽  
Mingzhuang Zhu ◽  
Khaled A. S. Al-Rasheid ◽  
...  

The annual variations in body-size spectra of planktonic ciliate communities and their relationships to environmental conditions were studied based on a 12-month dataset (June 2007 to May 2008) from Jiaozhou Bay on the Yellow Sea coast of northern China. Based on the dataset, the body sizes of the ciliates, expressed as equivalent spherical diameters, included five ranks: S1 (5–35 μm); S2 (35–55 μm); S3 (55–75 μm); S4 (75–100 μm); and S5 (100–350 μm). These body-size ranks showed a clear temporal succession of dominance in the order of S2 (January–April) → S1 (May–July) → S4 (August–September) → S3 (October–December). Multivariate analyses showed that the temporal variations in their body-size patterns were significantly correlated with changes in environmental conditions, especially water temperature, salinity, dissolved oxygen concentration (DO) and nutrients. In terms of abundance, rank S2 was significantly correlated with water temperature, DO and nutrients, whereas ranks S4 and S5 were correlated with the salinity and nutrients respectively (P < 0.05). These results suggest that the body-size patterns of planktonic ciliate communities showed a clear temporal pattern during an annual cycle and significantly associated with environmental conditions in marine ecosystems.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wataru Yamamoto ◽  
Rafael Yuste

AbstractThe neural code relates the activity of the nervous system to the activity of the muscles to the generation of behavior. To decipher it, it would be ideal to comprehensively measure the activity of the entire nervous system and musculature in a behaving animal. As a step in this direction, we used the cnidarian Hydra vulgaris to explore how physiological and environmental conditions alter the activity of the entire neural and muscle tissue and affect behavior. We used whole-body calcium imaging of neurons and muscle cells and studied the effect of temperature, media osmolarity, nutritional state and body size on body contractions.In mounted Hydra, changes in temperature, nutrition or body size did not have a major effect on neural or muscle activity, or on behavior. But changes in media osmolarity altered body contractions, increasing them in hipo-osmolar media solutions and decreasing them in hyperosmolar media. Similar effects were seen in ectodermal, but not in endodermal muscle. Osmolarity also bidirectionally changed the activity of contraction bursts neurons, but not of rhythmic potential neurons.These findings show osmolarity-dependent changes in neuronal activity, muscle activity, and contractions, consistent with the hypothesis that contraction burst neurons respond to media osmolarity, activating ectodermal muscle to generate contraction bursts. This dedicated circuit could serve as an excretory system to prevent osmotic injury. This work demonstrates the feasibility of studying the entire neuronal and muscle activity of behaving animals.Significance StatementWe imaged whole-body muscle and neuronal activity in Hydra in response to different physiological and environmental conditions. Osmolarity bidirectionally altered Hydra contractile behavior. These changes were accompanied by corresponding changes in the activity of one neuronal circuit and one set of muscles. This work is a step toward comprehensive deciphering of the mechanisms of animal behavior by measuring the activity of all neurons and muscle cells.


1988 ◽  
Vol 51 (2) ◽  
pp. 149-162 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. J. Van Noordwijk ◽  
J. H. Van Balen ◽  
W. Scharloo

SummaryWe have analysed data on weight and tarsus length collected during a long-term study of natural populations of Great Tits to evaluate the relative importance of genetic variation in body size. Some of our data were collected over a 25-year period, and therefore include a relatively large sample of naturally occurring environmental conditions. An overall heritability estimate calculated from the uncorrected mean weights of breeding birds amounts to 0·5. This estimate is unlikely to be influenced by resemblance in environmental conditions between relatives. Heritability estimates based on the size of fledglings vary between zero and the value for adults, depending on the environmental conditions during growth. If the feeding conditions for the nestlings are poor, no resemblance between parents and offspring is observed. Selection against small nestlings acts strongly on the environmental variance. This is concluded from the higher heritability estimates in the same cohorts after survival for at least three months after fledging, compared to measurements on nestlings. Such selection acting differentially on the genetic and environmental components of the phenotypic variance has important consequences for our ability to make predictions of phenotypic change from measured natural selection. Nevertheless, the amount of genetic variation would allow rapid response should selection on adult size occur.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (9) ◽  
pp. 331-340
Author(s):  
K. Rozumbetov ◽  
S. Esemuratova ◽  
S. Nisanova ◽  
I. Nazhimov ◽  
A. Esimbetov ◽  
...  

According to studies conducted in recent years, there is a harmful effect of harmful chemicals in the environment on the cardiovascular system. The level of blood pressure is a very important hemodynamic indicator, the level of which provides primary information about diseases of the cardiovascular system. In this study, the indicators of total body size, blood pressure and heart rate were measured in adolescents living in unfavorable environmental conditions of the Aral Sea region. In adolescents of both sexes, body weight deficiency occupied a significant share. In girls and boys, the excess body weight was about 5%. Obesity was not observed in adolescents of both sexes. Hypotension was detected in 17.64% of the females studied by categories of systolic blood pressure, and there were no cases of hypertension among the females. And in males, hypotension of 8.70% and hypertension of 4.35% were observed. According to the categories of diastolic blood pressure, hypotension of 2.95% and hypertension of 8.82% were detected in females, hypotension of 8.69% and hypertension of 8.70% in males.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1968 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 18-29
Author(s):  
Hedwig E. Rose ◽  
Jean Mayer

Activity has long been known to be a major factor in the energy balance of moving organisms. Recently, the relative inactivity of obese individuals and the hyperactivity of thin individuals have received much attention. A study of the relationships of activity, growth, fat storage, and calorie intake of 31 infants living under normal home environmental conditions suggests that the unusually fat and the unusually thin infant may have, respectively, a smaller and larger number of active cells and, therefore, lower and higher BMR's per unit of body mass than the average individual. This would seem to confirm the theory that BMR is a function of inherent mitochondrial activity rather than of body size or shape.


Copeia ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 107 (3) ◽  
pp. 550
Author(s):  
Joshua R. Ennen ◽  
Mary Lou Hoffacker ◽  
Will Selman ◽  
Christopher Murray ◽  
James Godwin ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 3 (5) ◽  
pp. 113
Author(s):  
Paul Chinedu Echi ◽  
Sanil George ◽  
Suresh Kumar

Seasonal occurrence of acanthocephalans is replete with controversies stemmed from hosts' activities and environmental conditions etc. Ergo, recent mitochondrial DNA resolved two new cystacanths sequences in a parentenic host Polyacanthorhynchus nigerianus NG1 KC904074 and Polyacanthorhynchus echiyensis NG5 KC9040745 has necessitated the present study between wet and dry seasons. Though the trend of infection followed a similar pattern, NG5 had higher prevalence than NG1 with highest prevalence 5.3% in January. However, the trend changed from March-July when the occurrence of NG1 had relatively much lower monthly prevalence < 2.6%. Their differential body size NG5 994.61 +/- 110.07 mm and NG1 237.58 +/- 30.34 mm, respectively, resulted in a trade-off between their body sizes and numbers.


1992 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 315-322
Author(s):  
Hilkka Kenttämies ◽  
Kerstin Smeds

Association between repeatedly scored body size and fur characteristics were studied in live blue foxes. Gradings in cages and outside cages in lamplight and daylight were also compared. Colour tended to be easier and clarity more difficult to evaluate than the other traits. Differences between judges in accuracy of grading were greater than between various grading environments. The grading was more reliable outside cages than within cages. The most uniform results were obtained when the same judge graded the animals in the same environmental conditions.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 81-87
Author(s):  
Henna Mir ◽  
Shivalingesh KK ◽  
Chanchal Gangwar ◽  
Waseem Ashraf

Sports dentistry originated in 1980s. Most of the sports-related injuries are musculoskeletal. There are various factors which are responsible for the sports injury like the age, gender, growth, body size, type of sports, environmental conditions etc. and sports dentistry includes the prevention and management of it. There are various methods for avoiding oral sports injuries like the use of helmets, mouthguards, facemasks etc. The dentist can play an important role in informing coaches and sportspersons about the importance of preventing orofacial injuries. The aim of this review article is to increase professional awareness towards sports dentistry.


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