Origin of Modern Species

2021 ◽  
pp. 503-511
Author(s):  
Frank Lewis Marsh
Keyword(s):  
Diversity ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 256
Author(s):  
Petro M. Tsarenko ◽  
Olena P. Bilous ◽  
Olha M. Kryvosheia-Zakharova ◽  
Halyna H. Lilitska ◽  
Sophia Barinova

The species diversity and changes in the structural dynamics of the algal flora from the alpine lake Nesamovyte has been studied for 100 years. During the period of investigations, 234 species (245 infraspecific taxa) were revealed to cover more than 70% of the modern species composition of the studied lake. The modern biodiversity of algae is characterized by an increase in the number of widespread forms, a change from the baseline “montane” complex in comparison to the beginning of the 20th century. Nevertheless, the Nesamovyte Lake still has a unique algae composition that is typical for high-mountainous European lakes. The presence of a different complex of conventionally arctic species of algae, in particular, diatoms is discussed. Structural changes in the taxonomic composition of the algal flora of the lake as well as in the complex of the leading genera, species and their diversity are revealed. An ecological analysis of the algal species composition of the lake showed vulnerability and degradation to the ecosystem of the lake. On this basis, the issue regarding the question of protection and preservation of the algae significance and uniqueness of the flora of algae in the Nesamovyte Lake are discussed.


Phytotaxa ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 167 (1) ◽  
pp. 141
Author(s):  
GERGELY KIRÁLY ◽  
ZOLTÁN BARINA ◽  
BOHUMIL TRÁVNÍČEK

The genus Rubus Linnaeus (1753: 492) with nearly 700 species in Europe (Kurtto et al. 2010) constitutes an extraordinarily taxonomically critical group within the Rosaceae (Rosoideae). The richness of morphotypes combined with a poor understanding of the breeding system of apomictic brambles has resulted in the description of thousands of entities. Lack of taxonomic standards and an overwhelming number of scientific names has caused nomenclatorial chaos, which mainly has been resolved by the modern species concept developed in Europe in the late 1900s (“Weberian reform”, Weber 1999; Haveman & de Ronde 2012). However, the review of older names is an extended process and re-evaluation of names has often failed due to lack of type material.


2013 ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael S. Engel ◽  
Laura C.V. Breitkreuz

Thefirst fossil species of the caenohalictine bee genus Agapostemon Guérin-Méneville (Halictinae: Caenohalictini:Agapostemonina) is described and figured from a single male preserved in EarlyMiocene (Burdigalian) amber from the Dominican Republic.  Agapostemon (Notagapostemon) luzziiEngel & Breitkreuz, new species, is compared with modern species and isnoteworthy for the absence of metafemoral modifications [in this regardplesiomorphically resembling the West Indian A. kohliellus (Vachal)and A. centratus (Vachal)], form of the head and protibial antennalcleaner, integumental sculpturing, and male terminalia, the latter of which arefortunately exposed and cleared.  Briefcomments are made on the affinity of the species to others in the West Indiesand surrounding regions as well as possible biogeographic implications.


2021 ◽  
Vol 288 (1963) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nobuaki Mizumoto ◽  
Thomas Bourguignon

Termites are social cockroaches. Because non-termite cockroaches are larger than basal termite lineages, which themselves include large termite species, it has been proposed that termites experienced a unidirectional body size reduction since they evolved eusociality. However, the validity of this hypothesis remains untested in a phylogenetic framework. Here, we reconstructed termite body size evolution using head width measurements of 1638 modern and fossil termite species. We found that the unidirectional body size reduction model was only supported by analyses excluding fossil species. Analyses including fossil species suggested that body size diversified along with speciation events and estimated that the size of the common ancestor of modern termites was comparable to that of modern species. Our analyses further revealed that body size variability among species, but not body size reduction, is associated with features attributed to advanced termite societies. Our results suggest that miniaturization took place at the origin of termites, while subsequent complexification of termite societies did not lead to further body size reduction.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luka Šupraha ◽  
Jorijntje Henderiks

Abstract. The biogeochemical performance of coccolithophores is defined by their overall abundance in the oceans, but also by a wide range in cell size, degree of calcification and carbon production rates between different species. Species’ sensitivity to environmental forcing has been suggested to relate to their cellular PIC : POC ratio and other physiological constraints. Understanding both the short and longer-term adaptive strategies of different coccolithophore lineages, and how these in turn shape the biogeochemical role of the group, is therefore crucial for modeling the ongoing changes in the global carbon cycle. Here we present data on the phenotypic evolution of a large and heavily-calcified genus Helicosphaera (order Zygodiscales) over the past 15 million years (Ma), at two deep-sea drill sites from the tropical Indian Ocean and temperate South Atlantic. The modern species Helicosphaera carteri, which displays eco-physiological adaptations in modern strains, was used to benchmark the use of its coccolith morphology as a physiological proxy in the fossil record. Our results show that, on the single-genotype level, coccolith morphology has no correlation with physiological traits in H. carteri. However, significant correlations of coccolith morphometric parameters with cell size and physiological rates do emerge once multiple genotypes or closely related lineages are pooled together. Using this insight, we interpret the phenotypic evolution in Helicosphaera as a global, resource limitation-driven selection for smaller cells, which appears to be a common adaptive trait among different coccolithophore lineages, from the warm and high-CO2 world of the middle Miocene to the cooler and low-CO2 conditions of the Pleistocene. However, despite a significant decrease in mean size, Helicosphaera kept relatively stable PIC : POC (as inferred from the coccolith aspect ratio) and thus highly conservative biogeochemical output on the cellular level. We argue that this supports its status as an obligate calcifier, like other large and heavily-calcified genera such as Calcidiscus and Coccolithus, and that other adaptive strategies, beyond size-adaptation, must support the persistent, albeit less abundant, occurrence of these taxa. This is in stark contrast with the ancestral lineage of Emiliania and Gephyrocapsa, which not only decreased in mean size but also displayed much higher phenotypic plasticity in degree of calcification while becoming globally more dominant in plankton communities.


Author(s):  
Eleonora Bilotta ◽  
Pietro Pantano

The ingenuity of nature and the power of DNA have generated an infinite range of languages - including human language. The existence of these languages inspires us to design artificial cognitive systems whose dynamic interaction with the environment is grounded, at least to some extent, on the same basic laws. Modern scientific knowledge provides us with new opportunities to investigate and understand the logic underlying biological life. We can then use this logic to derive design principles and computational models for artificial systems. The technologies we apply in these studies provide us with new insights into the complexity of the processes underlying the evolutionary success of modern species. We have yet to fully penetrate the mysteries of these natural languages. Nonetheless, the literature suggests (Chomsky, 1957; Aronof & Rees-Miller, 2003; Bilotta & Pantano, 2006) that while the superficial features of different languages depend on different physical supports and different mechanisms, their deep structures share common rules. These constitute linguistic universals, organized at different levels of complexity, where each level has its own rules of composition. At all levels, we can consider these rules as “production rules” or even as rules of reproduction.


2020 ◽  
pp. 88-106
Author(s):  
Bart J. Wilson

The class of words most likely to be overlooked in a title is the preposition. While this chapter briefly touches on of, as well as to and for, as examples of the mighty unsung and inversely proportional work that prepositions do in language, the focus in this chapter is on the cognitive contribution of the little word in. The chapter posits that an English language convention arose, and now has largely fallen out of use, for dealing with the formidable, yet beautiful, complexity of the meaning of property. The burden of the argument is to show that while this convention lasted for only 500 years, less than 1% of the time our modern species has roamed the planet, it provides an insight into how humans universally and uniquely cognize property. And the argument is this: Humans locate the meaning of property within a thing. Property is contained within the thing.


Author(s):  
Don Moll ◽  
Edward O. Moll

The turtle species that dwell in the world’s rivers, play important, but incompletely understood and largely unappreciated, roles in both the ecology of their respective ecosystems, and in the economy and sociology of the human cultures through which their rivers flow. Accordingly, the precipitous decline of many populations from former levels, and the complete extirpation of some species from large areas of their former ranges is cause for alarm by those concerned, not only with turtles, but with the health and welfare of rivers and humans as well. The causes of these declines are virtually all the result of human activities—including those which involve direct predation on the turtles themselves (and their eggs), removal for the pet trade, and those which result in unfavorable changes in their habitats. The fact that no known modern species has yet been driven to total extinction is testimony to the resiliency and fecundity of river turtle species. This is no cause for complacency—many are almost certainly teetering on the brink now and are facing ever-increasing odds against long-term survival. Some species could be even now beyond hope of recovery, their populations sustained for a time by a relatively few long-lived adults without sufficient collective reproductive “power” to thwart the normal and various mortality sources which plague all turtles, and which their sheer numbers had formerly been able to overcome. However, we are still so ignorant of the population dynamics of these species that we know not which, if any, are doomed. It seems preferable, therefore, as we strive to conserve river turtle stocks that we assume the working philosophy that none is in this category, and focus our efforts and resources toward research and conservation action most likely to return even the most endangered species to robust, sustainable population levels. The roots of the current crisis predate history, beginning with our hominid ancestors, and particularly hunter-gather Homo sapiens’ unparalleled capacity to learn and adapt in order to maximize the harvest of all available food resources.


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