نتایج جستجو برای: edaphic mites

تعداد نتایج: 7379  

2014
Joseph E. Knelman Steven K. Schmidt Ryan C. Lynch John L. Darcy Sarah C. Castle Cory C. Cleveland Diana R. Nemergut

The ecological mechanisms driving community succession are widely debated, particularly for microorganisms. While successional soil microbial communities are known to undergo predictable changes in structure concomitant with shifts in a variety of edaphic properties, the causal mechanisms underlying these patterns are poorly understood. Thus, to specifically isolate how nutrients--important dri...

Journal: :Molecular ecology 2014
Tracy M Misiewicz Paul V A Fine

Soil heterogeneity is an important driver of divergent natural selection in plants. Neotropical forests have the highest tree diversity on earth, and frequently, soil specialist congeners are distributed parapatrically. While the role of edaphic heterogeneity in the origin and maintenance of tropical tree diversity is unknown, it has been posited that natural selection across the patchwork of s...

2014
David Y. P. Tng David P. Janos Gregory J. Jordan Ellen Weber David M. J. S. Bowman

Although rain forest is characterized as pyrophobic, pyrophilic giant eucalypts grow as rain forest emergents in both temperate and tropical Australia. In temperate Australia, such eucalypts depend on extensive, infrequent fires to produce conditions suitable for seedling growth. Little is known, however, about constraints on seedlings of tropical giant eucalypts. We tested whether seedlings of...

2015
Mark A. Higgins Gregory P. Asner Christopher B. Anderson Roberta E. Martin David E. Knapp Raul Tupayachi Eneas Perez Nydia Elespuru Alfonso Alonso

Field studies in Amazonia have found a relationship at continental scales between soil fertility and broad trends in forest structure and function. Little is known at regional scales, however, about how discrete patterns in forest structure or functional attributes map onto underlying edaphic or geological patterns. We collected airborne LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) data and VSWIR (Visib...

2011

In the course of the routine parasitological examination of housedust samples, nearly 65,000 mites have been isolated and identified since 1969. So far the beginning of the 1980's chitinous particles of other Dermatophago­ ides mites and those of other mite species have regularly been found in the bo­ dies of house-dust mites, mostly D. farinae females. The possible significance and causes of t...

Journal: :Brazilian journal of biology = Revista brasleira de biologia 2015
S N Gomes T C Pesenti M P Cirne G Müller

AbstractDuring the period 2010-2012, eighty individuals of Calidris fuscicollis (Vieillot, 1819) were collected on the southern coast of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, with the objective of determining the presence of feather mites. Of the 80 birds examined, 32.5% were infested by mites, identified as Avenzoaria calidridis (Oudemans, 1904) (Avenzoariidae) (31.25%), Montchadskiana securicata (Megnin...

2017
Daniela HOFFMANN Peter SCHAUSBERGER

Research on aboveground-belowground interactions has recently experienced a boost. In spite of the relative prosperity of scientific literature featuring aboveground herbivorous arthropods involved in abovegroundbelowground interactions, mites have so far been under-represented. To stimulate work with mites in this area, we summarize existing research on plant-mediated interactions of abovegrou...

Journal: :Journal of evolutionary biology 2012
J J Soler J M Peralta-Sánchez A M Martín-Platero M Martín-Vivaldi M Martínez-Bueno A P Møller

Potentially, pathogenic bacteria are one of the main infective agents against which a battery of chemical and physical barriers has evolved in animals. Among these are the secretions by the exocrine uropygial gland in birds. The antimicrobial properties of uropygial secretions may prevent colonization and growth of microorganisms on feathers, skin and eggshells. However, uropygial gland secreti...

Journal: :Genetics 2004
Xiaoyu Zhang Ning Jiang Cédric Feschotte Susan R Wessler

Miniature inverted-repeat transposable elements (MITEs) are short, nonautonomous DNA elements that are widespread and abundant in plant genomes. Most of the hundreds of thousands of MITEs identified to date have been divided into two major groups on the basis of shared structural and sequence characteristics: Tourist-like and Stowaway-like. Since MITEs have no coding capacity, they must rely on...

Journal: :Genetics 2010
Masaki Momose Yutaka Abe Yoshihiro Ozeki

Miniature inverted-repeat transposable elements (MITEs) are dispersed in large numbers within the genomes of eukaryotes although almost all are thought to be inactive. Plants have two major groups of such MITEs: Tourist and Stowaway. Mobile MITEs have been reported previously in rice but no active MITEs have been found in dicotyledons. Here, we provide evidence that Stowaway MITEs can be mobili...

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