نتایج جستجو برای: queen elisa

تعداد نتایج: 51569  

Journal: :Journal of the Korea Society of Computer and Information 2012

Journal: :Acta biotheoretica 2015
Jorge Duarte Carla Rodrigues Cristina Januário Nuno Martins Josep Sardanyés

Coevolution between two antagonistic species has been widely studied theoretically for both ecologically- and genetically-driven Red Queen dynamics. A typical outcome of these systems is an oscillatory behavior causing an endless series of one species adaptation and others counter-adaptation. More recently, a mathematical model combining a three-species food chain system with an adaptive dynami...

Journal: :Journal of evolutionary biology 2015
A F G Bourke

Inclusive fitness theory predicts that sex investment ratios in eusocial Hymenoptera are a function of the relatedness asymmetry (relative relatedness to females and males) of the individuals controlling sex allocation. In monogynous ants (with one queen per colony), assuming worker control, the theory therefore predicts female-biased sex investment ratios, as found in natural populations. Rece...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2007
Kevin W Wanner Andrew S Nichols Kimberly K O Walden Axel Brockmann Charles W Luetje Hugh M Robertson

By using a functional genomics approach, we have identified a honey bee [Apis mellifera (Am)] odorant receptor (Or) for the queen substance 9-oxo-2-decenoic acid (9-ODA). Honey bees live in large eusocial colonies in which a single queen is responsible for reproduction, several thousand sterile female worker bees complete a myriad of tasks to maintain the colony, and several hundred male drones...

Journal: :Molecular ecology 2003
Stephanie Jemielity Laurent Keller

Queen-worker conflicts in social insect societies have received much attention in the past decade. In many species workers modify the colony sex ratio to their own advantage or produce their own male offspring. In some other species, however, queens seem to be able to prevent workers from making selfish reproductive decisions. So far, little effort has been made to find out how queens may keep ...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2009
Juliana Rangel Heather R Mattila Thomas D Seeley

Most species of social insects have singly mated queens, but in some species each queen mates with numerous males to create a colony whose workers belong to multiple patrilines. This colony genetic structure creates a potential for intracolonial nepotism. One context with great potential for such nepotism arises in species, like honey bees, whose colonies reproduce by fissioning. During fission...

Journal: :The Lancet 1888

Journal: :The English Historical Review 1887

Journal: :Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 1997

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید