نتایج جستجو برای: symbiont

تعداد نتایج: 5165  

2010
Yoshihiro Fujiwara Masaru Kawato Chikayo Noda Gin Kinoshita Toshiro Yamanaka Yuko Fujita Katsuyuki Uematsu Jun-Ichi Miyazaki

BACKGROUND Deep-sea mussels harboring chemoautotrophic symbionts from hydrothermal vents and seeps are assumed to have evolved from shallow-water asymbiotic relatives by way of biogenic reducing environments such as sunken wood and whale falls. Such symbiotic associations have been well characterized in mussels collected from vents, seeps and sunken wood but in only a few from whale falls. ME...

2017
Miguel Mies Paulo Y. G. Sumida Nils Rädecker Christian R. Voolstra

Symbiodinium are dinoflagellate photosynthetic algae that associate with a diverse array of marine invertebrates, and these relationships are comprehensively documented for adult animal hosts. Conversely, comparatively little is known about the associations during larval development of animal hosts, although four different metazoan phyla (Porifera, Cnidaria, Acoelomorpha, and Mollusca) produce ...

2016
Steven R. Parratt Crystal L. Frost Martijn A. Schenkel Annabel Rice Gregory D. D. Hurst Kayla C. King

Heritable microbial symbionts have profound impacts upon the biology of their arthropod hosts. Whilst our current understanding of the dynamics of these symbionts is typically cast within a framework of vertical transmission only, horizontal transmission has been observed in a number of cases. For instance, several symbionts can transmit horizontally when their parasitoid hosts share ovipositio...

2017
N. Alexia Raharinirina Gunnar Brandt Agostino Merico

The survival of many ecological communities relies on the symbiotic relationships formed by various organisms. An example of a symbiotic association that is often described as mutualistic is the one between corals and algae. Since the algae are located within coral epidermis, they are referred to as “endosymbiont” (more generally “symbiont”) whereas the corals are referred to as “host.” This as...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2012
Rachel N Silverstein Adrienne M S Correa Andrew C Baker

Some reef-building corals have been shown to respond to environmental change by shifting the composition of their algal symbiont (genus Symbiodinium) communities. These shifts have been proposed as a potential mechanism by which corals might survive climate stressors, such as increased temperatures. Conventional molecular methods suggest this adaptive capacity may not be widespread because few ...

Journal: :The Journal of experimental biology 2016
Katie E Hillyer Sergey Tumanov Silas Villas-Bôas Simon K Davy

Bleaching (dinoflagellate symbiont loss) is one of the greatest threats facing coral reefs. The functional cnidarian-dinoflagellate symbiosis, which forms coral reefs, is based on the bi-directional exchange of nutrients. During thermal stress this exchange breaks down; however, major gaps remain in our understanding of the roles of free metabolite pools in symbiosis and homeostasis. In this st...

2015
Christopher J. Freeman David M. Baker Cole G. Easson Robert W. Thacker

To investigate how the interactions between the closely related sponge species Aplysina cauliformis and Aplysina fulva and their symbiotic microbial communities vary under changing environmental conditions, we conducted a manipulative shading experiment with treatments spanning a gradient of 6 irradiances. In A. cauliformis, there was a tight coupling of symbiont and host metabolism across trea...

2012
Huipeng Pan Xianchun Li Daqing Ge Shaoli Wang Qingjun Wu Wen Xie Xiaoguo Jiao Dong Chu Baiming Liu Baoyun Xu Youjun Zhang

While every individual of Bemisia tabaci (Hemiptera: Aleyrodidae) harbors the primary symbiont (P-symbiont) Portiera, the infection frequencies of the six secondary symbionts (S-symbionts) including Hamiltonella, Arsenophonus, Cardinium, Wolbachia, Rickettsia and Fritschea vary greatly among different populations. To characterize the factors influencing the infection dynamics of the six S-symbi...

2014
Irmgard Eichinger Stephan Schmitz-Esser Markus Schmid Charles R Fisher Monika Bright

The siboglinid tubeworm Sclerolinum contortum symbiosis inhabits sulfidic sediments at deep-sea hydrocarbon seeps in the Gulf of Mexico. A single symbiont phylotype in the symbiont-housing organ is inferred from phylogenetic analyses of the 16S ribosomal ribonucleic acid (16S rRNA) gene and fluorescent in situ hybridization. The phylotype we studied here, and a previous study from an arctic hyd...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2006
Teresa E Leonardo Edward B Mondor

The evolution of herbivore-host plant specialization requires low levels of gene flow between populations on alternate plant species. Accordingly, selection for host plant specialization is most effective when genotypes have minimal exposure to, and few mating opportunities with individuals from, alternate habitats. Maternally transmitted bacterial symbionts are common in insect herbivores and ...

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