106 resultados para competitive replacement


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A new competitive enzyme immunoassay technique has been developed for the determination of concentrations of the trypanocidal drug isometamidium chloride (Samorin) in bovine serum. The method has been shown to be highly repeatable and reproducible, and it has several advantages over previous immunoassay techniques for the drug. There are fewer incubation steps overall; microtitre plates may be of coated in batches and stored frozen for future use; and the competition incubation is overnight and is followed only by a brief colour development stage of 10 min. Coefficients of variation (CVs) of duplicate samples were similar to 5%, and mean response variances of untreated cattle (n = 57) were small (CV, 10%). Partitioning of variance showed 77% of this variability to be intrinsic to the samples, and the remaining 23% was due to the procedure. The limit of detection was approximately 0.5 ng ml(-1), which was considered to be satisfactory for the intended use of the method. The drug could be detected in serum of treated cattle for up to 10 weeks following treatment, and determinations showed a high level of reproducibility.

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1. We present a model of the ideal free distribution (IFD) where differences between phenotypes other than those involved in direct competition for resources are considered. We show that these post-acquisitional differences can have a dramatic impact on the predicted distributions of individuals.

2. Specifically, we predict that, when the relative abilities of phenotypes are independent of location, there will be a continuum of mixed evolutionarily stable strategy (ESS) distributions (where all phenotypes are present in all patches).

3, When the relative strengths of the post-acquisitional trait in the two phenotypes differ between patches, however, we predict only a single ESS at equilibrium. Further, this distribution may be fully or partially segregated (with the distribution of at least one phenotype being spatially restricted) but it will never be mixed.

4, Our results for post-acquisitional traits mirror those of Parker (1982) for direct competitive traits. This comparison illustrates that it does not matter whether individual differences are expressed before or after competition for resources, they will still exert considerable influence on the distribution of the individuals concerned.