34 resultados para Arte Colonial
em Université de Lausanne, Switzerland
Resumo:
Mothers can improve the quality of their offspring by increasing the level of certain components in their eggs. To examine whether or not mothers increase deposition of such components in eggs as a function of food availability, we food-supplemented black-legged kittiwake females (Rissa tridactyla) before and during egg laying and compared deposition of androgens and antibodies into eggs of first and experimentally induced replacement clutches. Food-supplemented females transferred lower amounts of androgens and antibodies into eggs of induced replacement clutches than did non-food-supplemented mothers, whereas first clutches presented no differences between treatments. Our results suggest that when females are in lower condition, they transfer more androgens and antibodies into eggs to facilitate chick development despite potential long-term costs for juveniles. Females in prime condition may avoid these potential long-term costs because they can provide their chicks with more and higher quality resources.
Resumo:
Adoption is frequent in colonial animals where opportunities for dependent young to receive care from nonbiological parents are high. The departure of dependent young from their original family to seek adoption in neighbouring families is thought to be induced by sibling competition for access to limited resources provided by poor-quality parents. We tested this hypothesis in the colonial Alpine swift by manipulating the number of young reared per brood, with the prediction that offspring from enlarged broods switch nests more frequently than those from reduced broods. Although nestling swifts hatch with little locomotor activity, from 20 days until their first flight at 50-70 days they frequently move out of their nests to seek adoption in neighbouring families. Although nestlings reared in experimentally enlarged broods were lighter and their body mass at day 20 after hatching was more variable than in nestlings reared in reduced broods, there was no difference between the two treatments in the frequency of nests switching and in the age when nestlings switched nests for the first time. However, consistent with other evidence that nest switching by nestling swifts evolved as a strategy to reduce ectoparasite load, young from broods with naturally high numbers of the ectoparasitic louse fly Crataerina melbae were more prone to switch nests. This shows that ectoparasitism rather than sibling competition is a key proximate factor promoting the evolution of nest switching in the colonial Alpine swift. (c) 2006 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Resumo:
Da Bisanzio alla Santa Russia Résumé Ivan Foletti Le texte du premier volume de YIkonografija Bogomatri (Iconographie de la mère de Dieu), publié en 1914 à Saint Pétersbourg par Nikodim Kondakov et traduit dans le cadre de ce travail, soulève chez le lecteur contemporain de nombreuses questions quant au développement des études byzantines, entre la fin du XIXe et le début du XXe siècle. Il s'agit, avant tout, de comprendre les enjeux fondamentaux de la naissance de cette discipline, dans le cadre de l'Europe romantique et plus particulièrement de son acculturation à la réalité russe. En se concentrant sur le personnage de Nikodim Kondakov, considéré par ses contemporains comme le patriarche des études byzantines, ce travail propose d'articuler la réflexion autour de deux axes principaux. Il s'agit d'une part de la relation entre histoire de l'art et société : dans le contexte russe et plus largement dans celui de l'Europe, la recherche semble se développer en étroite relation avec les tendances politiques et sociales de ces années. C'est probablement la raison du choix pour Nikodim Kondakov de se dédier aux études de Byzance, dans les années où la Russie prépare sa guerre contre la Turquie (1877-1878), tandis que l'opinion publique est martelée avec un revival de l'ancienne idéologie de Moscou comme « troisième Rome » et héritière de Byzance. Un autre aspect significatif est la décision de ce même chercheur d'étudier les antiquités russes sous le règne de Alexandre III, le tzar « contre-réformateur », quand la Russie se replie sur elle même autour de trois mots d'ordre: Orthodoxie, autocratie, et nationalité. D'autre part, la réception de Kondakov en Occident, semble aussi dépendre de questions politiques. Son accueil très favorable en France et en Angleterre contraste avec une perception bien plus négative en Autriche et en Allemagne ; il s'agit là d'une position en étonnante harmonie avec les traités politiques - l'alliance franco-russe de 1891 et la triple entente de 1911 qui opposent les pays membres aux empires centraux. Le deuxième axe considéré est celui d'une analyse systématique de la naissance des études sur les images cultuelles russes, les icônes. Les pages dédiées à ce phénomène dans Γ Ikonograflja Bogomatri, mais également dans les autres ouvrages de Kondakov, posent clairement la question des raisons nationalistes et populistes de la redécouverte, autour de 1900, en Russie et en Europe de cette expression visuelle. Conclusion logique de la tradition historiographique du XIXe siècle - qui s'est préoccupé des icônes perçues comme documents historiques - cette nouvelle vague d'intérêt pose la question de l'icône commé"oeuvre d'art. C'est autour de ce débat, alimenté également par l'apparition des avant-gardes, que se situent les plus importants savants russes de ces années en opposant deux manières radicalement différentes de percevoir l'art : à l'approche positiviste s'oppose celle d'un renouveau d'Hegel. Ce débat sera brusquement interrompu par la révolution, suivie par les années staliniennes qui vont définitivement « discerner » laquelle des deux méthodes et approches est la « juste », en congelant de fait, pour des décennies, toute possibilité de discussion. Cette thèse souhaiterait donc ouvrir en Occident un débat pour l'instant marginal dans les études : celui de la naissance d'une histoire de l'art moderne en Russie, mais également de l'émergence d'une nouvelle Europe savante autour de 1900 où l'histoire de l'art byzantin s'affirme comme un domaine émergent.
Resumo:
Directional selection for parasite resistance is often intense in highly social host species. Using a partial cross-fostering experiment we studied environmental and genetic variation in immune response and morphology in a highly colonial bird species, the house martin (Delichon urbica). We manipulated intensity of infestation of house martin nests by the haematophagous parasitic house martin bug Oeciacus hirundinis either by spraying nests with a weak pesticide or by inoculating them with 50 bugs. Parasitism significantly affected tarsus length, T cell response, immunoglobulin and leucocyte concentrations. We found evidence of strong environmental effects on nestling body mass, body condition, wing length and tarsus length, and evidence of significant additive genetic variance for wing length and haematocrit. We found significant environmental variance, but no significant additive genetic variance in immune response parameters such as T cell response to the antigenic phytohemagglutinin, immunoglobulins, and relative and absolute numbers of leucocytes. Environmental variances were generally greater than additive genetic variances, and the low heritabilities of phenotypic traits were mainly a consequence of large environmental variances and small additive genetic variances. Hence, highly social bird species such as the house martin, which are subject to intense selection by parasites, have a limited scope for immediate microevolutionary response to selection because of low heritabilities, but also a limited scope for long-term response to selection because evolvability as indicated by small additive genetic coefficients of variation is weak.
Resumo:
Little is known about the maternal transfer of antibodies in natural host-parasite systems despite its possible evolutionary and ecological implications. In domestic animals, the maternal transfer of antibodies can enhance offspring survival via a temporary protection against parasites, but it can also interfere with the juvenile immune response to antigens. We tested the functional role of maternal antibodies in a natural population of a long-lived colonial seabird, the kittiwake (Rissa tridactyla), using a vaccine (Newcastle disease virus vaccine) to mimic parasite exposure combined with a cross-fostering design. We first investigated the role of prior maternal exposure on the interannual transmission of Ab to juveniles. We then tested the effect of these antibodies on the juvenile immune response to the same antigen. The results show that specific maternal antibodies were transferred to chicks 1 year after maternal exposure and that these antibodies were functional, i.e. they affected juvenile immunity. These results suggest that the role of maternal antibodies may depend on the timing and pattern of offspring exposure to parasites, along with the patterns of maternal exposure and the dynamics of her immune response. Overall, our approach underlines that although the transgenerational transfer of antibodies in natural populations is likely to have broad implications, the nature of these effects may vary dramatically among host-parasite systems, depending on the physiological mechanisms involved and the ecological context.