365 resultados para Reproduktion


Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

From 1993 to 2003 special surveys were conducted to analyse temporal and spatial aspects of the spawning activities of cod in the Baltic Sea. The ICES advice for cod in the Baltic Sea is based on yearly stock assessments of two separate stocks the western (SD 22 – 24) and the eastern stock (SD 25 – 32). Both stocks are characterized by different spawning seasons. The general progression of the maturity suggests that two types of development can be distinguished. In the western Baltic Sea (SD 22) the maturity development is temporal stable, with a relative short, main spawning period from March to April - spring spawner. In the Arkona Sea and Bornholm Basin the main spawning season starts in June and probably finishes in September - summer spawner. The proportion of spawners in summer is significantly higher than in spring in the Arkona Sea and Bornholm Basin. This again underlines the importance of the Arkona Sea for the reproduction success of the eastern Baltic cod stock. The analysis furthermore show, that the proportion of male spawners was significantly higher than the proportion of female spawners in all areas and the investigated months. This observation suggests that the reproductive success is only limited by the number of female cod which participates in the spawning process.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Surveys were conducted to analyse temporal and spatial aspects of the spawning activities of cod in the Baltic Sea from 1993 to 2003. Part I of the article describes the general maturity development and the spawning activities in the western Baltic Sea, the Arkona Sea and the Bornholm Sea. The studies suggest that two types of spawner can be distinguished, the spring spawner in the western Baltic Sea and the summer spawner in the Arkona Sea and the Bornholm Basin. The descriptive analysis is supported by statistical studies presented in this article. It is shown, that the proportion of spawning individuals is significantly higher in summer than in spring in the ArkonaSea and the Bornholm Sea. Furthermore, it is shown that reproductive mixing of both types of spawner is possible in the Arkona Sea in May/June due to the hydrographical conditions in the Arkona Sea which were suitable in 8 of 10 years for successful reproduction of both Baltic cod stocks, and that spatial expansion of spawning activities of the eastern Baltic cod stock into the Arkona Sea is positive correlated with the size of spawning stock in the Bornholm Sea.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Es wurde ein Teil der life-history, die Reproduktion, von Dinosauriern, speziell der Sauropoden, den größten bekannten jemals auf der Erde existierenden Landtieren, untersucht, um unter anderem den Zusammenhang zwischen Gigantismus und Reproduktion zu erforschen. Hierzu wurde eine mögliche life-history für Sauropoden, auf Grundlage des heutigen Forschungsstands in der Biologie und der Paläontologie, anhand einer Literaturrecherche erstellt. Des Weiteren wurde ein Modell zur Reproduktion bei ausgestorbenen oviparen Amnioten, basierend auf bestehenden Zusammenhängen zwischen Körpergröße und verschiedenen masse-spezifischen Reproduktionsmerkmalen (Eigewicht, Gelegegewicht, jähr. Gelegegewicht) bei rezenten oviparen Amnioten, erarbeitet. Mit Hilfe dieses Modells und Informationen aus Fossilfunden wurde der Frage nachgegangen, wie diese Reproduktionsmerkmale bei Dinosauriern wahrscheinlich ausgesehen haben. Weiterhin erfolgte die Überprüfung der Hypothese, dass Dinosaurier, insbesondere Sauropoden, eine höhere Reproduktionskapazität hatten als gleich große landlebende Säugetiere, was ersteren im Vergleich zu letzteren ermöglicht haben soll so viel größer zu werden (Janis und Carrano 1992). rnDie Untersuchungen der Zusammenhänge zwischen Körpergewicht und den masse-spezifischen Reproduktionsmerkmalen ergaben, dass das Körpergewicht immer stark mit den untersuchten Reproduktionsmerkmalen korreliert war. Große Vögel und große Reptilien unterscheiden sich in ihrem relativen Eigewicht (Eigewicht/Körpergewicht). Vögel haben relativ größere Eier. Betrachtet man das relative Gelegegewicht oder das relative jährliche Gelegegewicht so wird der Unterschied kleiner bzw. ist zwischen manchen Reptilien- und Vogelgruppen nicht mehr vorhanden. Dinosaurier hatten relative Eigewichte, die zwischen denen von Reptilien und Vögel liegen. Basale Dinosaurier, wie Prosauropoden, waren in ihrer Reproduktion eher reptilien-ähnlich, während vogel-ähnliche Theropoden eine Reproduktion hatten, die sich besser durch ein Vogelmodel beschreiben lässt. Die Reproduktion anderer Dinosaurier, wie Sauropoden und Hadrosaurier, lässt sich nicht eindeutig durch eines der beiden Modelle beschreiben und/oder die Modelle variierten in Abhängigkeit des betrachteten Merkmals. Trotzdem war es möglich für alle untersuchten Dinosaurier eine Abschätzung zur Gelegegröße und der Anzahl der jährlich gelegten Eier zu machen. Diese Schätzungen ergaben, dass die vermutete hohe Reproduktionskapazität von mehreren hundert Eiern pro Jahr nur für extrem große Sauropoden (70 t) haltbar ist. rnMit Ausnahme der Nagetiere fand ich die Unterschiede in der Reproduktionskapazität von Vögeln und Säugetieren, die Janis und Carrano (1992) postulierten, sogar auf der Ebene von Ordnungen. Dinosauriergelege waren größer als die Würfe von gleichgroßen (extrapolierten) Säugetieren während die Gelegegröße von gleichgroßen (extrapolierten) Vögeln ähnlich der von Sauropoden war. Da das Aussterberisiko häufig mit niedriger Reproduktionskapazität korreliert ist, impliziert dies ein geringeres Aussterberisiko großer Dinosaurier im Vergleich zu großen Säugetieren. Populationen sehr großer Dinosaurier, wie der Sauropoden, konnten vermutlich daher, über evolutionäre Zeiträume betrachtet, sehr viel länger existieren als Populationen großer Säugetiere.rn

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Social reproduction in Värmland, Sweden This study uses the 2014 SOM-survey of the Swedish region of Värmland (n = 1420) to study the ways in which social reproduction is expressed in a regional setting. Following the sociology of Bourdieu the study presents statistically significant results that highlight that a.) class habitus shapes the type of home one creates for oneself and b.) one’s level of education, and that c.) the orientation towards the ”legitimate” culture is particularly pronounced among those with relatively high volumes of economic and cultural capital and finally that d.) a regional elite is consecrated in the cultural and urban center of the region. Although the sociological explanation to ”why we do what we do” is not the only one, this study shows that it is an important one. Class, expressed as class habitus and volume of economic and cultural capital, continues to shape peoples’ life choices and their orientations in the social world.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Der vorliegende Beitrag fokussiert auf den Bildungsabschnitt im Leben eines mehrsprachigen Kindes, in dem der Übergang vom Kindergarten in die Primarschule ethnographisch untersucht wird. Am Beispiel von Dokumenten- und Praxisanalysen werden Selektionsprozesse und die Entstehung von Bildungsungleichheit auf der Mikroebene des pädagogischen Alltags insbesondere beim untersuchten Übergang rekonstruiert. Kontextuelle bildungspolitische Rahmenbedingungen werden dabei ebenfalls thematisiert. (DIPF/Orig.)

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Life-history theory states that although natural selection would favour a maximisation of both reproductive output and life-span, such a combination can not be achieved in any living organism. According to life-history theory the reason for the fact that not all traits can be maximised simultaneously is that different traits compete with each other for resources. These relationships between traits that constrain the simultaneous evolution of two or more traits are called trade-offs. Therefore, during different life-stages an individual needs to optimise its allocation of resources to life-history components such as growth, reproduction and survival. Resource limitation acts on these traits and therefore investment in one trait, e.g. reproduction, reduces the resources available for investment in another trait, e.g. residual reproduction or survival. In this thesis I study how food resources during different stages of the breeding event affect reproductive decisions in the Ural owl (Strix uralensis) and the consequences of these decisions on parents and offspring. The Ural owl is a suitable study species for such studies in natural populations since they are long-lived, site-tenacious, and feed on voles. The vole populations in Fennoscandia fluctuate in three- to four-year cycles, which create a variable food environment for the Ural owls to cope with. The thesis gives new insight in reproductive costs and their consequences in natural animal populations with emphasis on underlying physiological mechanisms. I found that supplementary fed Ural owl parents invest supplemented food resources during breeding in own self-maintenance instead of allocating those resources to offspring growth. This investment in own maintenance instead of improving current reproduction had carry-over effects to the following year in terms of increased reproductive output. Therefore, I found evidence that reduced reproductive costs improves future reproductive performance. Furthermore, I found evidence for the underlying mechanism behind this carry-over effect of supplementary food on fecundity. The supplementary-fed parents reduced their feeding investment in the offspring compared to controls, which enabled the fed female parents to invest the surplus resources in parasite resistance. Fed female parents had lower blood parasite loads than control females and this effect lasted until the following year when also reproductive output was increased. Hence, increased investment in parasite resistance when resources are plentiful has the potential to mediate positive carry-over effects on future reproduction. I further found that this carry-over effect was only present when potentials for future reproduction were good. The thesis also provides new knowledge on resource limitation on maternal effects. I found that increased resources prior to egg laying improve the condition and health of Ural owl females and enable them to allocate more resources to reproduction than control females. These additional resources are not allocated to increase the number of offspring, but instead to improve the quality of each offspring. Fed Ural owl females increased the size of their eggs and allocated more health improving immunological components into the eggs. Furthermore, the increased egg size had long-lasting effects on offspring growth, as offspring from larger eggs were heavier at fledging. Limiting resources can have different short- and long-term consequences on reproductive decisions that affect both offspring number and quality. In long-lived organisms, such as the Ural owl, it appears to be beneficial in terms of fitness to invest in long breeding life-span instead of additional investment in current reproduction. In Ural owls, females can influence the phenotypic quality of the offspring by transferring additional resources to the eggs that can have long-lasting effects on growth.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Social groups are common across animal species. The reasons for grouping are straightforward when all individuals gain directly from cooperating. However, the situation becomes more complex when helping entails costs to the personal reproduction of individuals. Kin selection theory has offered a fruitful framework to explain such cooperation by stating that individuals may spread their genes not only through their own reproduction, but also by helping related individuals reproduce. However, kin selection theory also implicitly predicts conflicts when groups consist of non-clonal individuals, i.e. relatedness is less than one. Then, individual interests are not perfectly aligned, and each individual is predicted to favour the propagation of their own genome over others. Social insects provide a solid study system to study the interplay between cooperation and conflict. Breeding systems in social insects range from solitary breeding to eusocial colonies displaying complete division of reproduction between the fertile queen and the sterile worker caste. Within colonies, additional variation is provided by the presence of several reproductive individuals. In many species, the queen mates multiply, which causes the colony to consist of half-sib instead of full-sib offspring. Furthermore, in many species colonies contain multiple breeding queens, which further dilutes relatedness between colony members. Evolutionary biology is thus faced with the challenge to answer why such variation in social structure exists, and what the consequences are on the individual and population level. The main part of this thesis takes on this challenge by investing the dynamics of socially polymorphic ant colonies. The first four chapters investigate the causes and consequences of different social structures, using a combination of field studies, genetic analyses and laboratory experiments. The thesis ends with a theoretical chapter focusing on different social interactions (altruism and spite), and the evolution of harming traits. The main results of the thesis show that social polymorphism has the potential to affect the behaviour and traits of both individuals and colonies. For example, we found that genetic polymorphism may increase the phenotypic variation between individuals in colonies, and that socially polymorphic colonies may show different life history patterns. We also show that colony cohesion may be enhanced even in multiple-queen colonies through patterns of unequal reproduction between queens. However, the thesis also demonstrates that spatial and temporal variation between both populations and environments may affect individual and colony traits, to the degree that results obtained in one place or at one time may not be applicable in other situations. This opens up potential further areas of research to explain these differences.