823 resultados para BODY-SIZE


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We studied the reproduction, sexual dimorphism, and diet of Oxyrhopus trigeminus from two sites in southeastern Brazil. Oxyrhopus trigeminus from Irape Power Plant (IPP) contained vitellogenic follicles and eggs in both rainy and dry seasons and clutch size was not correlated with female snout vent length (SVL). Sexual dimorphism was evident. Females attain larger SVL but males have longer tails. We found three females from Santa Clara Power Plant (SPP) with vitellogenic follicles, all of them collected in the dry season. Mean SVLs of adult females from IPP and SPP were 717.7 mm and 786 mm, respectively. Mean SVL of adult males from IPP was 553.4 mm and the single adult male from SPP was 507 mm. The diet of O. trigeminus from IPP included rodents (46.7%), lizards (33.3%), and birds (20%). The volume of individual prey items was not correlated with snake SVL. The diet of O. trigeminus from SPP included rodents (37.5%), lizards (37.5%), birds (12.5%), and marsupials (12.5%). It seemed that an ontogenetic shift may occur in individuals of this snake species from IPP.

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Locomotor capacity is often considered an excellent measure of whole animal performance because it requires the integrated functioning of many morphological, physiological (and biochemical) traits. However, because studies tend to focus on either structural or functional suits of traits, we know little on whether and how morphological and physiological traits coevolve to produce adequate locomotor capacities. Hence, we investigate the evolutionary relationships between morphological and physiological parameters related to exercise physiology, using tropidurine lizards as a model. We employ a phylogenetic principal component analysis (PCA) to identify variable clusters (factors) related to morphology, energetic metabolism and muscle metabolism, and then analyze the relationships between these clusters and measures of locomotor performance, using two models (star and hierarchical phylogenies). Our data indicate that sprint performance is enhanced by simultaneous evolutionary tendencies affecting relative limb and tail size and physiological traits. Specifically, the high absolute sprint speeds exhibited by tropidurines from the sand dunes are explained by longer limbs, feet and tails and an increased proportion of glycolytic fibers in the leg muscle, contrasting with their lower capacity for overall oxidative metabolism [principal component (PC1)]. However, when sprint speeds are corrected for body size, performance correlates with a cluster (PC3) composed by moderate loads for activity metabolic rate and body size. The simultaneous measurement of morphological and physiological parameters is a powerful tool for exploring patterns of coadaptation and proposing morphophysiological associations that are not directly predictable from theory. This approach may trigger novel directions for investigating the evolution of form and function, particularly in the context of organismal performance.

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Division of labor among workers is common in insect societies and is thought to be important in their ecological success. In most species, division of labor is based on age (temporal castes), but workers in some ants and termites show morphological specialization for particular tasks (physical castes). Large-headed soldier ants and termites are well-known examples of this specialization. However, until now there has been no equivalent example of physical worker subcastes in social bees or wasps. Here we provide evidence for a physical soldier subcaste in a bee. In the neotropical stingless bee Tetragonisca angustula, nest defense is performed by two groups of guards, one hovering near the nest entrance and the other standing on the wax entrance tube. We show that both types of guards are 30% heavier than foragers and of different shape; foragers have relatively larger heads, whereas guards have larger legs. Low variation within each subcaste results in negligible size overlap between guards and foragers, further indicating that they are distinct physical castes. In addition, workers that remove garbage from the nest are of intermediate size, suggesting that they might represent another unrecognized caste. Guards or soldiers are reared in low but sufficient numbers (1-2% of emerging workers), considering that <1% usually perform this task. When challenged by the obligate robber bee Lestrimelitta limao, an important natural enemy, larger workers were able to fight for longer before being defeated by the much larger robber. This discovery opens up opportunities for the comparative study of physical castes in social insects, including the question of why soldiers appear to be so much rarer in bees than in ants or termites.

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Identifying the differences in habitat use for sympatric species is important for understanding the species preferences and the limits of population distribution. We studied the differences in the habitat use of two understudied sympatric species of Ameiva (A. festiva and A. quadrilineata) in a natural reserve of the Caribbean coast of Coast Rica. Ameiva quadrilineata showed a more restrictive habitat use pattern than A. festiva. A. quadrilineata's smaller body size may be one of the factors limiting its habitat range. Both species showed higher density in regenerated forests, while A. quadrilineata was never found in swamp forests. The air temperature and the meteorological condition at the moment of the survey also influenced the occurrence of the A. quadrilineata, while the juveniles of A. festiva were only affected by the meteorological condition. None of the studied variables seemed to affect the occurrence of A. festiva adults. The results of this study can be useful to evaluate possible changes in the species distribution patterns as a consequence of direct (i.e., deforestation) or indirect (i.e., climate change) human activities in the distribution area of these species.

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Pesquisas em contextos Africanos nas quais se estuda o desempenho motor de crianças através do método alométrica são escassas. O estudo teve como objetivo averiguar a variabilidade da aptidão funcional de crianças e jovens rurais Moçambicanos por meio do contraste entre expoentes alométricos teóricos e empíricos. Foram medidas a altura e o peso, e avaliada a aptidão funcional com base em testes selecionados das baterias AAHPERD, EUROFIT e Fitnessgram. Foi considerada a equação alométrica fundamental, Y=aXb. Para além das estatísticas descritivas habituais, recorreu-se à ANOVA fatorial para determinar o efeito da idade e do sexo nas variáveis somáticas e funcionais. Aplicou-se uma extensão do modelo alométrico a partir da ANCOVA após transformação logarítmica das variáveis de interesse. Os valores médios de altura e peso aumentam em função da idade, interagindo significativamente com idade e sexo. Constatou-se um efeito da idade nas provas físicas, com maiores médias dos meninos. Os coeficientes alométricos encontrados são distintos dos esperados teoricamente, sendo maiores nas meninas do que nos meninos em quase todas as provas. Pode-se concluir que existe um dimorfismo sexual nas diferenças de médias na aptidão funcional ao longo da idade. Os expoentes empíricos encontrados, em ambos os sexos, são antagônicos aos esperados teoricamente, salientando ausência do pressuposto da similaridade geométrica. Nas meninas, os expoentes alométricos são, em todas as provas, maiores do que dos meninos.

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[EN] Ammonium (NH4+) release by bacterial remineralization and heterotrophic grazers determines the regenerated fraction of phytoplankton productivity, so the measurement of NH4+ excretion in marine organisms is necessary to characterize both the magnitude and the efficiency of the nitrogen cycle. Glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) is largely responsible for NH4+ formation in crustaceans and consequently should be useful in estimating NH4+ excretion by marine zooplankton.
Here, we address body size and starvation as sources of variability on the GDH to NH4+ excretion ratio (GDH/RNH4+). We found a strong correlation between the RNH4+ and the GDH activity (r2 = 0.87, n = 41) during growth. Since GDH activity maintained a linear relation (b = 0.93) and RNH4+ scaled exponentially (b =0.55) in well fed mysids, the GDH/RNH4+ ratio increased with size. However, the magnitude of its variation increased even more when adult mysids were starved. In this case, the GDH/RNH4+ ratio ranged from 11.23 to 102.41.

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Máster Universitario en Oceanografía

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Il lavoro svolto in questa tesi si propone di valutare la variabilità della composizione corporea nell’infanzia e nell’adolescenza, con particolare attenzione alla transizione dalla prima alla seconda, in relazione allo stato nutrizionale ed agli stili di vita. Lo studio è stato condotto eseguendo misure antropometriche presso scuole primarie e secondarie di Bologna. Sono stati analizzati inoltre dati acquisiti a partire dal 2004. Il campione analizzato comprende 3546 soggetti di età compresa tra 6 anni e 14 anni. In particolare sono state analizzate le principali misurazioni utili per il calcolo della composizione corporea, evidenziando i parametri antropometrici principali quali BMI, circonferenza vita, WHR, %F e FFM. Questi caratteri sono stati quindi messi in relazione con le informazioni inerenti l’attività sportiva extrascolastica e gli stili di vita dei soggetti esaminati. L’analisi trasversale delle principali caratteristiche antropometriche ha fornito un interessante panorama della situazione italiana e del nord Italia; lo studio longitudinale delle variabili antropometriche permette di ottenere un quadro aggiornato dei principali incrementi delle misure corporee. La valutazione della variabilità della composizione corporea in relazione all’attività sportiva e allo stile di vita durante il processo di accrescimento ha indicato come abitudini sane e propensione all’attività motoria sono sicuramente in grado di apportare miglioramenti nella modificazione della composizione corporea nel processo evolutivo specialmente se somministrate con modalità adeguate all’età e alle esigenze individuali. Questi aspetti sono certamente rilevanti e complessi, sarebbe infatti interessante in prospettiva futura riuscire ad indagare ancora più dettagliatamente sull’interazione tra i fattori che determinano e modificano la composizione corporea in un periodo della vita così particolare come la transizione dall’infanzia all’adolescenza.

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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

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Inbreeding can lead to a fitness reduction due to the unmasking of deleterious recessive alleles and the loss of heterosis. Therefore, most sexually reproducing organisms avoid inbreeding, often by disperal. Besides the avoidance of inbreeding, dispersal lowers intraspecific competition on a local scale and leads to a spreading of genotypes into new habitats. In social insects, winged reproductives disperse and mate during nuptial flights. Therafter, queens independently found a new colony. However, some species also produce wingless sexuals as an alternative reproductive tactic. Wingless sexuals mate within or close to their colony and queens either stay in the nest or they found a new colony by budding. During this dependent colony foundation, wingless queens are accompanied by a fraction of nestmate workers. The production of wingless reproductives therefore circumvents the risks associated with dispersal and independent colony foundation. However, the absence of dispersal can lead to inbreeding and local competition.rnIn my PhD-project, I investigated the mating biology of Hypoponera opacior, an ant that produces winged and wingless reproductives in a population in Arizona. Besides the investigation of the annual reproductive cycle, I particularly focused on the consequences of wingless reproduction. An analysis of sex ratios in wingless sexuals should reveal the relative importance of local resource competition among queens (that mainly compete for the help of workers) and local mate competition among males. Further, sexual selection was expected to act on wingless males that were previously found to mate with and mate-guard pupal queens in response to local mate competition. We studied whether males are able to adapt their mating behaviour to the current competitive situation in the nest and which traits are under selection in this mating situation. Last, we investigated the extent and effects of inbreeding. As the species appeared to produce non-dispersive males and queens quite frequently, we assumed to find no or only weak negative effects of inbreeding and potentially mechanisms that moderate inbreeding levels despite frequent nest-matings.rnWe found that winged and wingless males and queens are produced during two separate seasons of the year. Winged sexuals emerge in early summer and conduct nuptial flights in July, when climate conditions due to frequent rainfalls lower the risks of dispersal and independent colony foundation. In fall, wingless sexuals are produced that reproduce within the colonies leading to an expansion on the local scale. The absence of dispersal during this second reproductive season resulted in a local genetic population viscosity and high levels of inbreeding within the colonies. Male-biased sex ratios in fall indicated a greater importance of local resource competition among queens than local mate competition among males. Males were observed to adjust mate-guarding durations to the competitive situation (i.e. the number of competing males and pupae) in the nest, an adaptation that helps maximising their reproductive success. Further, sexual selection was found to act on the timing of emergence as well as on body size in these males, i.e. earlier emerging and larger males show a higher mating success. Genetic analyses revealed that wingless males do not actively avoid inbreeding by choosing less related queens as mating partners. Further, we detected diploid males, a male type that is produced instead of diploid females if close relatives mate. In contrast to many other Hymenopteran species, diploid males were here viable and able to sire sterile triploid offspring. They did not differ in lifespan, body size and mating success from “normal” haploid males. Hence, diploid male production in H. opacior is less costly than in other social Hymenopteran species. No evidence of inbreeding depression was found on the colony level but more inbred colonies invested more resources into the production of sexuals. This effect was more pronounced in the dispersive summer generation. The increased investment in outbreeding sexuals can be regarded as an active strategy to moderate the extent and effects of inbreeding. rnIn summary, my thesis describes an ant species that has evolved alternative reproductive tactics as an adaptation to seasonal environmental variations. Hereby, the species is able to maintain its adaptive mating system without suffering from negative effects due to the absence of dispersal flights in fall.rn

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In einem Ökosystem beeinflussen sich Tiere gegenseitig in erster Linie durch direkte Interaktionen. Ihr Verhalten kann aber auch indirekt durch chemotaktile Stoffe die andere Tiere in der Umwelt hinterlassen beeinflusst werden. Vergleichbar zu direkten Interaktionen können indirekt ausgelöste Verhaltensänderungen einen starken Einfluss auf Populationsdynamiken und Gemeinschaftsstrukturen eines Ökosystems haben. Obwohl das daran gehegte Interesse der Ökologen in den letzten Jahrzenten stark gestiegen ist, fehlen immer noch Studien, welche über mehrere Arten hinweg versuchen die übergreifende Relevanz von chemotaktilen Stoffen herauszufinden. Im Rahmen meiner Doktorarbeit untersuchte ich daher wie sich mehrere mitteleuropäische Arthropodenarten, abhängig von deren interspezifischen Räuber-Beute- und Konkurrenzbeziehungen, mittels chemotaktiler Stoffe beeinflussen können. Mithilfe unterschiedlicher Verhaltensversuche konnte ich empirisch nachweisen, dass verschiedene Arthropoden chemotaktile Stoffe zu ihrem eigenen Vorteil nutzen können. Außerdem zeigen meine Ergebnisse, dass die Verhaltensänderungen artspezifisch und abhängig von den jeweiligen Lebenszyklen und den damit verbundenen Eigenschaften (z.B. Körpergröße, Häufigkeit oder Rangordnung) der beteiligten Arten sind. Ich vermute daher, dass Arthropoden chemotaktile Stoffe ihrer Gegenspieler wahrnehmen und interpretieren können. Eine Verhaltensänderung scheint jedoch nur dann statt zu finden wenn ein Nichtreagieren starke Fitnesskosten mit sich führen würde. Zusammenfassend zeigen die Ergebnisse meiner Doktorarbeit, wie wichtig es ist, die Bedeutung von chemotaktilen Stoffen innerhalb vieler Arten einer Gemeinschaft zu testen, um die den Verhaltensänderungen zugrundeliegenden Ursachen identifizieren zu können. Dies wiederum stellt die Grundlage, um die ökologische Relevanz von chemotaktilen Stoffen und deren mögliche Effekte auf Ökosystemfunktionen besser zu verstehen.

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In der vorliegenden Dissertation wird ein Körpergrößengedächtnis untersucht. Es wird dargestellt, wie diese Information über die Reichweite der Fliege beim Lückenklettern unter kotrollierten Umweltbedingungen erworben und prozessiert wird. Zusätzlich wird geklärt, welche biochemischen Signale benötigt werden, um daraus ein lang anhalten-des Gedächtnis zu formen. Adulte Fliegen sind in der Lage, ihre Körperreichweite zu lernen. Naive Fliegen, die in der Dunkelheit gehalten wurden, versuchen erfolglos, zu breite Lücken zu überqueren, während visuell erfahrene Fliegen die Kletterversuche an ihre Körpergröße anpassen. Erfahrene kleine Fliegen scheinen Kenntnis ihres Nachteils zu haben. Sie kehren an Lückenbreiten um, welche ihre größeren Artgenos-sen durchaus noch versuchen. Die Taufliegen lernen die größenabhängige Reichweite über die visuelle Rückmeldung während des Laufens (aus Parallaxenbewegung). Da-bei reichen 15 min in strukturierter, heller Umgebung aus. Es gibt keinen festgelegten Beginn der sensiblen Phase. Nach 2 h ist das Gedächtnis jedoch konsolidiert und kann durch Stress nicht mehr zerstört oder durch sensorische Eingänge verändert werden. Dunkel aufgezogene Fliegen wurden ausgewählten Streifenmustern mit spezifischen Raumfrequenzen ausgesetzt. Nur die Insekten, welche mit einem als „optimal“ klassi-fizierten Muster visuell stimuliert wurden, sind in der Lage, die Körperreichweite einzu-schätzen, indem die durchschnittliche Schrittlänge in Verbindung mit der visuellen Wahrnehmung gebracht wird. Überraschenderweise ist es sogar mittels partieller Kompensation der Parallaxen möglich, naive Fliegen so zu trainieren, dass sie sich wie kleinere Exemplare verhalten. Da die Experimente ein Erlernen der Körperreich-weite vermuten lassen, wurden lernmutante Stämme beim Lückenüberwinden getes-tet. Sowohl die Ergebnisse von rut1- und dnc1-Mutanten, als auch das defizitäre Klet-tern von oc1-Fliegen ließ eine Beteiligung der cAMP-abhängigen Lernkaskade in der Protocerebralbrücke (PB) vermuten. Rettungsexperimente der rut1- und dnc1-Hinter-gründe kartierten das Gedächtnis in unterschiedliche Neuronengruppen der PB, wel-che auch für die visuelle Ausrichtung des Kletterns benötigt werden. Erstaunlicher-weise haben laterale lokale PB-Neurone und PFN-Neurone (Projektion von der PB über den fächerförmigen Körper zu den Noduli) verschiedene Erfordernisse für cAMP-Signale. Zusammenfassend weisen die Ergebnisse darauf hin, dass hohe Mengen an cAMP/PKA-Signalen in den latero-lateralen Elementen der PB benötigt werden, wäh-rend kolumnäre PFN-Neurone geringe oder keine Mengen an cAMP/PKA erfordern. Das Körperreichweitengedächtnis ist vermutlich das am längsten andauernde Ge-dächtnis in Drosophila. Wenn es erst einmal konsolidiert ist hält es länger als drei Wo-chen.rnAußerdem kann die Fruchtliege Drosophila melanogaster trainiert werden, die kom-plexe motorische Aufgabe des Lückenkletterns zu optimieren. Die trainierten Fliegen werden erfolgreicher und schneller beim Überqueren von Lücken, welche größer sind als sie selbst. Dabei existiert eine Kurzeitkomponente (STM), die 40 min nach dem ersten Training anhält. Nach weiteren vier Trainingsdurchläufen im Abstand von 20 min wird ein Langzeitgedächtnis (LTM) zum Folgetag geformt. Analysen mit Mutati-onslinien wiesen eine Beteiligung der cAMP-abhängigen Lernkaskade an dieser Ge-dächtnisform auf. Rettungsexperimente des rut2080-Hintergrunds kartierten sowohl das STM, als auch das LTM in PFN-Neuronen. Das STM kann aber ebenso in den alpha- und beta- Loben der Pilzkörper gerettet werden.rnLetztendlich sind wildtypische Fliegen sogar in der Lage, sich an einen Verlust eines Mittelbeintarsuses und dem einhergehenden Fehlen des Adhäsionsorgans am Tarsusende anzupassen. Das Klettern wird zwar sofort schlechter, erholt sich aber bis zum Folgetag wieder auf ein normales Niveau. Dieser neue Zustand erfordert ein Ge-dächtnis für die physischen Möglichkeiten, die nur durch plastische Veränderungen im Nervensystem des Insekts erreicht werden können.

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Aim The strawberry poison frog, Oophaga pumilio, has undergone a remarkable radiation of colour morphs in the Bocas del Toro archipelago in Panama. This species shows extreme variation in colour and pattern between populations that have been geographically isolated for < 10,000 years. While previous research has suggested the involvement of divergent selection, to date no quantitative test has examined this hypothesis. Location Bocas del Toro archipelago, Panama. Methods We use a combination of population genetics, phylogeography and phenotypic analyses to test for divergent selection in coloration in O. pumilio. Tissue samples of 88 individuals from 15 distinct populations were collected. Using these data, we developed a gene tree using the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) d-loop region. Using parameters derived from our mtDNA phylogeny, we predicted the coalescence of a hypothetical nuclear gene underlying coloration. We collected spectral reflectance and body size measurements on 94 individuals from four of the populations and performed a quantitative analysis of phenotypic divergence. Results The mtDNA d-loop tree revealed considerable polyphyly across populations. Coalescent reconstructions of gene trees within population trees revealed incomplete genotypic sorting among populations. The quantitative analysis of phenotypic divergence revealed complete lineage sorting by colour, but not by body size: populations showed non-overlapping variation in spectral reflectance measures of body coloration, while variation in body size did not separate populations. Simulations of the coalescent using parameter values derived from our empirical analyses demonstrated that the level of sorting among populations seen in colour cannot reasonably be attributed to drift. Main conclusions These results imply that divergence in colour, but not body size, is occurring at a faster rate than expected under neutral processes. Our study provides the first quantitative support for the claim that strong diversifying selection underlies colour variation in the strawberry poison frog.

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Aquatic species can experience different selective pressures on morphology in different flow regimes. Species inhabiting lotic regimes often adapt to these conditions by evolving low-drag (i.e., streamlined) morphologies that reduce the likelihood of dislodgment or displacement. However, hydrodynamic factors are not the only selective pressures influencing organismal morphology and shapes well suited to flow conditions may compromise performance in other roles. We investigated the possibility of morphological trade-offs in the turtle Pseudemys concinna. Individuals living in lotic environments have flatter, more streamlined shells than those living in lentic environments; however, this flatter shape may also make the shells less capable of resisting predator-induced loads. We tested the idea that ‘‘lotic’’ shell shapes are weaker than ‘‘lentic’’ shell shapes, concomitantly examining effects of sex. Geometric morphometric data were used to transform an existing finite element shell model into a series of models corresponding to the shapes of individual turtles. Models were assigned identical material properties and loaded under identical conditions, and the stresses produced by a series of eight loads were extracted to describe the strength of the shells. ‘‘Lotic’’ shell shapes produced significantly higher stresses than ‘‘lentic’’ shell shapes, indicating that the former is weaker than the latter. Females had significantly stronger shell shapes than males, although these differences were less consistent than differences between flow regimes. We conclude that, despite the potential for many-to-one mapping of shell shape onto strength, P. concinna experiences a trade-off in shell shape between hydrodynamic and mechanical performance. This trade-off may be evident in many other turtle species or any other aquatic species that also depend on a shell for defense. However, evolution of body size may provide an avenue of escape from this trade-off in some cases, as changes in size can drastically affect mechanical performance while having little effect on hydrodynamic performance.

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Primates as a taxonomic Order have the largest brains corrected for body size in the animal kingdom. These large brains have allowed primates to evolve the capacity to demonstrate advanced cognitive processes across a wide array of abilities. Nonhuman primates are particularly adept at social learning, defined as the modification of behavior by observing the actions of others. Additionally, primates often exploit resources differently depending on their social context. In this study, capuchin monkeys (Cebus apella) were tested on a cognitive task in three social contexts to determine if social context influenced their performance on the task. The three social contexts included: alone, having a dominant individual in an adjacent compartment, and having a subordinate individual in the adjacent compartment. The benefits to this design were thatthe social context was the only variable influencing performance, whereas in previous studies investigating audience effects other animals could physically and directly influence a subject's performance in an open testing situation. Based on past studies, Ipredicted that the presence of a dominant individual would reduce cognitive task performance compared to the other conditions. The cognitive test used was a match-tosample discrimination task in which animals matched combinations of eight geometric shapes. Animals were trained on this task in an isolated context until they reached a baseline level of proficiency and were then tested in the three social contexts in a random order multiple times. Two subjects (Mt and Dv) have successfully completed trials under all conditions. Results indicated that there were no significant difference in taskperformance across the three conditions (Dv x^2 (1) = 0.42, p=0.58; Mt x^2 (1) = 0.02, p=0.88). In all conditions, subjects performed significantly above chance (i.e., 39/60 trials determined by a binomial distribution). Results are contrary to previous studies thatreport low status monkeys 'play dumb' when testing in a mixed social context, possibly because other studies did not account for aggressive interference by dominants while testing. Results of this study suggest that the mere presence of a dominant individualdoes not necessarily affect performance on a cognitive task, but rather the imminence of physical aggression is the most important factor influencing testing in a social context.