1000 resultados para Savart, Nic.-Pierre-Ant.
Resumo:
Reproductive division of labor and the coexistence of distinct castes are hallmarks of insect societies. In social insect species with multiple queens per colony, the fitness of nestmate queens directly depends on the process of caste allocation (i.e., the relative investment in queen, sterile worker and male production). The aim of this study is to investigate the genetic components to the process of caste allocation in a multiple-queen ant species. We conducted controlled crosses in the Argentine ant Linepithema humile and established single-queen colonies to identify maternal and paternal family effects on the relative production of new queens, workers, and males. There were significant effects of parental genetic backgrounds on various aspects of caste allocation: the paternal lineage affected the proportion of queens and workers produced whereas the proportions of queens and males, and females and males were influenced by the interaction between parental lineages. In addition to revealing nonadditive genetic effects on female caste determination in a multiple-queen ant species, this study reveals strong genetic compatibility effects between parental genomes on caste allocation components.
Resumo:
El cinema és un art social. No podem restringir-lo a una acti vitat destinada a entretenir o a divertir sinó que ha esdevingut un mitja d'expressió, de comunicació, de rellexió, de denúncia i, per tant, un mitja educatiu de la societat. La gran revolució que ha suposat representa la superació de la lectura/esc riptura com a únic ve hicle d' informació. En la societat contemporania rebem la major part de la in formació mitj an\ant el lIenguatge a: audiov isual, i el cinema amb tots els seus formats actuals és el gran protagonista desinf'ormats de comunicac ió i d'express ió del moment!.
Resumo:
Tot i que els interessos de Pierre Vilar, en el curs de la seva llarga vida professional, van ser molt més amplis, em penso que no és cap exageració afirmar que el segle XVIII fou el seu segle. En tot cas, el que segur que no és exagerat és dir que els investigadors catalans sobre el segle XVIII han estat aquells sobre qui la influència de l’obra de Vilar més s’ha fet sentir. Aquest fet és fàcil d’explicar. En primer lloc, perquè va ser la documentació del segle XVIII la que Pierre Vilar va explorar i treballar de primera mà en els arxius i la que va alimentar el miler de pàgines dels volums tercer i quart –segon i tercer si pensem en l’edició francesa original– de la seva voluminosa tesi doctoral. En segon lloc, perquè en aquest segle Vilar va cercar-hi els fonaments de les societats contemporànies. De fet, i no podia ser d’altra manera tenint en compte el mètode d’anàlisi històrica de Pierre Vilar, la recerca empírica sobre el segle XVIII català va fer-li plantejar el “problema” històric dels “fonaments econòmics de les estructures nacionals”
Resumo:
Collection : Mémoires et documents publiés par l'Académie salésienne ; 101
Resumo:
Sex allocation data in social Hymenoptera provide some of the best tests of kin selection, parent-offspring conflict and sex ratio theories. However, these studies critically depend on controlling for confounding ecological factors and on identifying all parties that potentially manipulate colony sex ratio. It has been suggested that maternally inherited parasites may influence sex allocation in social Hymenoptera. If the parasites can influence sex allocation, infected colonies are predicted to invest more resources in females than non-infected colonies, because the parasites are transmitted through females but not males. Prime candidates for such sex ratio manipulation are Wolbachia, because these cytoplasmically transmitted bacteria have been shown to affect the sex ratio of host arthropods by cytoplasmic incompatibility, parthenogenesis, male-killing and feminization. In this study, we tested whether Wolbachia infection is associated with colony sex ratio in two populations of the ant Formica exsecta that have been the subject of extensive sex ratio studies. In these populations colonies specialize in the production of one sex or the other. We found that almost all F. exsecta colonies in both populations are infected with Wolbachia. However, in neither population did we find a significant association in the predicted direction between the prevalence of Wolbachia and colony sex ratio. In particular, colonies with a higher proportion of infected workers did not produce more females. Hence, we conclude that Wolbachia does not seem to alter the sex ratio of its hosts as a means to increase transmission rate in these two populations of ants.
Resumo:
The ability to distinguish nestmates from foreign individuals is central to the functioning of insect societies. In ants, workers from multiple-queen colonies are often less aggressive than workers from single-queen ones. In line with this observation, it has been hypothesized that workers from multiple-queen colonies have less precise recognition abilities than workers from single-queen ones because their colonies contain genetically more diverse individuals, which results in a broader template of recognition cues. Here, we assessed the impact of social structure ( queen number) variation on nestmate recognition and aggression in a large population of the socially polymorphic ant Formica selysi. We staged unilateral aggression tests on the nest surface. Workers from single-and multiple-queen colonies had good nestmate recognition ability and did not differ significantly in their level of aggression towards foreign, immobilized workers ( cue-bearers). In particular, workers from multiple-queen colonies efficiently recognized non-nestmates despite the higher genetic diversity in their colony. Cue-bearers from single- and multiple-queen colonies elicited similar reactions. However, the level of aggression was higher between than within social forms, suggesting that workers detect a signal that is specific to the colony social structure. Finally, the level of aggression was not correlated with the genetic distance between colonies. Overall, we found no evidence for the hypothesis that the presence of multiple breeders in the same colony decreases recognition abilities and found no simple relationship between genetic diversity and aggression level. (c) 2007 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviou