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Das geographische Verbreitungsgebiet von Arten ist ein fundamentales Struktur gebendes Merkmal der biologischen Welt. Warum Arten so verteilt sind, wie sie sind ist seit langem eine der zentralen Fragen in Ökologie, Biogeographie und Evolution. Gegenwärtig verändern sich, im Wesentlichen als unbeabsichtigtes Nebenprodukt menschlicher ökonomischen Aktivitäten und Populationsdynamik, die geographischen Verbreitungsgebiete von Arten mit entscheidender Bedeutung für Land- und Forstwirtschaft, als Krankheitsvektoren oder als Teil der biologischen Systeme, die Ökosystemfunktionen bereitstellen. Daher ist es dringend notwendig, dass wir unser Verständnis über die Dynamiken, aus denen die geographische Verbreitung von Arten erwachsen, verbessern. Mit dieser Doktorarbeit versuche ich, in drei Untersuchungen zur Dynamik der Verbreitungsgebiete von Singvögeln einen Beitrag zu unserem in Entwicklung begriffenen Verständnis der multiplen Faktoren die Artverbreitungsgebiete beeinflussen, zu leisten.
1) Zu einem mechanistischeren Verständnis von Artmerkmalen und Verbreitungsgebietsgrößen: Ein wichtiger, ungelöster Fragenkomplex in der Makroökologie ist, die immense interspezifische Variation in der Größe geographischer Verbreitungsgebiete zu verstehen. Während man davon ausgeht, dass Artmerkmale wie Fekundität und Körpergröße einen Effekt auf Verbreitungsgebietsgrößen haben, fehlt ein allgemeines Verständnis davon, wie Verbreitungsgebietsgrößen von mehreren Merkmalen gemeinsam beeinflusst werden. Hier beurteilen wir den Effekt von Lebensgeschichtsmerkmalen (Fekundität, Ausbreitungsfähigkeit), ökologischen Merkmalen (Habitatnische, Nahrungsnische, Zugverhalten, Flexibilität im Zugverhalten) und morphologischen Merkmalen (Körpergröße) auf die globale Verbreitungsgebietsgröße von 165 europäischen Singvögeln. Wir identifizieren Hypothesen zur Beziehung von Artmerkmalen und Verbreitungsgebietsgrößen aus der Literatur und verwenden die Methodik der Pfadanalyse, um sie zu testen. Die Größe der globalen geographischen Verbreitungsgebiete europäischer Singvögel wurde von Lebensgeschichtsmerkmalen (Fekundidtät und Ausbreitungsfähigkeit), ökologischen Merkmalen (Habitatnischenbreite, Nahrungsnischenposition und Zugverhalten) und von Körpergröße beeinflusst. Artmerkmale beeinflussten Verbreitungsgebietsgrößen auf direktem und indirektem Weg. Insbesondere der Einfluss von Körpergröße war komplex mit positiven und negativen Effekten über verschiedene Pfade. Die Größe von Verbreitungsgebieten ist sehr wahrscheinlich auch von anderen Faktoren als von Artmerkmalen abhängig. Wir zeigen, dass es notwendig ist, den direkten und indirekten Einfluss einer Vielzahl von Merkmalen zu entwirren, um die Mechanismen, die makroökologische Beziehungen generieren, aufzuklären.
2) Konkurrenz und Ausbreitungsfähigkeit interagieren bei der Bestimmung der geographischen Verbreitung von Vögeln: Es ist weiterhin eine Herausforderung für Ökologie und Evolutionsbiologie, die Faktoren zu verstehen , die die geographische Verbreitung von Arten beeinflussen. Wir untersuchen wie Konkurrenz, Ausbreitungsfähigkeit, das Alter eines Taxons und Habitatverschiebungen seit dem letzten glazialen Maximum das Ausmaß beeinflussen, in dem Arten der Vogelgattung Sylvia in allen Gegenden mit geeigneten Umweltbedingungen vorkommen (d.h. range filling).
Wir haben range filling in der Vogelgattung Sylvia (Grasmücken) unter Verwendung von Boosted Regression Trees und Ridge-Regression quantifiziert. Mittels multipler Regression haben wir für die Effekte von intragenerischer Konkurrenz, Ausbreitungfähigkeit, Alter des Taxons und Habitatverschiebung seit dem letzten glazialen Maximum auf range filling getestet.
Grasmücken mit hoher Ausbreitungsfähigkeit zeigten höheres range filling, aber nur wenn Konkurrenz in Gebieten mit weniger geeignetem Habitat innerhalb ihres potentiellen Verbreitungsgebietes niedrig war. Das Alter eines Taxon und Habitatverschiebung seit dem letzten glazialen Maximum hatten keinen konsistenten Effekt. Wir zeigen, dass die Verbreitungsgebiete von Grasmücken mit hoher Wahrscheinlichkeit durch den simultanen, interaktiven Effekt von Konkurrenz und Ausbreitungsfähigkeit geformt werden. Wenn biotische Interaktionen wie Konkurrenz generell die Fähigkeit von Arten beeinflussen auf der kontinentalen Skala neue Gebiete zu kolonisieren, wird es eine Herausforderung sein, den Effekt von Klimawandel auf Biodiversität vorherzusagen.
3) Nischenverfügbarkeit in Zeit und Raum: Vogelzug der Grasmücken: Im Kontext neuer Fortschritte in der ökologischen Nischenmodellierung sind sowohl die Umwelt als auch die ökologische Nische einer Art als statische Entitäten behandelt und quantifiziert worden. In der Realität sind aber die Umwelt und die Nischenanforderungen einer Art auf einer Vielzahl von Skalen dynamisch. Wir schlagen ein konzeptionelles System vor das berücksichtigt, wie die realisierte Nische und geographische Verbreitung von Arten durch die entkoppelte raumzeitliche Verfügbarkeit unterschiedlicher Umweltbedingungen und durch Veränderungen der Nischenanforderungen über die Lebenszeit eines Organismus geformt werden. Das Testen von aus dem konzeptionellen System abgeleiteten Vorhersagen am Beispiel des Vogelzugs der Grasmücken ergab neue Erkenntnisse: Das Verfolgen der Klimanische im geographischen Raum war höchstwahrscheinlich nicht die treibende Kraft für Migration in der Gattung und steht potentiell im Konflikt mit dem Verfolgen der Landnutzungsnische. Die Nischen der Grasmücken waren während der Brutsaison schmaler, was zeigt, dass Nischenanforderungen zeitlich dynamisch sein können. Wir legen nahe, dass die Berücksichtigung dynamischer Umwelten und Nischenanforderungen zu einer entscheidenden Verbessserung unseres Verständnisses der treibenden Faktoren hinter der Bewegung von Organismen im Raum und der Dynamik ihrer Nischen und Verbreitungsgebiete führt.
For millennia, rural West African communities living in or adjacent of savanna ecosystems have been collecting components of local plant species (e.g. fruits, leaves, bark) in order to fulfil essential household subsistence needs (alimentation, medical care, energy demand etc.), to generate cash income and to overcome times of (financial) crisis. Thus, these non-timber forest products (NTFPs) make a considerable contribution to the well-being of local households. However, climate and land use change severely impact West African savanna ecosystems and, consequently, the safe-guarding of dependent rural livelihoods. The conversion of savanna area into cultivated land for subsistence farming owing to the ongoing population growth, as well as the progressive promotion of cash crops (e.g. cotton) is ever-increasing. As a consequence, present land-use management in West Africa has to cope with serious trade-offs. Within this decision-making NTFPs have been constantly understated due to a lack of appropriate economic figures to use within common cost-benefit analysis, and, thus, have been frequently outcompeted by seemingly more profitable land-use options. Therefore, it is crucial to provide appropriate economic data for NTFPs in order to create positive incentives for both decision-makers and NTFP beneficiaries to conserve NTFP-providing trees. The key finding of this analysis is that income from NTFPs accounts for 39 % on average of an annual total household income in Northern Benin, representing the second largest income share next to crop income and proving the respective households to be economically heavily dependent on NTFPs. Thereby, socio-economic characteristics of NTFP users tremendously shape their preferences for woody species. Particularly ethnicity has a major impact on the species used and the economic return obtained by them. Moreover, the study investigated the impacts of climate and land use change on the economic benefits derived from the three economically most important tree species in the region Vitellaria paradoxa, Parkia biglobosa and Adansonia digitata in 2050: Environmental changes will have primarily negative effects on the economic returns from all the three species. At large, the study underpins the economic relevance of NTFPs for rural communities in West African savannas and, consequently, the necessity to appropriately sustain them in order to safe-guard local livelihoods. Providing key figures on the current and future economic benefits obtained from NTFPs can augment common cost-benefit analysis, and, delivering detailed information about peoples’ use preferences for local species, this study clearly contributes to improve the basis of decision-making with reference to local land-use policies.
Synthesis of acetate from carbon dioxide and molecular hydrogen is considered to be the first carbon assimilation pathway on earth. It combines carbon dioxide fixation into acetyl-CoA with the production of ATP via an energized cell membrane. How the pathway is coupled with the net synthesis of ATP has been an enigma. The anaerobic, acetogenic bacterium Acetobacterium woodii uses an ancient version of this pathway without cytochromes and quinones. It generates a sodium ion potential across the cell membrane by the sodium-motive ferredoxin:NAD oxidoreductase (Rnf). The genome sequence of A. woodii solves the enigma: it uncovers Rnf as the only ion-motive enzyme coupled to the pathway and unravels a metabolism designed to produce reduced ferredoxin and overcome energetic barriers by virtue of electron-bifurcating, soluble enzymes.
Our large brain, long life span and high fertility are key elements of human evolutionary success and are often thought to have evolved in interplay with tool use, carnivory and hunting. However, the specific impact of carnivory on human evolution, life history and development remains controversial. Here we show in quantitative terms that dietary profile is a key factor influencing time to weaning across a wide taxonomic range of mammals, including humans. In a model encompassing a total of 67 species and genera from 12 mammalian orders, adult brain mass and two dichotomous variables reflecting species differences regarding limb biomechanics and dietary profile, accounted for 75.5%, 10.3% and 3.4% of variance in time to weaning, respectively, together capturing 89.2% of total variance. Crucially, carnivory predicted the time point of early weaning in humans with remarkable precision, yielding a prediction error of less than 5% with a sample of forty-six human natural fertility societies as reference. Hence, carnivory appears to provide both a necessary and sufficient explanation as to why humans wean so much earlier than the great apes. While early weaning is regarded as essentially differentiating the genus Homo from the great apes, its timing seems to be determined by the same limited set of factors in humans as in mammals in general, despite some 90 million years of evolution. Our analysis emphasizes the high degree of similarity of relative time scales in mammalian development and life history across 67 genera from 12 mammalian orders and shows that the impact of carnivory on time to weaning in humans is quantifiable, and critical. Since early weaning yields shorter interbirth intervals and higher rates of reproduction, with profound effects on population dynamics, our findings highlight the emergence of carnivory as a process fundamentally determining human evolution.
Feedforward inhibition and synaptic scaling are important adaptive processes that control the total input a neuron can receive from its afferents. While often studied in isolation, the two have been reported to co-occur in various brain regions. The functional implications of their interactions remain unclear, however. Based on a probabilistic modeling approach, we show here that fast feedforward inhibition and synaptic scaling interact synergistically during unsupervised learning. In technical terms, we model the input to a neural circuit using a normalized mixture model with Poisson noise. We demonstrate analytically and numerically that, in the presence of lateral inhibition introducing competition between different neurons, Hebbian plasticity and synaptic scaling approximate the optimal maximum likelihood solutions for this model. Our results suggest that, beyond its conventional use as a mechanism to remove undesired pattern variations, input normalization can make typical neural interaction and learning rules optimal on the stimulus subspace defined through feedforward inhibition. Furthermore, learning within this subspace is more efficient in practice, as it helps avoid locally optimal solutions. Our results suggest a close connection between feedforward inhibition and synaptic scaling which may have important functional implications for general cortical processing.
5-Lipoxygenase (5-LO) catalyzes the two initial steps in the biosynthesis of leukotrienes (LT), a group of inflammatory lipid mediators derived from arachidonic acid. Here, we investigated the regulation of 5-LO mRNA expression by alternative splicing and nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD). In the present study, we report the identification of 2 truncated transcripts and 4 novel 5-LO splice variants containing premature termination codons (PTC). The characterization of one of the splice variants, 5-LOΔ3, revealed that it is a target for NMD since knockdown of the NMD factors UPF1, UPF2 and UPF3b in the human monocytic cell line Mono Mac 6 (MM6) altered the expression of 5-LOΔ3 mRNA up to 2-fold in a cell differentiation-dependent manner suggesting that cell differentiation alters the composition or function of the NMD complex. In contrast, the mature 5-LO mRNA transcript was not affected by UPF knockdown. Thus, the data suggest that the coupling of alternative splicing and NMD is involved in the regulation of 5-LO gene expression.
Sucrose is known to repress the translation of Arabidopsis thaliana AtbZIP11 transcript which encodes a protein belonging to the group of S (S - stands for small) basic region-leucine zipper (bZIP)-type transcription factor. This repression is called sucrose-induced repression of translation (SIRT). It is mediated through the sucrose-controlled upstream open reading frame (SC-uORF) found in the AtbZIP11 transcript. The SIRT is reported for 4 other genes belonging to the group of S bZIP in Arabidopsis. Tobacco tbz17 is phylogenetically closely related to AtbZIP11 and carries a putative SC-uORF in its 5′-leader region. Here we demonstrate that tbz17 exhibits SIRT mediated by its SC-uORF in a manner similar to genes belonging to the S bZIP group of the Arabidopsis genus. Furthermore, constitutive transgenic expression of tbz17 lacking its 5′-leader region containing the SC-uORF leads to production of tobacco plants with thicker leaves composed of enlarged cells with 3–4 times higher sucrose content compared to wild type plants. Our finding provides a novel strategy to generate plants with high sucrose content.
Freshwater biodiversity has declined dramatically in Europe in recent decades. Because of massive habitat pollution and morphological degradation of water bodies, many once widespread species persist in small fractions of their original range. These range contractions are generally believed to be accompanied by loss of intraspecific genetic diversity, due to the reduction of effective population sizes and the extinction of regional genetic lineages. We aimed to assess the loss of genetic diversity and its significance for future potential reintroduction of the long-tailed mayfly Palingenia longicauda (Olivier), which experienced approximately 98% range loss during the past century. Analysis of 936 bp of mitochondrial DNA of 245 extant specimens across the current range revealed a surprisingly large number of haplotypes (87), and a high level of haplotype diversity (Hd = 0.875). In contrast, historic specimens (6) from the lost range (Rhine catchment) were not differentiated from the extant Rába population (F ST = 0.02, p = 0.61), despite considerable geographic distance separating the two rivers. These observations can be explained by an overlap of the current with the historic (Pleistocene) refugia of the species. Most likely, the massive recent range loss mainly affected the range which was occupied by rapid post-glacial dispersal. We conclude that massive range losses do not necessarily coincide with genetic impoverishment and that a species' history must be considered when estimating loss of genetic diversity. The assessment of spatial genetic structures and prior phylogeographic information seems essential to conserve once widespread species.
Background: The blood-brain barrier (BBB) represents an insurmountable obstacle for most drugs thus obstructing an effective treatment of many brain diseases. One solution for overcoming this barrier is a transport by binding of these drugs to surface-modified nanoparticles. Especially apolipoprotein E (ApoE) appears to play a major role in the nanoparticle-mediated drug transport across the BBB. However, at present the underlying mechanism is incompletely understood.
Methodology/Principal Findings: In this study, the uptake of the ApoE-modified nanoparticles into the brain capillary endothelial cells was investigated to differentiate between active and passive uptake mechanism by flow cytometry and confocal laser scanning microscopy. Furthermore, different in vitro co-incubation experiments were performed with competing ligands of the respective receptor.
Conclusions/Significance: This study confirms an active endocytotic uptake mechanism and shows the involvement of low density lipoprotein receptor family members, notably the low density lipoprotein receptor related protein, on the uptake of the ApoE-modified nanoparticles into the brain capillary endothelial cells. This knowledge of the uptake mechanism of ApoE-modified nanoparticles enables future developments to rationally create very specific and effective carriers to overcome the blood-brain barrier.
Place based frequency discrimination (tonotopy) is a fundamental property of the coiled mammalian cochlea. Sound vibrations mechanically conducted to the hearing organ manifest themselves into slow moving waves that travel along the length of the organ, also referred to as traveling waves. These traveling waves form the basis of the tonotopic frequency representation in the inner ear of mammals. However, so far, due to the secure housing of the inner ear, these waves only could be measured partially over small accessible regions of the inner ear in a living animal. Here, we demonstrate the existence of tonotopically ordered traveling waves covering most of the length of a miniature hearing organ in the leg of bushcrickets in vivo using laser Doppler vibrometery. The organ is only 1 mm long and its geometry allowed us to investigate almost the entire length with a wide range of stimuli (6 to 60 kHz). The tonotopic location of the traveling wave peak was exponentially related to stimulus frequency. The traveling wave propagated along the hearing organ from the distal (high frequency) to the proximal (low frequency) part of the leg, which is opposite to the propagation direction of incoming sound waves. In addition, we observed a non-linear compression of the velocity response to varying sound pressure levels. The waves are based on the delicate micromechanics of cellular structures different to those of mammals. Hence place based frequency discrimination by traveling waves is a physical phenomenon that presumably evolved in mammals and bushcrickets independently.