Differential gene expression during early development in recently evolved and sympatric Arctic charr morphs
old paper on the development of sympatric morphs
#arcticcharr #transcriptome #rnaseq #fish #evolution #sympatry
#peerj #biology
https://peerj.com/articles/4345/
Variation in personality shaped by evolutionary history, genotype and developmental plasticity in response to feeding modalities in the Arctic charr
Marion Dellinger
Sarah E. Steele
Evert Sprockel
Joris Philip
Arnar Pálsson
David Benhaïm
Published:13 December
#evolution #speciation #behavior #personality #divergence #sympatry #polymorphism #ArcticCharr #salmonid
2023https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2023.2302
Some findings show that speciation rates and the degree of sympatry increase with latitude, while species richness decreases. Harmáčková & Remeš find that syntopy is higher but is unrelated to local species richness. Read now for free ahead of print!
https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/728687
#speciation #sympatry #syntropy #speciesRichness
Diversity in the internal functional feeding elements of sympatric morphs of Arctic charr (Salvelinus alpinus)
New version of Guðbjörg Jonsdottir manuscript on #BioRxiv
#Evolution #Morphology #sympatry #craniofacial
#Iceland #Thingvallavatn
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.02.17.528955v2
#Human #activity can be a factor in allowing #sympatry of similar #species. Case-in-point, giant and neotropical otters in the #Amazon.
In this new study, Norris and Michalski (2023) observed that #giant #otters tended to avoid human activity while #neotropical otters did not.
OA 🔗 https://peerj.com/articles/15742/
We #influence our #ecosystems in many ways. While not always and inevitably detrimental, we need to be aware of our #impacts.
#conservation


Human disturbances and the daytime activity of sympatric otters along equatorial Amazonian rivers
Background Previous studies suggest coexistence between sympatric neotropical (Lontra longicaudis) and giant otters (Pteronura brasiliensis) maybe facilitated by temporal and spatial differences in activity. Yet, to date there has been no systematic evaluation of activity of these species in sympatry. Here we use extensive multi-year field data to compare temporal and spatial patterns in the diurnal activity of sympatric giant and neotropical otters to answer three questions: Do temporal patterns in daytime river use change in relation to seasonal river levels (low, rising, high and declining river levels), do they change due to human disturbances (boats and fishing nets) and do patterns in neotropical otter activity change due to the presence of the larger sized giant otter? Methods Direct observations of both species were recorded using standardized boat surveys along 218 km of rivers over 53 months during nine years (2011–2013 and 2015–2020). Complementary techniques (Generalized Additive Models, Kernel density estimates and non-parametric tests,) were used to compare diurnal activity patterns along rivers subdivided into 41 river reaches. Results The presence of giant otters decreased threefold from 67% of the least disturbed reaches (few boats no fishing nets) to 18% of the most disturbed reaches with many boats and fishing nets. In contrast neotropical otter presence nearly doubled from 44% of the least disturbed to 73% of the most disturbed reaches with fewest giant otter detections. Both species were observed across all daytime hours but were observed rarely on the same day. There was no evidence to suggest simultaneous use of the same reach. When species were detected on the same day, they were separated spatially (median distance between species 12.5 km) and temporally (median time difference 3.0 hours). There was little change in activity of either species among seasons. Giant otters were less active in river reaches with fishing nets and boat use, whereas neotropical otter activity did not appear to be strongly affected by these activities. Conclusions Our findings support evidence that diurnal activity in both otter species is flexible, with daytime activity changing due to human disturbances in the case of giant otters.
PeerJ
English dialects make themselves heard in genes
People with a common history – often due to significant geographic or social barriers – often share genetics and language. New research finds that even a dialect can act as a barrier within a group.
The ConversationIn
#sympatry, as in Finland, the 🐜🐜🐜
#hybridise extensively and form a mosaic
#hybrid #zone:
#admixed populations (♦️) alternate in space with non-admixed pops (🟢&🟠) with different climatic adaptations. The ♦️ occupy warmer nest sites than their cold-adapted parent (🟢)! 2/5
This darling is nearly ready for submission. Very cool results from a study led by Guðbjörg Ósk Jónsdóttir and Sarah Steele, based on pioneering work by Finnur Ingimarsson and Sigurður S. Snorrason.
Diversity in the internal functional feeding elements of sympatric morphs of Arctic charr (Salvelinus alpinus)
#geometricmorphometrics #boneshape #arcticcharr #salmonid #polymorphism #sympatry #evolution #integration #iceland #Þingvallavatn
https://uni.hi.is/apalsson/2022/11/09/manuscript-on-craniofacial-variation-in-sympatric-ecomorphs-of-arctic-charr/
The laboratory of A. Palsson and associates » Manuscript on craniofacial variation in sympatric ecomorphs of Arctic charr