7 results on '"Adam M. Fisher"'
Search Results
2. Relatedness modulates density‐dependent cannibalism rates in Drosophila
- Author
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Daniel R. Lewis, Andri Manser, Stuart Wigby, Tom A. R. Price, Adam M. Fisher, Gregory I. Holwell, and Sally Le Page
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Density dependence ,biology ,Density dependent ,Evolutionary biology ,Cannibalism ,Kin selection ,Drosophila (subgenus) ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The impact of intrinsic and extrinsic factors on the epidemiology of male-killing bacteria
- Author
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Adam M. Fisher, Robert J. Knell, Tom A. R. Price, and Michael B. Bonsall
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Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Many arthropod species are vulnerable to infection by bacteria that kill the male offspring of their female hosts. These male-killing bacteria (MKB) can greatly impact the ecology and evolution of their hosts, particularly when MKB prevalence is high and persistent through time. However, we still do not have a holistic understanding of the key determinants of MKB ecological epidemiology, particularly regarding the interplay between host-MKB traits and environmental conditions. Here, we derived a mathematical model to analyse the role that several intrinsic and extrinsic factors play in determining MKB epidemiology, and how these factors interact with one another. We found that the invasion threshold and prevalence of MKB is determined by transmission rate and the rate at which female hosts recover from MKB infections. The invasion and prevalence of MKB is also highly sensitive to the extent that MKB can reduce intra-brood competition by killing male offspring. Environmentally-induced periodic changes to the epidemiological characteristics of MKB caused a sharp decline and a slow recovery of MKB prevalence and, in some cases, environmental disturbance can drive MKB extinct. Furthermore, the magnitude of the impact that environmental disturbance had on the dynamics of MKB prevalence was heavily modulated by intrinsic factors, particularly intra-brood competition. This is the first study to explore how both intrinsic and extrinsic factors interact to influence the dynamics of MKB infections over large timescales; our findings are central to predicting the current and future impacts of MKB on host populations.
- Published
- 2022
4. The evolutionary impact of population size, mutation rate and virulence on pathogen niche width
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Adam M. Fisher
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Population Density ,Mutation rate ,Virulence ,Population size ,Niche ,Biology ,Generalist and specialist species ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Biological Evolution ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Phenotype ,Mutation Rate ,Evolutionary biology ,Mutation (genetic algorithm) ,Trait ,Pathogen ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Understanding the evolution of pathogen niche width is important for predicting disease spread and the probability that pathogens can emerge in novel hosts. Findings from previous theoretical studies often suggest that pathogens will evolve to be specialists in specific host environments. However, several of these studies make unrealistic assumptions regarding demographic stochasticity and the ability of pathogens to select their hosts. Here, an individual-based model was used to predict how population size, virulence and pathogen mutation rate affects the evolution niche specialism in pathogens. Pathogen specialism evolved regardless of virulence or populations size; thus, the findings of this study are somewhat consistent with those of previous work. However, because specialist pathogens had only a weak selective advantage over generalist pathogens, high mutation rates caused random trait variation to accumulate, preventing the evolution of specialism. Mutation rate varies greatly across different species and strains of pathogen. By showing that high mutation rates may prevent pathogen specialism evolving, this study highlights an intrinsic pathogen trait that may influence the evolution of pathogen niche width.
- Published
- 2021
5. Teaching and learning in ecology: A horizon scan of emerging challenges and solutions
- Author
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Thomas Hesselberg, Alice L. Mauchline, Julia Cooke, Karen L. Bacon, Tom R. Bishop, Adam M. Fisher, Lesley Batty, Kadmiel Maseyk, Dan W. Forman, Cristina García, Barbara J. Tigar, David R. Daversa, William J. Sutherland, Miranda L. Dyson, Liam R. Dougherty, Zenobia Lewis, Ewan Harney, Nicholas T. Worsfold, Robert J. Knell, Jeremy Pritchard, Moya Burns, Joanna M. Bagniewska, Rebecca L. Thomas, Julie Peacock, M. Charalambous, Yoseph N. Araya, Rachel L. White, Philip Wheeler, Elizabeth A. John, Angelo P. Pernetta, Cooke, J [0000-0002-3178-0674], Bishop, TR [0000-0001-7061-556X], Knell, RJ [0000-0002-3446-8715], Pernetta, AP [0000-0003-4492-2798], White, RL [0000-0003-0694-7847], Lewis, Z [0000-0001-9464-7638], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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0106 biological sciences ,THREATEN BIODIVERSITY ,Higher education ,LONG-TERM ,media_common.quotation_subject ,BIOLOGY ,Environmental Sciences & Ecology ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Perception ,horizon scan ,Spoken language translation ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,global challenges ,FIELD TRIPS ,STUDENT PERCEPTIONS ,Curriculum ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,media_common ,Science & Technology ,CLIMATE-CHANGE ,Global challenges ,Ecology ,0602 Ecology ,business.industry ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,EDUCATION ,SCIENCE ,FOREST ,Influencer marketing ,TIME ,teaching and learning ,business ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Abstract
We currently face significant, anthropogenic, global environmental challenges, and the role of ecologists in mitigating these challenges is arguably more important than ever. Consequently there is an urgent need to recruit and train future generations of ecologists, both those whose main area is ecology, but also those involved in the geological, biological, and environmental sciences.Here we present the results of a horizon scanning exercise that identified current and future challenges facing the teaching of ecology, through surveys of teachers, students, and employers of ecologists. Key challenges identified were grouped in terms of the perspectives of three groups: students, for example the increasing disconnect between people and nature; teachers, for example the challenges associated with teaching the quantitative skills that are inherent to the study of ecology; and society, for example poor societal perceptions of the field of ecology.In addition to the challenges identified, we propose a number of solutions developed at a workshop by a team of ecology teaching experts, with supporting evidence of their potential to address many of the problems raised. These proposed solutions include developing living labs, teaching students to be ecological entrepreneurs and influencers, embedding skills‐based learning and coding in the curriculum, an increased role for learned societies in teaching and learning, and using new technology to enhance fieldwork studies including virtual reality, artificial intelligence and real‐time spoken language translation.Our findings are focused towards UK higher education, but they should be informative for students and teachers of a wide range of educational levels, policy makers and professional ecologists worldwide.
- Published
- 2020
6. Behavioural correlations and aggression in praying mantids
- Author
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Gregory I. Holwell, Tom A. R. Price, and Adam M. Fisher
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0106 biological sciences ,biology ,Aggression ,05 social sciences ,Cannibalism ,Zoology ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Predation ,Orthodera novaezealandiae ,Animal ecology ,Sexual cannibalism ,medicine ,Juvenile ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Animal Science and Zoology ,050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology ,Mantis ,medicine.symptom ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Abstract Distinct behaviours can co-vary within individuals. As such, the magnitude of certain behaviours may be partly predicted by other behaviours, rather than the environment. This can constrain behaviours, potentially reducing behavioural variability. Pre-copulatory sexual cannibalism, the consumption of potential mates before copulation, can lead to females remaining unmated, particularly if males are rare. One possible explanation for the persistence of pre-copulatory cannibalism is that sexual cannibalism is correlated with high levels of aggression towards prey. Here, we test this in two species of praying mantis: the highly cannibalistic Miomantis caffra and the less cannibalistic Orthodera novaezealandiae. If cannibalism in M. caffra is linked to aggression towards prey, we predicted that (1) M. caffra would be more aggressive towards prey than O. novaezealandiae, (2) female M. caffra would be more aggressive than males, (3) aggression towards prey would be correlated across juvenile and adult instars for M. caffra but not O. novaezealandiae, and (4) aggression towards prey would be associated with a propensity for sexual cannibalism among individual M. caffra. We found evidence supporting predictions one and two, but not predictions three and four. Surprisingly, aggression was shown to be repeatable and correlated across instars for O. novaezealandiae but not M. caffra. Our results suggest sexual cannibalism is not a product of behavioural co-variation, even in clades where sexual cannibalism is common. This suggests that sexual cannibalism evolves due to the direct benefits it brings to females, rather than being a by-product of high aggression towards heterospecific prey. Significance statement In some animals, different behaviours co-vary within individuals. This may lead to the emergence of costly behaviours and reduce behavioural plasticity. It is theorized that pre-copulatory cannibalism is a costly behavioural by-product of selection for high levels of aggression towards prey. However, there are very few studies that explicitly test this. Here, we provide a behavioural comparison between two species of praying mantis that vary in their propensity to cannibalize and tested whether general aggression is linked cannibalism. We found that aggression towards prey in adults can be linked to juvenile aggression but not a propensity for cannibalism. Although cannibalism rates were higher in the species that was more aggressive towards prey, aggression towards prey was not linked to cannibalism within individuals. This suggests that pre-copulatory cannibalism is not a behavioural by-product but a result of direct selection.
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- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Density-dependent aggression, courtship, and sex ratio in a fishing spider
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Adam M. Fisher and Tom A. R. Price
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Spider ,biology ,Aggression ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Cannibalism ,Zoology ,biology.organism_classification ,Courtship ,Dolomedes ,Raft spider ,Insect Science ,Sexual cannibalism ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Sex ratio ,media_common - Abstract
Sexual cannibalism is common in spiders and can be advantageous for female fitness by increasing egg production. However, it is possible that, under low mate density, females will be at risk of consuming all of the males they encounter prior to copulation. Cannibalistic females may be able to mitigate the risk of virgin death if they reduce cannibalism rates in response to low mate availability. Here, we attempted to manipulate perceived mate density and observe whether it affected female aggression towards males in the fen raft spider (Dolomedes fimbriatus). We predicted that female attack rate would increase in response to an increasing number of male encounters. We also recorded male courtship effort. Despite previous literature finding that D. fimbriatus females were highly aggressive towards conspecific males, we found that females only attacked courting males in 14% of encounters. None of these attacks resulted in cannibalism. Moreover, attacks were not associated with how many males the female had previously been exposed to. Male courtship effort decreased in response to repeated exposure to females. Some of the virgin females laid and guarded unfertilized egg cases; this made them unattractive to males, potentially reducing their reproductive lifespan prematurely.
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- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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