17 results on '"Elisabeth Arévalo"'
Search Results
2. DELIMITING SPECIES: COMPARING METHODS FOR MENDELIAN CHARACTERS USING LIZARDS OF THE SCELOPORUS GRAMMICUS (SQUAMATA: PHRYNOSOMATIDAE) COMPLEX
- Author
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Edgar Benavides, Elisabeth Arévalo, Jonathon C. Marshall, Jack W. Sites, and Joanne L. Sites
- Subjects
Mitochondrial DNA ,Sceloporus grammicus ,Squamata ,biology ,Lineage (evolution) ,Chromosome ,Zoology ,Morphology (biology) ,biology.organism_classification ,Divergence ,symbols.namesake ,Evolutionary biology ,Genetics ,Mendelian inheritance ,symbols ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Species form the fundamental units of analysis in many areas of biology and, therefore, rigorous delimitation of this unit is important to a broad array of researchers. Recently, many new empirical methods have been proposed to delimit species in nature, and a large literature exists on the theoretical merit and superiority of each method. However, few empirical studies actually compare the results of these methods applied in the same study system. We used a large allozyme and chromosome dataset to apply a number of genetic-distance, character-based, and tree-based methods to a well-studied, data-rich system: the Sceloporus grammicus lizard complex of central Mexico. We hy- pothesized species boundaries under a general lineage or evolutionary species conceptual framework in an a priori fashion using mapped restriction-site data (mitochondrial DNA and nuclear rDNA), allozymes, and morphology. We then compared the ability of different methods to recover the ''hypothesized evolutionary species'' (HES). Highton's genetic-distance method and a tree-based method consistently recovered all four HES, although sometimes with weak support. With two exceptions, other methods recovered the same HES, but additional groups were weakly delimited and nested within the HES. Given the apparent recent divergence of some of the chromosome races and distinct populations in this complex, these are encouraging results. We emphasize the value of specifying testable criteria as clearly as possible and testing these with methods that make use of different properties of a single dataset.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Worker interests and male production inPolistes gallicus,a Mediterranean social wasp
- Author
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Stefano Turillazzi, Elisabeth Arévalo, David C. Queller, J. S. Nguyen, Francesca Zacchi, Joan E. Strassmann, and Rita Cervo
- Subjects
biology ,Ecology ,education ,Unfertilized Eggs ,Hymenoptera ,Social behaviour ,biology.organism_classification ,Queen (playing card) ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,Social conflict ,Polistes gallicus ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Demography - Abstract
The resolution of social conflict in colonies may accord with the interests of the most numerous party. In social insect colonies with single once-mated queens, workers are more closely related to the workers’ sons than they are to the queens’ sons. Therefore, they should prefer workers to produce males, against the queen’s interests. Workers are capable of producing males as they arise from unfertilized eggs. We found Polistes gallicus to have colonies of single, once-mated queens, as determined by microsatellite genotyping of the workers, so worker interests predict worker male production. In colonies lacking queens, workers produced the males, but not in colonies with original queens. Thus worker interests were expressed only when the queen was gone. The high fraction of missing queens and early end to the colony cycle relative to climate so early in the season is surprising and may indicate a forceful elimination of the queen.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Absence of within–colony kin discrimination in behavioural interactions of swarm–founding wasps
- Author
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Jessica Williams, Perttu Seppä, Elisabeth Arévalo, Amina Husain, Ceal J. Klingler, Joan E. Strassmann, David C. Queller, and Francesca Zacchi
- Subjects
Parachartergus colobopterus ,Kin discrimination ,Communication ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,business.industry ,Swarm behaviour ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Article ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Aggressive behaviours ,Biting ,Genetic marker ,Evolutionary biology ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,Genetic relatedness ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,business ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Within-colony kin discrimination has not been demonstrated conclusively for any social insect, perhaps partly because highly polymorphic genetic markers necessary to assess within-colony relatednesses have only recently become available. We use microsatellite loci to investigate within-colony kin discrimination in behavioural interactions in the neotropical multiple-queen wasp, Parachartergus colobopterus. Within-colony kin discrimination would be particularly advantageous in this species since average genetic relatedness among colony members overall is low (0.32 =/- 0.06), compared to the relatedness value between full sisters of 0.75. Using seven colonies of individually marked females, we recorded behavioural interactions that were cooperative (222 grooming, 2438 feeding), aggressive (511 body or wing biting, 240 mandible biting) or neutral (1676 antennating). We expected cooperative behaviours to favour closer kin and aggressive behaviours to be directed towards more distant kin, but found that none of the behaviours we investigated showed discrimination on the basis of relatedness. We could have detected a difference in relatedness values of as little as between 0.03 and 0.12, depending on the behaviour being analysed. Thus, we found no evidence for kin discrimination in within-colony behaviour in this species.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Mitochondrial DNA Sequence Divergence and Phylogenetic Relationships among Eight Chromosome Races of the Sceloporus Grammicus Complex (Phrynosomatidae) in Central Mexico
- Author
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Scott K. Davis, Elisabeth Arévalo, and Jack W. Sites
- Subjects
Genetics ,Species complex ,Mitochondrial DNA ,Sceloporus grammicus ,Phylogenetic tree ,Molecular evolution ,Nucleic acid sequence ,Chromosome ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Gene ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
A 2,479-base pair mitochondrial DNA fragment was sequenced for eight chromosome races of Sceloporus grammicus from central Mexico to estimate their phylogenetic relationships. The species S. poinsetti and S. olivaceus were used separately as alternative outgroups. A total of 795 positions varied in three complete protein-coding genes examined (ND3, ND4L, ND4), and 52 of 292 positions varied across five transfer RNAs examined (glycine, argenine. histidine, serine, leucine). Sequence divergence values ranged from 0.0 to 0.23 among the ingroup taxa, and a maximum of 0.26 was observed between ingroup and outgroup taxa. Alternative analyses based upon equally weighted characters and several alternative character-weighting options were used to obtain phylogenetic hypotheses for the complex, and a single most-parsimonious tree was selected from among these on the basis of a new character-weighting method that takes into account the observed frequencies of all 12 possible substitutions for protein genes
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Population structure and reproductive biology of the stone crab Xantho poressa (Crustacea: Decapoda: Xanthidae) in the ‘Corrales de Rota’ (south-western Spain), a human-modified intertidal fishing area
- Author
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José A. Cuesta, Eduardo D. Spivak, J. Ignacio González-Gordillo, Elisabeth Arévalo, Biología, and Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia (España)
- Subjects
fecundity ,Intertidal zone ,Aquatic Science ,Ciencias Biológicas ,handedness ,Reproductive biology ,Corrales de Pesca ,Xanthidae ,Matting systems ,rhythms ,Handedness ,biology ,Ecology ,Hatching ,gonadosomatic index ,Hepatosomatic index ,Biología Marina, Limnología ,biology.organism_classification ,Fecundity ,Crustacean ,Xantho poressa ,mating systems ,Gonadosomatic Index ,Gonadosomatic index ,hepatosomatic index ,Rhythms ,CIENCIAS NATURALES Y EXACTAS - Abstract
12 páginas, 8 figuras, 4 tablas., The present study describes the reproductive biology, population structure and life history traits of the abundant intertidal crab Xantho poressa. Between March 2007 and April 2008, a total of 1918 individuals were collected in Corrales de Rota (south-western Spain), a human-modified intertidal habitat characterized by an artificial high complexity. Suitable refuges for crabs (cobbles and boulders) are very abundant in this area and density (maximum of 50 ind*m−2) was directly related with the area covered by these stones. In spring and summer, size–frequency distributions showed a polymodal pattern with seasonal variations related to the incorporation of juveniles to the adult population. Newly settled juveniles were not found in the Corrales suggesting an ontogenetic migration from a distant recruitment habitat. The annual reproductive cycle was seasonal and successive peaks in the abundance of ovigerous females were observed in late spring and summer. Females probably produced multiple broods during a long intermoult period. The gonadosomatic index had a cyclic pattern of variation with peaks two weeks prior to those of ovigerous females; it was lower during the non-reproductive season. The hepatosomatic index was high during spring, decreased during summer and increased gradually at the end of the reproductive season. There was a monthly cycle of larval release resulting from a combination of a cyclic and synchronic ovarian maturity, oviposition and incubation; hatching took place during neap tides when the moon was at last quarter. The adaptive significance of the rhythmic reproduction and hatching observed may not be explained by the predator avoidance hypotheses. The overall sex-ratio did not differ from 1:1 but one male and several females coexist under a stone, indicating a female biased operative sex-ratio. The combination of a complex habitat, its use, and a strong sexual dimorphism suggest a refuge–defence polygenic mating system. The survival and fitness of X. poressa in the Corrales de Rota are probably enhanced by the availability of shelter, a consequence of a highly complex habitat, and probably, of human activity., This study was partially carried out during a 6-month visit by E.D.S. to the Instituto de Ciencias Marinas de Andalucía (ICMAN), supported by the Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia de España (MEC) through a grant for foreign professors and researchers visiting laboratories in Spain during their sabbatical years (SAB2005-0170).
- Published
- 2010
7. Delimiting species: comparing methods for Mendelian characters using lizards of the Sceloporus grammicus (Squamata: Phrynosomatidae) complex
- Author
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Jonathon C, Marshall, Elisabeth, Arévalo, Edgar, Benavides, Joanne L, Sites, and Jack W, Sites
- Subjects
Evolution, Molecular ,Geography ,Models, Genetic ,Animals ,Chromosome Mapping ,Lizards ,Environment ,DNA, Mitochondrial ,DNA, Ribosomal ,Mexico ,Phylogeny - Abstract
Species form the fundamental units of analysis in many areas of biology and, therefore, rigorous delimitation of this unit is important to a broad array of researchers. Recently, many new empirical methods have been proposed to delimit species in nature, and a large literature exists on the theoretical merit and superiority of each method. However, few empirical studies actually compare the results of these methods applied in the same study system. We used a large allozyme and chromosome dataset to apply a number of genetic-distance, character-based, and tree-based methods to a well-studied, data-rich system: the Sceloporus grammicus lizard complex of central Mexico. We hypothesized species boundaries under a general lineage or evolutionary species conceptual framework in an a priori fashion using mapped restriction-site data (mitochondrial DNA and nuclear rDNA), allozymes, and morphology. We then compared the ability of different methods to recover the "hypothesized evolutionary species" (HES). Highton's genetic-distance method and a tree-based method consistently recovered all four HES, although sometimes with weak support. With two exceptions, other methods recovered the same HES, but additional groups were weakly delimited and nested within the HES. Given the apparent recent divergence of some of the chromosome races and distinct populations in this complex, these are encouraging results. We emphasize the value of specifying testable criteria as clearly as possible and testing these with methods that make use of different properties of a single dataset.
- Published
- 2006
8. Can cuticular lipids provide sufficient information for within-colony nepotism in wasps?
- Author
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Alessandro Massolo, Stefano Turillazzi, David C. Queller, Joan E. Strassmann, Francesca Romana Dani, Annalisa Carelli, Francesca Zacchi, Kevin R. Foster, Perttu Seppä, and Elisabeth Arévalo
- Subjects
Population Dynamics ,Wasps ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry ,Gene Frequency ,Nepotism ,Animals ,Mating ,Cooperative Behavior ,General Environmental Science ,Communication ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,biology ,business.industry ,Inclusive fitness ,Discriminant Analysis ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Lipid Metabolism ,Lipids ,United Kingdom ,Closest relatives ,Italy ,Multivariate Analysis ,Odorants ,Polistes ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,business ,Microsatellite Repeats ,Research Article - Abstract
Inclusive fitness theory predicts that members of non-clonal societies will gain by directing altruistic acts towards their closest relatives. Multiple mating by queens and multiple queens creates distinct full-sister groups in many hymenopteran societies within which nepotism might occur. However, the weight of empirical data suggests that nepotism within full-sister groups is absent. It has been suggested that a lack of reliable recognition markers is responsible. In this paper, we investigated whether epicuticular lipids could provide reliable cues for intracolony kin recognition in two species of social wasps, the paper wasp Polistes dominulus and the hornet Vespa crabro. Epicuticular lipids have previously been shown to be central to kin recognition at the nest level, making them excellent candidates for within-nest discrimination. We genotyped individuals using DNA microsatellites and analysed surface chemistry by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. We find that in both species epicuticular lipids typically could provide enough information to distinguish related nest-mates from unrelated nest-mates, a difference that occurs in colonies with multiple queens. However, in V. crabro, where colonies may be composed by different patrilines, information for discrimination between full sisters and half-sisters is weaker and prone to errors. Our data suggest that epicuticular lipids at best provide reliable information for intracolony nepotistic discrimination in multiple-queen colonies composed of unrelated lines.
- Published
- 2004
9. Isolation of Microsatellite Loci in Sceloporus grammicus (Squamata, Phrynosomatidae)
- Author
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Elisabeth Arévalo and Patrick H. Degnan
- Subjects
Genetics ,education.field_of_study ,Sceloporus grammicus ,biology ,Population ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Genome ,genomic DNA ,Hybrid zone ,Genetic marker ,Microsatellite ,Genomic library ,education - Abstract
The mesquite lizard (Sceloporus grammicus) exhibits multiple Robertsonian chromosomal rearrangements (mainly centric fissions) resulting in several cytotypes. In a transitional environment from oak-pine forests to a drier xeric habitat in central Mexico, two cytotypes (F5: 2n = 34 and FM2: 2n = 46) are known to hybridize. A partial genomic library was constructed from S. grammicus genomic DNA and then screened for microsatellites. Microsatellites are short tandem nucleotide repeats that have near universal occurrence in all eukaryotic genomes. Microsatellites exhibit variable length polymorphisms that can be characterized and utilized as genetic markers for population studies. Thirteen microsatellite arrays were isolated from the S. grammicus genomic library and PCR primers were designed in the flanking regions for the amplification of these alleles. These microsatellite loci would be the primary tool used to answer behavioral, ecological, chromosomal and evolutionary questions that influence the maintenance of this hybrid zone.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Isolated pelvic perfusion: plasma pharmacokinetics depend primarily on drug dosage and not the type of drug
- Author
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Hank Griffin, Harold J. Wanebo, Elisabeth Arévalo, and James F. Belliveau
- Subjects
Drug ,Cancer Research ,Organoplatinum Compounds ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Pharmacology ,Toxicology ,law.invention ,Pharmacokinetics ,law ,Blood plasma ,medicine ,Distribution (pharmacology) ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,media_common ,Pelvic Neoplasms ,Clinical pharmacology ,business.industry ,Pelvic perfusion ,Oxaliplatin ,Oncology ,Chemotherapy, Cancer, Regional Perfusion ,business ,Perfusion ,Algorithms ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Comparison of the pharmacokinetics of four drugs with the isolated pelvic perfusion protocol showed linear relationships between drug dosage and two isolated pelvic plasma parameters, mean AUC (pelvic exposure, microM min) and the mean maximum pelvic drug level (microM). It appears that the pharmacokinetics are sufficiently defined as to predict plasma distribution curves for an additional drug with this protocol. Recent FDA approval of oxaliplatin allowed an evaluation of this premise.Linearity of drug dosage with maximum drug levels and exposure (AUC) in the isolated pelvic plasma yields initial estimates of these parameters for additional drugs. Use of an empirical, four-compartment pharmacokinetic model (Wanebo and Belliveau in Cancer Chemother. Pharmacol. 43:427, 1999) allowed the generation of predictive plasma distribution curves. These curves were established by optimizing the initial estimates of maximum drug levels and exposure along with estimates of two additional parameters (half-life of pelvic clearance and pelvic to systemic exposure ratio) from experimental data of the four drugs pharmacokinetically characterized.Calculated plasma distribution curves for oxaliplatin matched the experimental curves from the first three patients receiving oxaliplatin therapy, given the experimental ranges of pharmacokinetic parameters seen with the initial four drugs.These results give an overall picture for the plasma pharmacokinetics during the isolation period for the isolated pelvic perfusion protocol. Enough experimental data have been accumulated for five drugs to establish a simple pharmacokinetic model (Wanebo and Belliveau in Cancer Chemother Pharmacol 43:427, 1999) and interdrug relationships (i.e., this report) which can be used to predict reasonable plasma distribution curves for additional drugs with this protocol.
- Published
- 2003
11. Ancient conservation of trinucleotide microsatellite loci in polistine wasps
- Author
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David C. Queller, Perttu Seppä, Jes S. Pedersen, Francesca Zacchi, Vanessa O. Ezenwa, Michele D. Hastings, Yong Zhu, John M. Peters, Joan E. Strassmann, and Elisabeth Arévalo
- Subjects
Genetics ,Polymorphism, Genetic ,biology ,Vespidae ,Wasps ,Population genetics ,Locus (genetics) ,DNA ,biology.organism_classification ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Loss of heterozygosity ,Cold Temperature ,Gene mapping ,Species Specificity ,Trinucleotide Repeats ,Evolutionary biology ,Genetic marker ,Microsatellite ,Animals ,Polistes ,Molecular Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Microsatellites have proven to be very useful genetic markers for studies of kinship, parentage, and gene mapping. If microsatellites are conserved among species, then those developed for one species can be used on related species, which would save the time and effort of developing new loci. We evaluated conservation of 27 trinucleotide loci that were derived from 2 species of Polistes wasps in cross-species applications on 27 species chosen from the major lineages of the Vespidae, which diverged as much as 144 million years ago. We further investigated cross-species polymorphism levels for 18 of the loci. There was a clear relationship between cladistic distance and both conservation of the priming sites and heterozygosity. However the loci derived from P. bellicosus were much more widely conserved and polymorphic than were those derived from P. annularis. The disparity in cross-species utility between these sets of loci means that caution should be used in generalizing from conservation rates derived from single species. We found no relationship between locus conservation or heterozygosity and GC content of flanks, repeat motif, repeat length, or heterozygosity in the original species, which suggests that generalizations from other studies reporting such patterns are premature.
- Published
- 1999
12. CONFLICTS OF INTEREST IN SOCIAL INSECTS: MALE PRODUCTION IN TWO SPECIES OF POLISTES
- Author
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David C. Queller, Elisabeth Arévalo, and Joan E. Strassmann
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Offspring ,Ecology ,Reproduction (economics) ,Zoology ,Worker policing ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Brood ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,Genetics ,Polistes ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
In social insects, reproduction is often monopolized by queens even though in many species are workers capable of laying male eggs. Because it is difficult to see how one or a few queens can suppress the much more numerous workers, collective worker control, or policing, offers an attractive solution. When workers are less related to other workers than they are to queens, workers should be selected to suppress each other in favor of the queen's male offspring, if other things are equal. Otherwise, they should allow each other to lay male eggs. For two species of Polistes, we used DNA microsatellites to estimate these two relatednesses, to determine the sex of brood, and to determine whether male brood was produced by queens or workers. Workers were significantly more related to each other (0.63 and 0.73 for P. bellicosus and P. dorsalis, respectively) than they were to queens (0.40 and 0.54, respectively) so they were predicted to allow each other to lay the male eggs. However, workers did not lay male-destined eggs in either species, so the results do not support collective worker control. There are two possible explanations for this result. Queens may be able to physically dominate in these small colonies. Alternatively, this may be a conventional settlement that minimizes conflict and the attendant costs.
- Published
- 1997
13. Support for the hypothesis of anguimorph ancestry for the suborder Serpentes from phylogenetic analysis of mitochondrial DNA sequences
- Author
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Michael R. J. Forstner, Scott K. Davis, and Elisabeth Arévalo
- Subjects
Mitochondrial DNA ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Zoology ,complex mixtures ,DNA, Mitochondrial ,Species Specificity ,Phylogenetics ,biology.animal ,Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid ,Genetics ,Animals ,Leptotyphlops ,Molecular Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Phylogeny ,integumentary system ,biology ,Phylogenetic tree ,Base Sequence ,Lizard ,Fossorial ,Snakes ,biology.organism_classification ,Sister group ,Typhlops ,Sequence Alignment - Abstract
Snakes represent one of the most ubiquitous and successful groups of terrestrial vertebrates; however, many aspects of their evolutionary relationships remain uncertain. Previous research, which utilized morphological and immunological data, has not resolved the origin of snakes or clearly delineated the relationships between snakes and other lizards. A DNA sequence data set from the mitochondrial ND4 gene and the histidine, serine, and leucine tRNAs has been generated for use in the examination of these relationships. Parsimony analyses employing multiple outgroups resolve snakes within the lizard clade. Varanus is the sister group to the snakes in 81% of bootstrap replications using Bos as the outgroup specified, 85% using Trachemys, 57% using Alligator, and 80% using all three outgroups. The primitive, fossorial snake genera Leptotyphlops and Typhlops are basal to the other snakes and provide tentative molecular evidence in support of a fossorial or subfossorial origin of limblessness for the suborder Serpentes.
- Published
- 1995
14. [Untitled]
- Author
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James M. Carpenter, Elisabeth Arévalo, Yong Zhu, and Joan E. Strassmann
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Paraphyly ,0303 health sciences ,Subfamily ,Vespidae ,biology ,Zoology ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Monophyly ,Evolutionary biology ,Phylogenetics ,Polistinae ,Microsatellite ,Subgenus ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
Social wasps in the subfamily Polistinae (Hymenoptera: Vespidae) have been important in studies of the evolution of sociality, kin selection, and within colony conflicts of interest. These studies have generally been conducted within species, because a resolved phylogeny among species is lacking. We used nuclear DNA microsatellite flanking sequences, mitochondrial COI sequence, and morphological characters to generate a phylogeny for the Polistinae (Hymenoptera) using 69 species. Our phylogeny is largely concordant with previous phylogenies at higher levels, and is more resolved at the species level. Our results support the monophyly of the New World subgenera of Polistini, while the Old World subgenera are a paraphyletic group. All genera for which we had more than one exemplar were supported as monophyletic except Polybia which is not resolved, and may be paraphyletic. The combination of DNA sequences from flanks of microsatellite repeats with mtCOI sequences and morphological characters proved to be useful characters establishing relationships among the different subgenera and species of the Polistini. This is the first detailed hypothesis for the species of this important group.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Can cuticular lipids provide sufficient information for within-colony nepotism in wasps?
- Author
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Francesca R. Dani, Kevin R. Foster, Francesca Zacchi, Perttu Seppä, Alessandro Massolo, Annalisa Carelli, Elisabeth Arévalo, David C. Queller, Joan E. Strassmann, and Stefano Turillazzi
- Subjects
HYMENOPTERA ,ANIMAL sexual behavior ,WASPS ,VESPIDAE - Abstract
Inclusive fitness theory predicts that members of non-clonal societies will gain by directing altruistic acts towards their closest relatives. Multiple mating by queens and multiple queens creates distinct full-sister groups in many hymenopteran societies within which nepotism might occur. However, the weight of empirical data suggests that nepotism within full-sister groups is absent. It has been suggested that a lack of reliable recognition markers is responsible. In this paper, we investigated whether epicuticular lipids could provide reliable cues for intracolony kin recognition in two species of social wasps, the paper wasp Polistes dominulus and the hornet Vespa crabro. Epicuticular lipids have previously been shown to be central to kin recognition at the nest level, making them excellent candidates for within-nest discrimination. We genotyped individuals using DNA microsatellites and analysed surface chemistry by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. We find that in both species epicuticular lipids typically could provide enough information to distinguish related nest-mates from unrelated nest-mates, a difference that occurs in colonies with multiple queens. However, in V. crabro, where colonies may be composed by different patrilines, information for discrimination between full sisters and half-sisters is weaker and prone to errors. Our data suggest that epicuticular lipids at best provide reliable information for intracolony nepotistic discrimination in multiple-queen colonies composed of unrelated lines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Parapatric Hybridization between Chromosome Races of the Sceloporus grammicus Complex (Phrynosomatidae): Structure of the Ajusco Transect
- Author
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Elisabeth Arévalo, Gustavo Casas, Scott K. Davis, Guillermo Lara, Jack W. Sites, and Elisabeth Arevalo
- Subjects
Species complex ,Sceloporus grammicus ,biology ,Environmental factor ,Zoology ,Introgression ,Aquatic Science ,Parapatric speciation ,medicine.disease_cause ,biology.organism_classification ,Divergence ,Gene flow ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Ribosomal DNA ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
ric contact zone was found between locality four (F6) and five (HS). A hybrid index score obtained with the diagnostic markers of these races showed a total of 42 pure F6, 43 pure HS, six possible backcrosses to F6, and two F, individuals. Different levels of introgression were found for the different marker systems. Two different classes of markers, allozyme and mtDNA, showed asymmetrical gene flow from the F6 into the LS. The asymmetrical flow of the F6 mtDNA into the LS distribution was very pronounced with the F6 haplotypes occurring at a frequency of 0.5 at the LS locality. The rDNA markers showed symmetrical flow to both sides of the F6 and HS races. Taxonomic implications of the levels of morphological and molecular divergence are discussed, and the origins of the F6HS and F6-LS contact zones are interpreted to represent a secondary contact. Se examin6 variaci6n genetica y morfol6gica en el complejo Sceloporus grammicus a lo largo de un transecto elevacional en la Sierra del Ajusco, al suroeste de la ciudad de Mexico. Un total de 122 lagartijas se colectaron en seis localidades empezando a los 2400 m y establecidas a cada 200 m de altitud, y una submuestra de 107 animales fue examinada en cuanto a su numero cromos6mico, diez characteres morfol6gicos y tres sistemas de proteinas. Una selecci6n de esta muestra
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Population Cytogenetics and Evolution of the Sceloporus grammicus Complex (Iguanidae) in Central Mexico
- Author
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Elisabeth Arévalo, Calvin A. Porter, Arturo González, Fernando Mendoza, José L. Camarillo, Jack W. Sites, Elisabeth Arevalo, Arturo Gonzalez, and Jose L. Camarillo
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Sceloporus grammicus ,biology ,Population ,Cytogenetics ,Zoology ,Iguanidae ,biology.organism_classification ,Evolutionary biology ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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