Jackson, Hanna M. Johnson, Sarah A. Morandin, Lora A. Richardson, Leif L. Guzman, Laura Melissa M’Gonigle, Leithen K.
Published in
Biology Letters
Mounting evidence suggests that climate change, agricultural intensification and disease are impacting bumblebee health and contributing to species’ declines. Identifying how these factors impact insect communities at large spatial and temporal scales is difficult, partly because species may respond in different ways. Further, the necessary data mu...
Krehenwinkel, Henrik Weber, Sven Künzel, Sven Kennedy, Susan R
Published in
Biology letters
Environmental DNA analysis (eDNA) has revolutionized the field of biomonitoring in the past years. Various sources have been shown to contain eDNA of diverse organisms, for example, water, soil, gut content and plant surfaces. Here we show that dried plant material is a highly promising source for arthropod community eDNA. We designed a metabarcodi...
O'Brien, Fiona Staunton, Caroline A Barrett-Jolley, Richard
Published in
Biology letters
In humans, skin is a primary thermoregulatory organ, with vasodilation leading to rapid body cooling, whereas in Rodentia the tail performs an analogous function. Many thermodetection mechanisms are likely to be involved including transient receptor potential vanilloid-type 4 (TRPV4), an ion channel with thermosensitive properties. Previous studies...
Tassé, Mélanie Choquette, Thierry Angers, Annie Stewart, Donald T. Pante, Eric Breton, Sophie
Published in
Biology Letters
Cytochrome c oxidase subunit II (COX2) is one of the three mitochondrially encoded proteins of the complex IV of the respiratory chain that catalyses the reduction of oxygen to water. The cox2 gene spans about 690 base pairs in most animal species and produces a protein composed of approximately 230 amino acids. We discovered an extreme departure f...
Millena, Rebecca Jean A Rosenheim, Jay A
Published in
Biology letters
Parental care can protect offspring from predators but can also create opportunities for parents to vector parasites to their offspring. We hypothesized that the risk of infection by maternally vectored parasites would increase with the frequency of mother-offspring contact. Ammophila spp. wasps (Hymenoptera: Sphecidae) build nests in which they re...
Sepil, Irem Perry, Jennifer C Dore, Alice Chapman, Tracey Wigby, Stuart
Published in
Biology letters
Biased population sex ratios can alter optimal male mating strategies, and allocation to reproductive traits depends on nutrient availability. However, there is little information on how nutrition interacts with sex ratio to influence the evolution of pre-copulatory and post-copulatory traits separately. To address this omission, we test how male m...
Liu, Wanzhen Smith, David A S Raina, Gayatri Stanforth, Rowan Ng'Iru, Ivy Ireri, Piera Martins, Dino J Gordon, Ian J Martin, Simon H
Published in
Biology letters
Warning coloration provides a textbook example of natural selection, but the frequent observation of polymorphism in aposematic species presents an evolutionary puzzle. We investigated biogeography and polymorphism of warning patterns in the widespread butterfly Danaus chrysippus using records from citizen science (n = 5467), museums (n = 8864) and...
Choi, Noori Adams, Matt Fowler-Finn, Kasey Knowlton, Elise Rosenthal, Malcolm Rundus, Aaron Santer, Roger D Wilgers, Dustin Hebets, Eileen A
Published in
Biology letters
The evolution of complex signals has often been explored by testing multiple functional hypotheses regarding how independent signal components provide selective benefits to offset the costs of their production. In the present study, we take a different approach by exploring the function of complexity per se. We test the hypothesis that increased vi...
Culina, Antica Brouwer, Lyanne
Published in
Biology Letters
Individuals of socially monogamous species can correct for suboptimal partnerships via two secondary mating strategies: divorce and extra-pair mating, with the former potentially providing both genetic and social benefits. Divorcing between breeding seasons has been shown to be generally adaptive behaviour across monogamous birds. Interestingly, so...
Abecia, Janine E King, Alison J Luiz, Osmar J Crook, David A Wedd, Dion Banks, Sam C
Published in
Biology letters
While mouthbrooding is not an uncommon parental care strategy in fishes, paternal mouthbrooding only occurs in eight fish families and is little studied. The high cost of paternal mouthbrooding to the male implies a low risk of investment in another male's offspring but genetic parentage patterns are poorly known for paternal mouthbrooders. Here, w...