Temperature Influences on Adult Size, Development, and Reproductive Potential of Aquatic Diptera

1987 ◽  
Vol 44 (10) ◽  
pp. 1743-1752 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert S. Rempel ◽  
John C. H. Carter

Elevated temperature (2.5 and 4.0 °C) resulted in smaller body size of stream Diptera in outdoor experimental channels, and this trend applied to both predator and detritivore trophic groups. Comparison of cumulative emergence curves using the Kolmogorov–Smirnov test showed that most species developed more quickly in the heated channels; this led to greater overall survivorship. Reproductive potential, estimated from ovary area, did not change with body size for Conchapelopia aleta, Polypedilum aviceps, and Stempellinella brevis, and did so only weakly for Parametriocnemus lundbecki. In addition, females decreased in size more than males in the heated channels. Somatic growth appeared to be sacrificed to maintain reproductive potential, although loss of energy reserves could reduce the length of the reproductive stage. In balance, the aquatic Diptera demonstrated resistance to thermal elevation in the summer, even though ambient temperatures approached 30 °C. This may partially account for the group's ability to grow and develop throughout the year in extremely varied temperate environments.

Author(s):  
Stanisław Bury ◽  
Bartłomiej Zając ◽  
Henryk Okarma ◽  
Aleksandra Kolanek

AbstractDepletion of free-living populations is often associated with changes in fitness-related traits, e.g., body size. Ongoing decrease in body size has been reported in most vertebrates, but reptiles remain understudied. Moreover, sexual size dimorphism, commonly observed in reptiles, indicates that environmental pressures on body size may appear sex-specific. This can also result in shifts in sex ratio, an aspect even less studied. We investigated body size and sex ratio in population of grass snake (Natrix natrix) surveyed over 40 years ago in comparison with the current state. We found that both sexes express similar magnitude in body size decline. The current sex ratio does not deviate from 1:1, while in the past, females outnumbered males. The observed changes are likely an outcome of several non-mutually exclusive factors. In the studied area, an increase in road traffic and human presence and a drop in prey availability have been documented. Both factors may exert higher pressure on larger individuals, particularly females, due to their high costs of reproduction. It is recorded here that increase in ambient temperatures and summer duration may additionally enhance the mortality risk and resource requirements. Shifts in body size and sex ratio can catalyze further declines in abundance and reproductive potential of the population.


2017 ◽  
Vol 75 (3) ◽  
pp. 1042-1053 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nikolai Klibansky ◽  
Frederick S Scharf

Abstract Understanding the dynamic processes that contribute to reproductive output is vital to determine appropriate harvest controls and sustain marine fisheries. For sequential hermaphrodites, the process of reproduction is complicated by sex transition within the life history. We examined the reproductive dynamics of black sea bass (Centropristis striata), a protogynous serranid, within a major fishing region of the Northwest Atlantic during two consecutive spawning seasons to quantify the strength of size-dependence and the magnitude of temporal variation in several key traits. Specifically, we estimated the size-dependence of sex ratio, maturity, spawning capability, batch fecundity, and spawning frequency at both fine (weeks/months) and broad (years) temporal scales. We observed fecundity to be highest in females of intermediate body size, which was entirely a function of reduced spawning frequency among the largest females. Female fecundity peaked at sizes well below the estimated size at sex transition, and contrary to the pattern typically observed for gonochoristic fishes in which the largest females yield the greatest number of eggs. Among protogynous fishes, females may decrease egg production prior to sex change and instead allocate energy to somatic growth, benefitting from larger body size during the subsequent male phase. The production of fewer batches of eggs by larger females directly impacted estimates of annual fecundity. In addition, we detected large interannual differences in the proportion of spawning capable females, and also spawning frequency, which resulted in considerable variation between annual fecundity estimates. The inclusion of temporal and size-dependent variation in female egg production should produce more robust estimates of stock reproductive potential and its response to changing harvest scenarios.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stanisław Bury ◽  
Bartłomiej Zając ◽  
Henryk Okarma ◽  
Aleksandra Kolanek

Abstract Depletion of free-living populations is often associated with changes in fitness-related traits, e.g. body size. Ongoing decrease in body size has been reported in most vertebrates, but reptiles remain understudied. Moreover, sexual size dimorphism, commonly observed in reptiles, indicates that environmental pressures on body size may appear sex-specific. This can also result in shifts in sex ratio, an aspect even less studied. We investigated body size and sex ratio in population of grass snake (Natrix natrix) surveyed over 40 years ago in comparison with the current state. We found that both sexes express similar magnitude in body size decline. The current sex ratio does not deviate from 1:1, while in the past females outnumbered males. The observed changes are likely an outcome of several non-mutually exclusive factors. In the studied area an increase in road traffic, human presence and a drop in prey availability has been documented. Both factors may exert higher pressure on larger individuals, particularly females, due to their high costs of reproduction. Recorded here increase in ambient temperatures and summer duration, may additionally enhance the mortality risk and resource requirements. Shifts in body size and sex ratio can catalyze further declines in abundance and reproductive potential of the population.


2020 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammadreza Azimi ◽  
Seyed Ahmad Rasoulinejad ◽  
Andrzej Pacut

AbstractIn this paper, we attempt to answer the questions whether iris recognition task under the influence of diabetes would be more difficult and whether the effects of diabetes and individuals’ age are uncorrelated. We hypothesized that the health condition of volunteers plays an important role in the performance of the iris recognition system. To confirm the obtained results, we reported the distribution of usable area in each subgroup to have a more comprehensive analysis of diabetes effects. There is no conducted study to investigate for which age group (young or old) the diabetes effect is more acute on the biometric results. For this purpose, we created a new database containing 1,906 samples from 509 eyes. We applied the weighted adaptive Hough ellipsopolar transform technique and contrast-adjusted Hough transform for segmentation of iris texture, along with three different encoding algorithms. To test the hypothesis related to physiological aging effect, Welches’s t-test and Kolmogorov–Smirnov test have been used to study the age-dependency of diabetes mellitus influence on the reliability of our chosen iris recognition system. Our results give some general hints related to age effect on performance of biometric systems for people with diabetes.


2014 ◽  
Vol 60 (6) ◽  
pp. 700-711 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nina A. Vasilieva ◽  
Ekaterina V. Pavlova ◽  
Sergey V. Naidenko ◽  
Andrey V. Tchabovsky

Abstract Life-history theory predicts that in hibernators age of maturation is related positively to body size and negatively to the duration of active season aboveground. Yellow souslik is a large-sized ground squirrel with long hibernation, which suggests late maturation. We used four-year field observations of marked individuals to determine the age of maturation in males through analysis of age-dependent variation in body size, mass, androgen status, timing of spring emergence, ranging patterns and social behavior during the mating season. Yearling males were smaller, lighter, had lower level of fecal testosterone, emerged later and had smaller home ranges than older males. Social activity and the number of females encountered did not differ between age classes. After the second hibernation none of the studied parameters varied with age. Cluster analysis revealed two behavioral tactics: “active” males (adults only) emerged earlier, ranged more widely, initiated more contacts, encountered more females and were heavier than “passive” males (both yearling and adult). Thus, males of S. fulvus reached adult size and matured after two hibernations, which is relatively fast for such a big species with short active period. Indirect evidence for copulations and high variation among yearlings in all parameters suggest that some of them might successfully compete with adults. Active tactic of wandering and searching for females is energetically costly, and probably only adult males in good physical condition can afford it, whereas passive tactic of residing is energy saving and good for adults in poor condition and for yearlings that are continuing to grow.


Ecology ◽  
1982 ◽  
Vol 63 (6) ◽  
pp. 1780 ◽  
Author(s):  
Clyde E. Goulden ◽  
Linda L. Henry ◽  
Alan J. Tessier

Author(s):  
Du Wenliao ◽  
Guo Zhiqiang ◽  
Gong Xiaoyun ◽  
Xie Guizhong ◽  
Wang Liangwen ◽  
...  

A novel multifractal detrended fluctuation analysis based on improved empirical mode decomposition for the non-linear and non-stationary vibration signal of machinery is proposed. As the intrinsic mode functions selection and Kolmogorov–Smirnov test are utilized in the detrending procedure, the present approach is quite available for contaminated data sets. The intrinsic mode functions selection is employed to deal with the undesired intrinsic mode functions named pseudocomponents, and the two-sample Kolmogorov–Smirnov test works on each intrinsic mode function and Gaussian noise to detect the noise-like intrinsic mode functions. The proposed method is adaptive to the signal and weakens the effect of noise, which makes this approach work well for vibration signals collected from poor working conditions. We assess the performance of the proposed procedure through the classic multiplicative cascading process. For the pure simulation signal, our results agree with the theoretical results, and for the contaminated time series, the proposed method outperforms the traditional multifractal detrended fluctuation analysis methods. In addition, we analyze the vibration signals of rolling bearing with different fault types, and the presence of multifractality is confirmed.


Revista CEFAC ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-43
Author(s):  
Rafaela Coelho Minsky ◽  
Tayná Castilho ◽  
Roseane Rebelo Silva Meira ◽  
Tatiana Godoy Bobbio ◽  
Camila Isabel Santos Schivinski

ABSTRACT Purpose: to analyze whether deleterious oral habits can influence the number of attempts of forced spirometry maneuvers performed by healthy children. Methods: this observational and cross-sectional analytical study included 149 healthy children aged 6-12 years attending public and private schools in Florianópolis, SC, Brazil. A validated protocol was applied for the analysis of deleterious oral habits. The children were grouped according to the number of spirometry maneuvers needed to achieve successful spirometry results, as follows: G1) children who needed 3 maneuvers; G2) 4 maneuvers; G3) 5-8 maneuvers. Data were analyzed with the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test and the Kruskal-Wallis test was applied to compare quantitative variables between the groups. The Chi-square test was used to assess the association between the groups and qualitative variables. Results: there was no association between the number of attempts and the qualitative variables evaluated by the protocol. There was also no difference between the groups regarding quantitative variables for breastfeeding time, breastfeeding occurrence, use of pacifiers, and thumb sucking. Conclusion: the presence of DOH did not influence the number of forced spirometry maneuvers, performed by the healthy children in this study.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (7) ◽  
pp. 1940-1944
Author(s):  
Sevcan Altun ◽  
Aykut Aksu ◽  
Osman Imamoglu ◽  
Murat Erdogdu ◽  
Kursat Karacabey

The aim of this study is to investigate the nutritional approaches of student athletes studying at the university during the coronavirus outbreak period. Participants consisted of students studying and doing sports at the University. 446 students, 246 males and 200 females, participated in the study. Besides the personal form, students were filled the questionnaire testing questionnaire. Students voluntarily participated. The surveys were done on social media. Nutritional habits questionnaire consists of 12 questions. In the preparation of the survey questions, the questions proved validity of the researches which have been done on the subject before have been used. SPSS 23.00 package program was used in statistical analyses. Kolmogorov-Smirnov test was performed to test whether the data was normally distributed and it was determined that the data showed normal distribution. Independent t-test, paired t-test, unidirectional variance analysis and LSD tests were used in statistical operations. There was no significant difference in students' nutrition approaches by gender, both in the pre-outbreak period and in the outbreak period points (p> 0.05). Nutrition scores were significantly increased during the outbreak period (p <0.001). A significant difference was found between the students who felt bad before the epidemic and those who felt well before the epidemic and their nutritional scores according to the levels they felt (p <0.05). A significant difference was found between the pre-outbreak period and post-epidemic nutrition scores of the sports faculty students (p <0.05). During the coronavirus epidemic, university student athletes have either increased their nutritional opportunities or have changed their eating habits positively to keep their immune systems strong or both. The fact that sports faculty students have better nutrition compared to other faculty students can be attributed to their taking courses in nutrition, health and similar. It is recommended to give lectures or seminars on nutrition to athlete students. Keywords: Student, Nutrition, Sports Nutrition, Nutritional Approach, Covid-19


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