SwePub
Tyck till om SwePub Sök här!
Sök i SwePub databas

  Extended search

Träfflista för sökning "AMNE:(NATURVETENSKAP Biologi) ;lar1:(uu)"

Search: AMNE:(NATURVETENSKAP Biologi) > Uppsala University

  • Result 1-10 of 15687
Sort/group result
   
EnumerationReferenceCoverFind
1.
  • Sigvald, Roland, et al. (author)
  • Molecular identification of bloodmeals and species composition in Culicoides biting midges
  • 2013
  • In: Medical and Veterinary Entomology. - : Wiley. - 0269-283X .- 1365-2915. ; 27, s. 104-112
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Investigations of host preferences in haematophagous insects, including Culicoides biting midges (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae), are critical in order to assess transmission routes of vector-borne diseases. In this study, we collected and morphologically identified 164 blood-engorged Culicoides females caught in both light traps and permanent 12-m high suction traps during 20082010 in Sweden. Molecular analysis of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) gene in the biting midges was performed to verify species classification, discern phylogenetic relationships and uncover possible cryptic species. Bloodmeal analysis using universal vertebrate cytochrome b primers revealed a clear distinction in host selection between mammalophilic and ornithophilic Culicoides species. Host sequences found matches in horse (n = 59), sheep (n = 39), cattle (n = 26), Eurasian elk (n = 1) and 10 different bird species (n = 18). We identified 15 Culicoides species previously recorded in Scandinavia and four additional species haplotypes that were distinctly different from the described species. All ornithophilic individuals (n = 23) were caught exclusively in the suction traps, as were, interestingly, almost all mammalophilic species (n = 41), indicating that many biting midge species may be able to cover long distances after completing a bloodmeal. These results add new information on the composition of Culicoides species and their host preferences and their potential long-distance dispersal while blood-engorged.
  •  
2.
  • Alm Rosenblad, Magnus, 1957, et al. (author)
  • Detection of signal recognition particle (SRP) RNAs in the nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer 1 (ITS1) of three lineages of ectomycorrhizal fungi (Agaricomycetes, Basidiomycota)
  • 2016
  • In: MycoKeys. - : Pensoft Publishers. - 1314-4057 .- 1314-4049. ; 13, s. 21-33
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • During a routine scan for Signal Recognition Particle (SRP) RNAs in eukaryotic sequences, we surprisingly found in silico evidence in GenBank for a 265-base long SRP RNA sequence in the ITS1 region of a total of 11 fully identified species in three ectomycorrhizal genera of the Basidiomycota (Fungi): Astraeus, Russula, and Lactarius. To rule out sequence artifacts, one specimen from a species indicated to have the SRP RNA-containing ITS region in each of these genera was ordered and re-sequenced. Sequences identical to the corresponding GenBank entries were recovered, or in the case of a non-original but conspecific specimen differed by three bases, showing that these species indeed have an SRP RNA sequence incorporated into their ITS1 region. Other than the ribosomal genes, this is the first known case of non-coding RNAs in the eukaryotic ITS region, and it may assist in the examination of other types of insertions in fungal genomes.
  •  
3.
  • Abarenkov, Kessy, et al. (author)
  • Annotating public fungal ITS sequences from the built environment according to the MIxS-Built Environment standard – a report from a May 23-24, 2016 workshop (Gothenburg, Sweden)
  • 2016
  • In: MycoKeys. - : Pensoft Publishers. - 1314-4057 .- 1314-4049. ; 16, s. 1-15
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Recent molecular studies have identified substantial fungal diversity in indoor environments. Fungi and fungal particles have been linked to a range of potentially unwanted effects in the built environment, including asthma, decay of building materials, and food spoilage. The study of the built mycobiome is hampered by a number of constraints, one of which is the poor state of the metadata annotation of fungal DNA sequences from the built environment in public databases. In order to enable precise interrogation of such data – for example, “retrieve all fungal sequences recovered from bathrooms” – a workshop was organized at the University of Gothenburg (May 23-24, 2016) to annotate public fungal barcode (ITS) sequences according to the MIxS-Built Environment annotation standard (http://gensc.org/mixs/). The 36 participants assembled a total of 45,488 data points from the published literature, including the addition of 8,430 instances of countries of collection from a total of 83 countries, 5,801 instances of building types, and 3,876 instances of surface-air contaminants. The results were implemented in the UNITE database for molecular identification of fungi (http://unite.ut.ee) and were shared with other online resources. Data obtained from human/animal pathogenic fungi will furthermore be verified on culture based metadata for subsequent inclusion in the ISHAM-ITS database (http://its.mycologylab.org).
  •  
4.
  • Nilsson, R. Henrik, 1976, et al. (author)
  • How, not if, is the question mycologists should be asking about DNA-based typification
  • 2023
  • In: MycoKeys. - : Pensoft Publishers. - 1314-4057 .- 1314-4049. ; :96, s. 143-157
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Fungal metabarcoding of substrates such as soil, wood, and water is uncovering an unprecedented number of fungal species that do not seem to produce tangible morphological structures and that defy our best attempts at cultivation, thus falling outside the scope of the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants. The present study uses the new, ninth release of the species hypotheses of the UNITE database to show that species discovery through environmental sequencing vastly outpaces traditional, Sanger sequencing-based efforts in a strongly increasing trend over the last five years. Our findings chal-lenge the present stance of some in the mycological community - that the current situation is satisfactory and that no change is needed to "the code" - and suggest that we should be discussing not whether to allow DNA-based descriptions (typifications) of species and by extension higher ranks of fungi, but what the precise requirements for such DNA-based typifications should be. We submit a tentative list of such criteria for further discussion. The present authors hope for a revitalized and deepened discussion on DNA-based typification, because to us it seems harmful and counter-productive to intentionally deny the overwhelming majority of extant fungi a formal standing under the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants.
  •  
5.
  • Sundblad, Göran (author)
  • Spatial Modelling of Coastal Fish – Methods and Applications
  • 2010
  • Doctoral thesis (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • Environmental factors influence species and habitats on multiple scales creating a mosaic of distribution patterns. Studying factors shaping these patterns are central to our understanding of population dynamics and ultimately ecosystem functioning. Information on the distribution of resources and conservation values are also highly needed in marine management as coastal areas are increasingly influenced by human activities. In this thesis, large-scale field data is used to explore how strong environmental gradients found on multiple scales in the coastal areas of the Baltic Sea influence fish habitats. The underlying concepts are based in the field of species distribution modelling, whereby habitat maps can be produced using environmental layers in a geographic information system. Distribution modelling is further used to address both ecological and applied questions by examining effects of habitat limitation on fish population sizes and to evaluate management actions aimed at habitat conservation. I show that specific habitat requirements for fish species of both freshwater and marine origin can be described using environmental variables and that species-environment relationships can be used to predict the distribution of early life-stages of fish in the Baltic Sea archipelagos. Further, predicted habitat availability of a specific life-stage was directly related to adult population size of Eurasian perch Perca fluviatilis, signifying that the abundance of large predatory fish can be limited by specific recruitment habitats. Lastly, by predicting the distribution of an assemblage of coastal fish species and their associated habitats, an assessment of a network of marine protected areas was performed. Results revealed large gaps in the current network and identified areas suitable for future protection. By demonstrating how current habitat protection can be improved by including critical habitats for coastal fish population sizes this thesis points to the benefits of integrating nature conservation and fisheries management. Based on these findings I conclude that species distribution modelling provides a suitable analytical framework for assessing the habitat requirements of organisms. An increased understanding of habitat-population relationships and an ability to accurately map ecologically important features will be of great value for an ecosystem-based marine management. ­    
  •  
6.
  • Zhao, M., et al. (author)
  • Phylogenetic position of the Wallcreeper Tichodroma muraria
  • 2016
  • In: Journal of Ornithology = Journal fur Ornithologie. - : Springer Science and Business Media LLC. - 0021-8375 .- 1439-0361. ; 157:3, s. 913-918
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The Wallcreeper Tichodroma muraria is usually placed in a monotypic family or subfamily within the superfamily Certhioidea, with assumed close relationships to Certhia (treecreepers), Sitta (nuthatches) and Salpornis (spotted creepers). Previous studies have suggested that Tichodroma is most closely related to Sitta, alternatively to Salpornis. We analysed the relationships of Tichodroma using two mitochondrial and five nuclear loci. The tree based on concatenated sequences strongly supported a sister relationship between Tichodroma and Sitta, as well as between Salpornis and Certhia. However, species tree analysis (MP-EST) was unable to resolve these relationships, and although the concatenation tree remains the best hypothesis, more data are needed to corroborate this. © 2016, Dt. Ornithologen-Gesellschaft e.V.
  •  
7.
  • Anslan, Sten, et al. (author)
  • Great differences in performance and outcome of high-throughput sequencing data analysis platforms for fungal metabarcoding
  • 2018
  • In: MycoKeys. - : Pensoft Publishers. - 1314-4057 .- 1314-4049. ; 39, s. 29-40
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Along with recent developments in high-throughput sequencing (HTS) technologies and thus fast accumulation of HTS data, there has been a growing need and interest for developing tools for HTS data processing and communication. In particular, a number of bioinformatics tools have been designed for analysing metabarcoding data, each with specific features, assumptions and outputs. To evaluate the potential effect of the application of different bioinformatics workflow on the results, we compared the performance of different analysis platforms on two contrasting high-throughput sequencing data sets. Our analysis revealed that the computation time, quality of error filtering and hence output of specific bioinformatics process largely depends on the platform used. Our results show that none of the bioinformatics workflows appears to perfectly filter out the accumulated errors and generate Operational Taxonomic Units, although PipeCraft, LotuS and PIPITS perform better than QIIME2 and Galaxy for the tested fungal amplicon dataset. We conclude that the output of each platform requires manual validation of the OTUs by examining the taxonomy assignment values.
  •  
8.
  • Alström, Per, et al. (author)
  • Dramatic niche shifts and morphological change in two insular bird species
  • 2015
  • In: Royal Society Open Science. - : The Royal Society. - 2054-5703. ; 2
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Colonizations of islands are often associated with rapid morphological divergence. We present two previously unrecognized cases of dramatic morphological change and niche shifts in connection with colonization of tropical forest-covered islands. These evolutionary changes have concealed the fact that the passerine birds madanga, Madanga ruficollis, from Buru, Indonesia, and São Tomé shorttail, Amaurocichla bocagii, from São Tomé, Gulf of Guinea, are forest-adapted members of the family Motacillidae (pipits and wagtails). We show that Madanga has diverged mainly in plumage, which may be the result of selection for improved camouflage in its new arboreal niche, while selection pressures for other morphological changes have probably been weak owing to preadaptations for the novel niche. By contrast, we suggest that Amaurocichla's niche change has led to divergence in both structure and plumage.
  •  
9.
  • Alström, Per, et al. (author)
  • Integrative taxonomy of the Plain-backed Thrush (Zoothera mollissima) complex (Aves, Turdidae) reveals cryptic species, including a new species.
  • 2016
  • In: Avian research. - : Elsevier BV. - 2053-7166. ; 7:1
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Background: The Plain-backed Thrush Zoothera mollissima breeds in the Himalayas and mountains of central China. It was long considered conspecific with the Long-tailed Thrush Zoothera dixoni, until these were shown to be broadly sympatric. Methods: We revise the Z. mollissima–Z. dixoni complex by integrating morphological, acoustic, genetic (two mito- chondrial and two nuclear markers), ecological and distributional datasets. Results: In earlier field observations, we noted two very different song types of“Plain-backed”Thrush segregated by breeding habitat and elevation. Further integrative analyses congruently identify three groups: an alpine breeder in the Himalayas and Sichuan, China (“Alpine Thrush”); a forest breeder in the eastern Himalayas and northwest Yunnan (at least), China (“Himalayan Forest Thrush”); and a forest breeder in central Sichuan (“Sichuan Forest Thrush”). Alpine and Himalayan Forest Thrushes are broadly sympatric, but segregated by habitat and altitude, and the same is prob- ably true also for Alpine and Sichuan Forest Thrushes. These three groups differ markedly in morphology and songs. In addition, DNA sequence data from three non-breeding specimens from Yunnan indicate that yet another lineage exists (“Yunnan Thrush”). However, we find no consistent morphological differences from Alpine Thrush, and its breed- ing range is unknown. Molecular phylogenetic analyses suggest that all four groups diverged at least a few million years ago, and identify Alpine Thrush and the putative “Yunnan Thrush” as sisters, and the two forest taxa as sisters. Cytochrome b divergences among the four Z. mollissima sensu lato (s.l.) clades are similar to those between any of them and Z. dixoni, and exceed that between the two congeneric outgroup species. We lectotypify the name Oreocin- cla rostrata Hodgson, 1845 with the Z. mollissima sensu stricto (s.s.) specimen long considered its type. No available name unambiguously pertains to the Himalayan Forest Thrush. Conclusions: The Plain-backed Thrush Z. mollissima s.l. comprises at least three species: Alpine Thrush Z. mollissima s.s., with a widespread alpine breeding distribution; Sichuan Forest Thrush Z. griseiceps, breeding in central Sichuan forests; and Himalayan Forest Thrush, breeding in the eastern Himalayas and northwest Yunnan (at least), which is described herein as a new species. “Yunnan Thrush” requires further study.
  •  
10.
  • Tedersoo, Leho, et al. (author)
  • Novel soil-inhabiting clades fill gaps in the fungal tree of life
  • 2017
  • In: Microbiome. - : Springer Science and Business Media LLC. - 2049-2618. ; 5
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Background - Fungi are a diverse eukaryotic group of degraders, pathogens, and symbionts, with many lineages known only from DNA sequences in soil, sediments, air, and water. Results - We provide rough phylogenetic placement and principal niche analysis for >40 previously unrecognized fungal groups at the order and class level from global soil samples based on combined 18S (nSSU) and 28S (nLSU) rRNA gene sequences. Especially, Rozellomycota (Cryptomycota), Zygomycota s.lat, Ascomycota, and Basidiomycota are rich in novel fungal lineages, most of which exhibit distinct preferences for climate and soil pH. Conclusions - This study uncovers the great phylogenetic richness of previously unrecognized order- to phylum-level fungal lineages. Most of these rare groups are distributed in different ecosystems of the world but exhibit distinct ecological preferences for climate or soil pH. Across the fungal kingdom, tropical and non-tropical habitats are equally likely to harbor novel groups. We advocate that a combination of traditional and high-throughput sequencing methods enable efficient recovery and phylogenetic placement of such unknown taxonomic groups.
  •  
Skapa referenser, mejla, bekava och länka
  • Result 1-10 of 15687
Type of publication
journal article (11833)
doctoral thesis (1081)
other publication (784)
editorial collection (587)
research review (579)
book chapter (271)
show more...
conference paper (251)
book (164)
reports (58)
review (39)
licentiate thesis (24)
editorial proceedings (13)
artistic work (5)
patent (3)
show less...
Type of content
peer-reviewed (12160)
other academic/artistic (3309)
pop. science, debate, etc. (179)
Author/Editor
Ellegren, Hans (178)
Andersson, Leif (141)
Bertilsson, Stefan (136)
Jakobsson, Mattias (124)
Ågren, Jon (123)
Lascoux, Martin (123)
show more...
Höglund, Jacob (123)
Söderhäll, Kenneth (117)
Karlsson, Thomas (116)
Björklund, Mats (115)
Olsen, Björn (112)
Lindblad-Toh, Kersti ... (111)
Lindblad, Peter (104)
Laurila, Anssi (100)
Qvarnström, Anna (100)
Nilsson Ekdahl, Kris ... (99)
Carlsson, Bengt (99)
Andersson, Dan I. (96)
Åqvist, Johan (90)
Nilsson, Bo (89)
Söderhäll, Irene (86)
Thulin, Mats (86)
Berglund, Anders (84)
Johannesson, Hanna (82)
Mannervik, Bengt (79)
Uhlén, Mathias (79)
Hellman, Lars (79)
Ettema, Thijs J. G. (79)
Johansson, Frank (79)
Ehrenberg, Måns (78)
Arnqvist, Göran (78)
Rydin, Håkan (78)
Suh, Alexander (78)
Gustafsson, Lars (75)
Widersten, Mikael (72)
El-Seedi, Hesham (71)
Götherström, Anders (71)
Elf, Johan (69)
Winberg, Svante (68)
Messinger, Johannes, ... (68)
Langenheder, Silke (67)
Sanyal, Suparna (65)
Tibell, Leif (65)
Lindström, Eva S. (65)
Carlborg, Örjan (64)
Jemth, Per (62)
Svanbäck, Richard (62)
Nilsson, Mats (61)
Pejler, Gunnar (61)
Messinger, Johannes (61)
show less...
University
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (1094)
Stockholm University (905)
Karolinska Institutet (762)
Lund University (586)
Umeå University (513)
show more...
University of Gothenburg (481)
Royal Institute of Technology (391)
Linnaeus University (323)
Linköping University (280)
Chalmers University of Technology (150)
Swedish Museum of Natural History (128)
Örebro University (78)
Södertörn University (71)
Halmstad University (45)
Karlstad University (32)
Högskolan Dalarna (30)
RISE (29)
University of Gävle (28)
Kristianstad University College (23)
Mälardalen University (20)
Jönköping University (17)
Mid Sweden University (15)
VTI - The Swedish National Road and Transport Research Institute (12)
Luleå University of Technology (9)
Stockholm School of Economics (9)
University of Skövde (9)
Malmö University (7)
Swedish Environmental Protection Agency (5)
University of Borås (3)
The Swedish School of Sport and Health Sciences (2)
IVL Swedish Environmental Research Institute (2)
Sophiahemmet University College (1)
Red Cross University College (1)
show less...
Language
English (14809)
Swedish (796)
German (56)
French (11)
Danish (3)
Spanish (3)
show more...
Russian (2)
Norwegian (1)
Undefined language (1)
Finnish (1)
Polish (1)
Japanese (1)
Chinese (1)
Vietnamese (1)
show less...
Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Natural sciences (15683)
Medical and Health Sciences (1686)
Agricultural Sciences (522)
Engineering and Technology (183)
Humanities (134)
Social Sciences (106)

Year

Kungliga biblioteket hanterar dina personuppgifter i enlighet med EU:s dataskyddsförordning (2018), GDPR. Läs mer om hur det funkar här.
Så här hanterar KB dina uppgifter vid användning av denna tjänst.

 
pil uppåt Close

Copy and save the link in order to return to this view