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Author |
Marcon, E.; Herault, B. |
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Title |
entropart: An R package to measure and partition diversity |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2015 |
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Journal of Statistical Software |
Abbreviated Journal |
Journal of Statistical Software |
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67 |
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8 |
Pages |
1-26 |
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Biodiversity; Entropy; Partitioning |
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entropart is a package for R designed to estimate diversity based on HCDT entropy or similarity-based entropy. It allows calculating species-neutral, phylogenetic and functional entropy and diversity, partitioning them and correcting them for estimation bias. © 2015, American Statistical Association. All rights reserved. |
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Cirad, Campus agronomique, BP 316, Kourou, French Guiana |
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Export Date: 22 October 2015 |
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EcoFoG @ webmaster @ |
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633 |
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Marcon, E.; Traissac, S.; Puech, F.; Lang, G. |
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Title |
Tools to characterize point patterns: dbmss for R |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2015 |
Publication |
Journal of Statistical Software |
Abbreviated Journal |
Journal of Statistical Software |
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67 |
Issue |
Codesnippet3 |
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1-15 |
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Point patterns; R; Spatial structure |
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The dbmss package for R provides an easy-to-use toolbox to characterize the spatial structure of point patterns. Our contribution presents the state of the art of distance-based methods employed in economic geography and which are also used in ecology. Topographic functions such as Ripley’s K, absolute functions such as Duranton and Overman’s Kd and relative functions such as Marcon and Puech’s M are implemented. Their confidence envelopes (including global ones) and tests against counterfactuals are included in the package. © 2015, American Statistical Association. All rights reserved. |
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AgroParisTech, INRA, UMR 518 Math. Info. Appli., 16 rue Claude Bernard, Paris, France |
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Export Date: 22 October 2015 |
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EcoFoG @ webmaster @ |
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635 |
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Coste, S.; Roggy, J.C.; Garraud, L.; Heuret, P.; Nicolini, E.; Dreyer, E. |
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Title |
Does ontogeny modulate irradiance-elicited plasticity of leaf traits in saplings of rain-forest tree species? A test with Dicorynia guianensis and Tachigali melinonii (Fabaceae, Caesalpinioideae) |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2009 |
Publication |
Annals of Forest Science |
Abbreviated Journal |
Ann. For. Sci. |
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66 |
Issue |
7 |
Pages |
701-709 |
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Keywords |
plant architecture; phenotypic plasticity; photosynthetic capacity; leaf structure; tropical rain forest |
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Irradiance elicits a large plasticity in leaf traits, but little is known about the modulation of this plasticity by ontogeny. Interactive effects of relative irradiance and ontogeny were assessed on leaf traits for two tropical rainforest tree species: Dicorynia guianensis Amshoff and Tachigali melinonii (Harms) Barneby (Fabaceae, Caesalpinioideae). Eleven morphological and physiological leaf traits, relative to photosynthetic performance, were measured on saplings at three different architectural development stages (ASD 1, 2 and 3) and used to derive composite traits like photosynthetic N-use efficiency. Measurements were made along a natural irradiance gradient. The effect of ASD was very visible and differed between the two species. For Dicorynia guianensis, only leaf mass-per-area (LMA) significantly increased with ASDs whereas for Tachigali melinonii, almost all traits were affected by ASD: LMA, leaf N content and photosynthetic capacity increased from ASD 1 to ASD 3. Photosynthetic N-use-efficiency was not affected by ASD in any species. Leaf traits were severely modulated by irradiance, whereas the degree of plasticity was very similar among ASDs. Only few interactions were detected between irradiance and ASD, for leaf thickness, carbon content, and the ratio Chl/N in T. melinonii and for photosynthetic capacity in D. guianensis. We conclude that ontogenic development and irradiance-elicited plasticity modulated leaf traits, with almost no interaction, i.e., the degree of irradiance-elicited plasticity was stable across development stages and independent of ontogeny in these two species, at least in the early stages of development assessed here. |
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[Dreyer, Erwin] INRA, UMR Ecol & Ecophysiol Forestieres 1137, F-54280 Champenoux, France, Email: dreyer@nancy.inra.fr |
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EDP SCIENCES S A |
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1286-4560 |
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ISI:000270906600009 |
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EcoFoG @ eric.marcon @ |
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100 |
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Author |
Tritsch, I.; Gond, V.; Oszwald, J.; Davy, D.; Grenand, P. |
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Title |
Territorial dynamics in the wayãpi and teko amerindian communities of the middle oyapock, camopi, French Guiana |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2012 |
Publication |
Bois et Forets des Tropiques |
Abbreviated Journal |
Bois Forets Tropiques |
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66 |
Issue |
311 |
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49-61 |
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Amerindian populations; French Guiana; Protected area; Slash-and-burn cultivation; System of natural resource use; Territorial management |
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Amerindian populations have been experiencing major socio-economic changes for several decades, in a context of rapid demographic growth. This article addresses the ways in which the Amerindian populations of French Guiana have adapted their land use and natural resource management systems to cope with the pressures exerted on their lands and lifestyles. The aim was to investigate the resilience of their systems for land and natural resource use. The concentration of Amerindian habitats around the town of Camopi, which is linked to the availability of health and school infrastructure and to efforts to promote a sedentary lifestyle, is a factor of increasing natural resource scarcity and social alienation. The system is adapting by fragmenting the Amerindian habitat into peripheral villages and extending farmlands along rivers to access to more space. These villages replicate patterns of spatial organisation that are similar to those found in traditional Wayãpi and Teko villages, except that habitation is sedentary, as families hope to have their villages equipped with at lEast drinking water and electrification. Habitat fragmentation is spatially limited by the time taken for daily journeys to school, and therefore by school bus services (dugout), which means that land use is effectively conditioned by services and infrasrtucture. Other living quarters are maintained at a distance from the village, so that the habitat is bi-local: families have a main home where services and infrastructure are available, and a secondary itinerant home further away, which is chosen according to the quality of farmland, the hunting yield of hunting resources, the history of the location and family networks. These distant homes are kept up by spending income from social assistance on transport. It's thus shown that these Amerindian systems for land and natural resource uses are highly adaptable, in that their sustainability is guaranteed by the reconstruction of a circular pattern of mobility in accordance with the intensity of resource use. |
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Ird Observatoire Hommes-Milieux Oyapock, Cnrs Guyane, 2, avenue Gustave Charlery, 97300 Cayenne, France |
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0006579x (Issn) |
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Export Date: 17 April 2013; Source: Scopus; Language of Original Document: French; Correspondence Address: Tritsch, I.; Université des Antilles et de la Guyane/Cirad, Umr Écologie des forêts de Guyane, Campus agronomique de Kourou, 97310 Kourou, France |
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EcoFoG @ webmaster @ |
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482 |
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Sist, P.; Blanc, L.; Mazzei, L.; Baraloto, C.; Aussenac, R. |
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Title |
Current knowledge on overall post-logging biomass dynamics in Northern Amazonian forests |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2012 |
Publication |
Bois et Forets des Tropiques |
Abbreviated Journal |
Bois Forets Tropiques |
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66 |
Issue |
314 |
Pages |
41-49 |
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Above ground-biomass; Amazonian rainforests; Logging impact; Silviculture |
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This article presents the effects of logging on the dynamics of above-ground biomass from the results of the post-logging study within two forests: Cikel in Eastern Pará, Brazil and Paracou in French Guiana. The main objective is to compare the impact of commercial logging on the regeneration of the aboveground biomass in these forests whose characteristics differ in terms of structure and growth. In both sites, the intensity of exploitation is a key factor in determining the loss of biomass and the time required for its regeneration. In Paracou, the regeneration of biomass lost during conventional logging of 10 trees per hectare takes 45 years and more than 100 years when operating with higher intensity (21 trees/ha ). In Cikel the forest biomass regenerates after 49 years harvesting 6 trees/ha and that takes 87 years after removal of 8 trees/ha. This regeneration needs similar time on both sites but with lower logging intensity at Cikel, in which felled trees are larger with a greater biomass than those of Paracou. This post-logging study has established a direct correlation of the dynamics of the biomass with the initial structure of the forest, as well as with the parameters of forest dynamics: mortality, growth and recruitment. The accumulation of biomass by the tree growth of the two remaining stands is a key parameter for the net carbon storage, while the contribution of recruitment in Paracou becomes significant only after 10 years after felling. Therefore in view to improve the growth of residual trees, it is compulsory to apply adequate silvicultural treatments such as selective thinning or removal of vines. While the two forests are geographically close enough, their regenerative abilities differ and because of the significant difference in size of the trees, the forest could tolerate more intensive harvesting in French Guiana. |
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Université Antilles-Guyane Cayenne, Guyane, France |
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0006579x (Issn) |
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Export Date: 5 June 2013; Source: Scopus; Language of Original Document: English; Correspondence Address: Cirad UR B and SEF, Campus international de Baillarguet, 34398 Montpellier Cedex 5, France |
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EcoFoG @ webmaster @ |
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489 |
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Vincent, G.; Caron, F.; Sabatier, D.; Blanc, L. |
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Title |
LiDAR shows that higher forests have more slender trees |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2012 |
Publication |
Bois et Forets des Tropiques |
Abbreviated Journal |
Bois Forets Tropiques |
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66 |
Issue |
314 |
Pages |
51-56 |
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Keywords |
Competition; Fertility; French Guiana; LiDAR; Tree allometry |
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High-density Airborne Laser Scanning was used to derive the Canopy Height Model (CHM) of an experimental forest site in the neotropics (Paracou, French Guiana). Individual tree heights were computed by manually segmenting tree crowns on the CHM and then extracting the local maximum canopy height. Three hundred and ninety-six (396) height estimates were matched from dominant or emergent trees with the corresponding ground records of stem diameters sampled in two plots with different mean canopy heights (28.1 m vs. 31.3 m). Tree slenderness was found to be positively and very significantly correlated with mean canopy height at the plot level. The same correlation was observed at the species population level for the three species adequately sampled. It can therefore be concluded that stratification by canopy height is to be recommended when deriving allometric relationships in order to avoid bias in Above Ground Biomass estimations. |
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CIRAD, UMR Ecofog, 97300 Kourou, France |
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0006579x (Issn) |
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Export Date: 5 June 2013; Source: Scopus; Language of Original Document: English; Correspondence Address: IRD, UMR AMAP, 34000 Montpellier, France |
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EcoFoG @ webmaster @ |
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490 |
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Amusant, N.; Fournier, M.; Beauchene, J. |
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Title |
Colour and decay resistance and its relationships in Eperua grandiflora |
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Journal Article |
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2008 |
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Annals of Forest Science |
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Ann. For. Sci. |
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65 |
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8 |
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806 |
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natural durability; colour; decay resistance; variability; heartwood; tropical wood |
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Eperua grandiflora, which is widely distributed in the French Guiana forest region, shows high variability in decay resistance. Further information concerning this wood quality parameter is necessary, but standard testing methods are complex and time-consuming. We assessed the use of colorimetry to determine durability in heartwood samples from a range of trees. Eperua grandiflora colour parameters were measured using a CIELAB system, revealing that the tree effect was greater than the radial position and height effects. The wood samples were exposed to Coriolus versicolor and Antrodia sp. according to two European standards (En 350-1 and XP CEN TS 15083-1). Eperua grandiflora is more susceptible to brown rot. These two standards did not give the same durability classes. The high variation in natural durability was due to the tree effect. These two properties were found to be correlated and the assessment also distinguished the extreme durability classes but they are not sufficient to classify the class of durability of this species. |
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[Amusant, Nadine] CIRAD, PERSYT, UR Valorisat Bois Tropicaux, F-34538 Montpellier 5, France, Email: nadine.amusant@cirad.fr |
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EDP SCIENCES S A |
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1286-4560 |
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ISI:000261431600006 |
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EcoFoG @ eric.marcon @ |
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127 |
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Tahiri, A.; Amissa Adima, A.; Adjé, F.A.; Amusant, N. |
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Pesticide effects and screening of extracts of Azadirachta Indica (A.) Juss. on the Macrotermes bellicosus rambur termite |
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Journal Article |
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2011 |
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Bois et Forets des Tropiques |
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Effet pesticide et screening des extraits de Azadirachta indica (A.) Juss. sur le termite Macroterme |
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65 |
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310 |
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79-88 |
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Azadirachta indica; Pesticide properties; Phytochemical screening; Termite |
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To recommend applications in the field of a naturally insecticide plant substance as an alternative to chemical control against termite attacks, several important prerequisites need to be satisfied to ensure its effectiveness. The toxicity, lethal dose, mode of action, persistence of insecticide effect and chemical composition of total aqueous, alcohol and hexane extracts of the leaves and seeds of the neem tree, Azadirachta indica, were tested with the Macrotermes bellicosus termite. The extracts were found to be highly toxic to termites on contact, killing the entire population tested. The insecticide effect of the extracts persisted from 2.4 to 4.2 days. The aqueous and hexane extracts were the most toxic (LD50 0.422±0.018 to 4,466±0,162 mg/l). Contact and inhalation were both essential to their effectiveness. The aqueous extract of seeds, which is the most active, is also capable of being transferred through the colony during social tasks. However, it seems to have an anti-appetent effect on termites and does not act by ingestion. It contains phenol compounds (tannins and flavonoids) and saponins. The hexane extract of seeds is oily and contains 11 fatty acids as well as terpenoids, flavonoids and saponins. |
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Cirad Laboratoire de Chimie du Bois, 34398 Montpellier Cedex 5, France |
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Export Date: 20 November 2012; Source: Scopus |
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EcoFoG @ webmaster @ |
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447 |
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Delph, L.F.; Arntz, A.M.; Scotti-Saintagne, C.; Scotti, I. |
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The Genomic Architecture of Sexual Dimorphism in the Dioecious Plant Silene Latifolia |
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Journal Article |
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2010 |
Publication |
Evolution |
Abbreviated Journal |
Evolution |
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64 |
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10 |
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2873-2886 |
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Artificial selection; genetic correlations; linkage map; sex-specific expression; sexual conflict |
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Evaluating the genetic architecture of sexual dimorphism can aid our understanding of the extent to which shared genetic control of trait variation versus sex-specific control impacts the evolutionary dynamics of phenotypic change within each sex. We performed a QTL analysis on Silene latifolia to evaluate the contribution of sex-specific QTL to phenotypic variation in 46 traits, whether traits involved in trade-offs had colocalized QTL, and whether the distribution of sex-specific loci can explain differences between the sexes in their variance/covariance matrices. We used a backcross generation derived from two artificial-selection lines. We found that sex-specific QTL explained a significantly greater percent of the variation in sexually dimorphic traits than loci expressed in both sexes. Genetically correlated traits often had colocalized QTL, whose signs were in the expected direction. Lastly, traits with different genetic correlations within the sexes displayed a disproportionately high number of sex-specific QTL, and more QTL co-occurred in males than females, suggesting greater trait integration. These results show that sex differences in QTL patterns are congruent with theory on the resolution of sexual conflict and differences based on G-matrix results. They also suggest that trade-offs and trait integration are likely to affect males more than females. |
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[Delph, Lynda F.; Arntz, A. Michele; Scotti, Ivan] Indiana Univ, Dept Biol, Bloomington, IN 47405 USA, Email: ldelph@indiana.edu |
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WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, INC |
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0014-3820 |
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ISI:000282573800006 |
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EcoFoG @ eric.marcon @ |
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31 |
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Royer, M.; Stien, D.; Beauchene, J.; Herbette, G.; McLean, J.P.; Thibaut, A.; Thibaut, B. |
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Extractives of the tropical wood wallaba (Eperua falcata Aubl.) as natural anti-swelling agents |
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2010 |
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Holzforschung |
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Holzforschung |
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64 |
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2 |
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211-215 |
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Wallaba (Eperua falcata) is a tropical wood that is known to have naturally high moisture related dimensional stability. Samples of wallaba heartwood were subjected to differential solvent extraction. Wood pieces that were extracted with methanol showed significantly greater swelling following rehydration from oven dry to 96% relative humidity than non- extracted samples and samples extracted with other solvents. Methanol soluble wallaba heartwood extract was purified by HPLC and the compounds present were characterized by NMR spectroscopy. The structure of 13 compounds in methanol extract was identified. The relative proportion of polar compounds in methanol extract was found to be high. The compounds identified are proposed to bind to the polymeric cell wall by means of multiple hydrogen bonds restricting the association of water and therefore act as natural anti-swelling agents. |
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0018-3830 |
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WOS:000274423900010 |
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EcoFoG @ webmaster @ |
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307 |
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