| | Creator | Title | Description | Subject | Date |
|---|
| 1 |  | Seger, Jon | 1998 Sewall Wright Award: William Donald Hamilton | The Sewall Wright Award was established in 1991 to honor active investigators who have contributed in especially significant ways to the conceptual unification of the biological sciences. This year's recipient is William D. Hamilton of Oxford University. Beginning in the 1960s with his papers on the... | Evolution; Biological; Research | 1999 |
| 2 |  | Adler, Frederick R. | Defended fortresses or moving targets? Another model of inducible defenses inspired by military metaphors | We use a common framework to compare three models of plant strategies to confront herbivory: constitutive defense, optimal inducible defense, and the "moving target." Plants with constitutive defenses retain a fixed defensive phenotype. Plants with optimal inducible defenses respond to attack by inc... | Constitutive defense; optimal inducible defense; phenotype | 1994 |
| 3 |  | Farmer, Colleen G. | Parental care: the key to understanding endothermy and other convergent features in birds and mammals | Birds and mammals share a number of features that are remarkably similar but that have evolved independently. One of these characters, endothermy, has been suggested to have played a cardinal role in avian and mammalian evolution. I hypothesize that it is parental care, rather than endothermy, that ... | Evolution; Metabolism; Convergence | 2000 |
| 4 |  | Adler, Frederick R.; Jackson, Brian Richard; Carroll, Karen C.; Samore, Matthew H. | Use of strain typing data to estimate bacterial transmission rates in healthcare settings | OBJECTIVE: To create an affordable and accurate method for continuously monitoring bacterial transmission rates in healthcare settings. DESIGN: We present a discrete simulation model that relies on the relationship between in-hospital transmission rates and strain diversity. We also present a proof... | Strain typing; Infection control; Transmission model | 2005 |
| 5 |  | Seger, Jon | Natural history and evolution of paper-wasps | Paper-wasps occupy a special place in the history of animal behavior. Temperate species o f Polistes are large, beautiful, intelligent, adaptable, easy to observe, and thoroughly committed to social life. They are also aptly named, being intensely political, in the limited sense that any nonhuman an... | Individuals; Excellent; Phylogeny | 1997 |
| 6 |  | Adler, Frederick R. | Optimization, conflict, and nonoverlapping foraging ranges in ants | An organism's foraging range depends on the behavior of neighbors, the dynamics of resources, and the availability of information. We use a well-studied population of the red harvester ant Pogonomyrmex barbatus to develop and independently parameterize models that include these three factors. The mo... | Colony; Space; Model | 2003 |
| 7 |  | Linton, Matthew J. | Hydraulic conductivity, xylem cavitation, and water potential for succulent leaves of agave deserti and agave tequilana | Axial hydraulic conductivity (Kh) was measured for fresh, dehydrated, and rehydrated leaves of the Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) leaf succulents, Agave deserti and Agave tequilana. Dehydration of leaves at 35(o)C for several hours caused Kh to decrease, with a 50% decrease occurring at a leaf w... | Transpiration; Dehydrated; Drought | 2001 |
| 8 |  | Sperry, John S. | Hydraulic consequences of vessel evolution in angiosperms | We tested two hypotheses for how vessel evolution in angiosperms influenced xylem function. First, the transition to vessels decreased resistance to flow--often considered the driving force for their evolution. Second, the transition to vessels compromised safety from cavitation--a constraint emergi... | Cavitation; Resistivity; Perforation | 2007 |
| 9 |  | Adler, Frederick R. | Information collection and spread by networks of patrolling ants | To study how a social group, such as an ant colony, monitors events occurring throughout its territory, we present a model of a network of patrolling ants engaged in information collection and dissemination. In this network, individuals follow independent paths through a region and can exchange sign... | Patrolling network; ant colony; information-gathering | 1992 |
| 10 |  | Davidson, Diane W. | Size variability in the worker caste of a social insect (veromessor pergandei mayr) as a function of the competitive environment | Worker size polymorphism in colonies of Veromessor pergandei, a granivorous desert ant, is inversely related to the intensity of interspecific competition in the habitat for seven ant communities in the deserts of southern California and southern Arizona. Seed size preferences are positively corr... | Ants; Arizona; California; Coexistence; Communities; Density specialization; Desert granivores; Foraging strategies; Resource partitioning; Size | 1978 |
| 11 |  | Seger, Jon | Solitary wasps: behavior and natural history by Kevin M. O'Neill | Most species of living things are insects, and ter- restrial ecology consists largely of interactions between insects and plants. The biologies of major insect groups such as Hymenoptera should be well documented and well known. Amazingly, they are not. The world is awash in excellent reviews of cur... | Insects; Ecological | 2002 |
| 12 |  | Davidson, Diane W. | Some consequences of diffuse competition in a desert ant community | Exploitative and interference competition are investigated in detail in a community of six coexisting species of granivorous desert ants . A linear model that includes both direct and indirect competitive interactions is used to predict positive or negative correlations in the abundances of com... | Ants; Arizona; California; Coexistence; Communities; Density specialization; Desert granivores; Resource partitioning | 1980 |
| 13 |  | Adler, Frederick R. | Stumped by trees? A generalized null model for patterns of organismal diversity | Evolutionary biologists increasingly have become interested in the factors determining the structure of phylogenetic trees. For example, highly asymmetric trees seem to suggest that the probability of extinction and/or speciation differs among lineages. | Evolutionary diversification; phylogenetic topologies; speciation | 1995 |
| 14 |  | Clayton, Dale H. | Reciprocal natural selection on host-parasite phenotypes | Coevolution is evolution in one species in response to selection imposed by a second species, followed by evolution in the second species in response to reciprocal selection imposed by the first species. Although reciprocal selection is a prerequisite of coevolution, it has seldom been documented in... | Host-parasite phenotypes; Ectoparasites; Virulence; Fitness | 1999 |
| 15 |  | Farmer, Colleen G. | Reproduction: the adaptive significance of endothermy | A central theme raised by Angilletta and Sears is that the energetic cost of endothermy is too enormous to be offset by the benefits that thermogenesis could provide for reproduction. Angilletta and Sears suggest that parents would have been better off producing additional offspring with the energy ... | Parental care; Incubation; Metabolism | 2003 |
| 16 |  | Farmer, Colleen G. | Right-to-left shunt of crocodilians serves digestion | All amniotes except birds and mammals have the ability to shunt blood past the lungs, hut the physiological function of this ability is poorly understood. We studied the role of the shunt in digestion in juvenile American alligators in the following ways. First, we characterized the shunt in fasting... | Postprandial; Alligators; Gastrointestinal | 2008 |
| 17 |  | Bromley, Benjamin C. | Rise and fall of debris disks: MIPS observations of h and chi Persei and the evolution of mid-IR emission from planet formation | We describe Spitzer MIPS observations of the double cluster, h and X Persei, covering a 0.6 deg2 area surrounding the cores of both clusters. The data are combined with IRAC and 2MASS data to investigate 616 sources from 1.25Y24 m. We use the long-baseline Ks ½24 color to identify two population... | Infrared circumstellar matter; Open clusters and associations stars: Individual (NGC 869, NGC 884) planetary systems: Formation, planetary systems: Protoplanetary disks | 2008 |
| 18 |  | Adler, Frederick R. | Role of heterogeneity in the persistence and prevalence of sin nombre virus in deer mice | Many diseases persist at a relatively low prevalence, seemingly close to extinction. For a chronic disease in a homogeneous population, reducing the transmission rate by a fraction proportional to the prevalence would be sufficient to eradicate the disease. This study examines how higher prevalence ... | Transmission; Survivorship; Seropositivity | 2008 |
| 19 |  | Shapiro, Michael D. | Limb diversity and digit reduction in reptilian evolution | The study of morphological rules, or trends, offered classical biologists the opportunity to address the mechanisms underlying the evolution of anatomical designs. Regularities in evolution suggested that common functional or developmental rules governed the transformation of structures. Parallelism... | Digit loss; Morphology; Adaptation | 2006 |
| 20 |  | Adler, Frederick R.; Feener, Donald H. | Maintaining diversity in an ant community: modeling, extending, and testing the dominance-discovery trade-off | Ant communities often consist of many species with apparently similar niches. We present a mathematical model of the dominance-discovery trade-off, the trade-off between the abilities to find and to control resources, showing that it can in principle facilitate the coexistence of large numbers of s... | Coexistence; Dominant species; Parasitoid | 2007 |
| 21 |  | Sperry, John S. | Water transport in vesselless angiosperms: conducting efficiency and cavitation safety | Two structure-function hypotheses were tested for vesselless angiosperm wood. First, vesselless angiosperm wood should have much higher flow resistance than conifer wood because angiosperm tracheids lack low-resistance torus-margo pits. Second, vesselless wood ought to be exceptionally safe from cav... | | 2007 |
| 22 |  | Jorgensen, Erik | Wormwholes: a commentary on K. F. Schaffner's "Genes, behavior, and developmental emergentism | Although Caenorhabditis elegans was chosen and modified to be an organism that would facilitate a reductionist program for neurogenetics, recent research has provided evidence for properties that are emergent from the neurons. While neurogenetic advances have been made using C elegans which may be u... | Organism; Neurons; Genotype | 1998 |
| 23 |  | Rogers, Alan R. | How much can fossils tell us about regional continuity? | Presents a study on the genetic contribution of earlier populations to later populations within regions called regional continuity. Testing for regional continuity with multiple characters; Replacement of archaic population by a population of modern humans. | Human genetics; Fossils; Regional continuity | 2006-06-05 |
| 24 |  | Rogers, Alan R.; Harpending, Henry C. | Genetic structure of ancient human populations | Discusses mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequences as important source of data about the history of human species. | Tree of descent; mismatch distributions; simulations; findings; intermatch distributions; younger and older populations | 2001-09-15 |
| 25 |  | Kieda, David B. | High statistics search for ultrahigh energy gamma-ray emission from Cygnus X-3 and Hercules X-1 | We have carried out a high statistics (2 X 10 9 events) search for ultrahigh energy g-ray emission from the x-ray binary sources Cygnus X-3 and Hercules X-1. Using data taken with the CASA-MIA detector over a five year period (1990-1995), we find no evidence for steady emission from either source. T... | Cygnus X-3; Hercules X-1; Ultrahigh energy; X-rays | 1997 |