Detailed Information on Publication Record
2008
Distribution and variability in genome size of the beetle Oryzaephilus surinamensis at "Evolution Canyon" Lower Nahal Oren, compared to Silo population in Haifa Bay (in hebrew)
SHARAF, Kamal, Petr BUREŠ, Lucie HOROVÁ, Tomáš PAVLÍČEK, Eviatar NEVO et. al.Basic information
Original name
Distribution and variability in genome size of the beetle Oryzaephilus surinamensis at "Evolution Canyon" Lower Nahal Oren, compared to Silo population in Haifa Bay (in hebrew)
Name in Czech
Distribuce a variabilita velikosti genomu Oryzaephilus surinamensis v Evolučním kaňonu, Lower Nahal Oren, ve srovnání s ferálními populacemi z Haifského zálivu
Name (in English)
Distribution and variability in genome size of the beetle Oryzaephilus surinamensis at "Evolution Canyon" Lower Nahal Oren, compared to Silo population in Haifa Bay
Authors
SHARAF, Kamal (376 Israel), Petr BUREŠ (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution), Lucie HOROVÁ (203 Czech Republic, belonging to the institution), Tomáš PAVLÍČEK (203 Czech Republic) and Eviatar NEVO (376 Israel)
Edition
Services of Plant Protection and Control, 2008
Other information
Language
Yiddish
Type of outcome
Článek v odborném periodiku (nerecenzovaný)
Field of Study
10600 1.6 Biological sciences
Country of publisher
Israel
Confidentiality degree
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
RIV identification code
RIV/00216224:14310/08:00027291
Organization unit
Faculty of Science
Keywords in English
genome size; DNA content; DNA amount; Israel
Tags
Tags
International impact, Reviewed
Změněno: 26/3/2019 22:04, prof. RNDr. Petr Bureš, Ph.D.
V originále
The distribution of abundance and genome size (GS, 2C-value) variability of the saw-toothed grain beetle Oryzaephilus surinamensis was studied on the opposite slopes of the microsite "Evolution Canyon" ("EC"), Mt.Carmel, Israel. As controls, we used one sample of beetle population from a grain silo in Haifa Bay. The study showed that O. surinamensis is abundant in acorns of Quercus calliprinos (Palestine oak). The observed number of adults of O. surinamensis per acorn ranged from 0 to 12 at "EC" and 54% of acorns were not infected. At "EC", O. surinamensis was more abundant on the "European, garrigue-like" north-facing slope ("ES") than on the "African, savannah-like" south-facing slope ("AS"), reflecting the interslope differences in the number of oak trees. There was a significant positive correlation between beetle abundance and number of acorns. Both the number of acorns and the number of beetles decreased with the "ES" altitude. No significant intersample differences were found in the infestation rate (number of beetles per acorn) at "EC". The study of the GS variability showed significant differences between the natural population at "EC" and the indoor silo pest population. Likewise, we found significant differences between males and females at both "EC" and in the silo, probably associated with the heteromorphism of the sex chromosomes. At "EC", the slopes had significantly more effect than the intraslope stations on the female GS differences, indicating larger genomes in females at "AS" than at "ES". The multispecies comparison of four diploid species (O. surinamensis, and the plants Ceratonia siliqua, Cyclamen persicum and Lotus peregrinus) supports the premise that increased tolerance to drought stress is associated with larger GS.
In Czech
The distribution of abundance and genome size (GS, 2C-value) variability of the saw-toothed grain beetle Oryzaephilus surinamensis was studied on the opposite slopes of the microsite "Evolution Canyon" ("EC"), Mt.Carmel, Israel. As controls, we used one sample of beetle population from a grain silo in Haifa Bay. The study showed that O. surinamensis is abundant in acorns of Quercus calliprinos (Palestine oak). The observed number of adults of O. surinamensis per acorn ranged from 0 to 12 at "EC" and 54% of acorns were not infected. At "EC", O. surinamensis was more abundant on the "European, garrigue-like" north-facing slope ("ES") than on the "African, savannah-like" south-facing slope ("AS"), reflecting the interslope differences in the number of oak trees. There was a significant positive correlation between beetle abundance and number of acorns. Both the number of acorns and the number of beetles decreased with the "ES" altitude. No significant intersample differences were found in the infestation rate (number of beetles per acorn) at "EC". The study of the GS variability showed significant differences between the natural population at "EC" and the indoor silo pest population. Likewise, we found significant differences between males and females at both "EC" and in the silo, probably associated with the heteromorphism of the sex chromosomes. At "EC", the slopes had significantly more effect than the intraslope stations on the female GS differences, indicating larger genomes in females at "AS" than at "ES". The multispecies comparison of four diploid species (O. surinamensis, and the plants Ceratonia siliqua, Cyclamen persicum and Lotus peregrinus) supports the premise that increased tolerance to drought stress is associated with larger GS.
In English
The distribution of abundance and genome size (GS, 2C-value) variability of the saw-toothed grain beetle Oryzaephilus surinamensis was studied on the opposite slopes of the microsite "Evolution Canyon" ("EC"), Mt.Carmel, Israel. As controls, we used one sample of beetle population from a grain silo in Haifa Bay. The study showed that O. surinamensis is abundant in acorns of Quercus calliprinos (Palestine oak). The observed number of adults of O. surinamensis per acorn ranged from 0 to 12 at "EC" and 54% of acorns were not infected. At "EC", O. surinamensis was more abundant on the "European, garrigue-like" north-facing slope ("ES") than on the "African, savannah-like" south-facing slope ("AS"), reflecting the interslope differences in the number of oak trees. There was a significant positive correlation between beetle abundance and number of acorns. Both the number of acorns and the number of beetles decreased with the "ES" altitude. No significant intersample differences were found in the infestation rate (number of beetles per acorn) at "EC". The study of the GS variability showed significant differences between the natural population at "EC" and the indoor silo pest population. Likewise, we found significant differences between males and females at both "EC" and in the silo, probably associated with the heteromorphism of the sex chromosomes. At "EC", the slopes had significantly more effect than the intraslope stations on the female GS differences, indicating larger genomes in females at "AS" than at "ES". The multispecies comparison of four diploid species (O. surinamensis, and the plants Ceratonia siliqua, Cyclamen persicum and Lotus peregrinus) supports the premise that increased tolerance to drought stress is associated with larger GS.
Links
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