3,367 research outputs found
Data from: Andriollo T., Michaux J.R., Ruedi M. (2021). Food for everyone: differential feeding habits of cryptic bat species inferred from DNA metabarcoding. Molecular Ecology
Supporting data for: Andriollo T., Michaux J.R., Ruedi M. (2021). Food for everyone: differential feeding habits of cryptic bat species inferred from DNA metabarcoding. Molecular Ecology. https://doi.org/ 10.1111/mec.16073
Raw DNA sequences of prey of Plecotus auritus, P. austriacus and P. macrobullaris with complete sampling information and taxonomic assignations. Data separated by semicolums as follows:
Sample name; Dataset; Colony; Bat species; Date; Season; Read numbers (Size); DNA sequence; Lowest taxonomic identification (ID_MOTU); Family; Order; Class; Is the sequence attributable to the diet or not (Diet
Phylogeography of a host (Apodemus sylvaticus) and one of its direct and specific endoparasite (Heligmosomoides polygyrus) in the Western Mediterranean islands
Morand serge Université de Liège Michaux Johan René Campus internationalAgropolis de Baillarguet Montferrier-sur-Lez, France Libois, Roland univesité de Lièg
Report of Governor Johan Rising, 1655, on New Sweden
Governor Johan Rising reports to the Swedish government and royalty on the status of New Sweden (present-day New Jersey). He also reports on other Swedish colonies in the area. He asks that single women and skilled tradesmen be sent to the colonies. Rising also reports that attacks from neighboring Indian tribes are increasing. He has found some protection by forming an alliance with English settlers, but the cost is high, and his colony owes the English money and supplies. Rising asks that Sweden send them money so that they can pay off their debts, build ships that would establish a trading dominance with the West Indies, and cultivate land and crops to gain more profit. Reports from New World governors were sent back to their native countries via ships. Rising sent this report in June of 1655, but Sweden did not recieve the report until November of 1655. This article is part of a Primary Source Material collection compiled by the New Sweden Commemorative Commission in 1988
Report of Governor Johan Printz, 1647, on New Sweden
Govern Johan Printz, the governor of New Sweden (later to become New Jersey), reports on the status of the colony and the settlers. Many freemen have arrived to settle in New Sweden, but the criminals and military men who were conscripted to the colony want to return to Sweden. Of the freemen, very few are skilled, so Governor Printz asks that blacksmiths, tanners, tailors, carpenters, and butchers be sent to the colony. Additionally, he asks for single women. Printz also reports on two new Swedish colonies that have been established along the Delaware River. However, Dutch settlers have become very aggressive by re-purchasing land from the Indians that the Swedish had already bought. They are also interrupting trade between the Swedes and the Indians, as well as instigating the Indians to attack the Swedes. Printz directed the construction of some storage houses along common trade routes to win back trade from the Indians. However, fighting has erupted between different Native tribes as each tries to establish dominance in trading with the colonies. This article is part of a Primary Source Material collection compiled by the New Sweden Commemorative Commission in 1988
Relation of the surrender of New Sweden, by Governor Johan Clason Rising, 1655
Governor Johan Rising of New Sweden reports to Sweden on the August 1655 Dutch attack on New Sweden's Fort Christina. The Dutch traveled from New Amsterdam (present-day New York) and easily captured a New Sweden outpost. Rising sent men to the outpost to fend of the Dutch, but the Dutch defeated them and took them as prisoners, leaving Fort Christina without fighting men and supplies. The Dutch then put the Fort under seige. A few days later, Rising surrendered the Fort. He and the Swedish colonists were ordered to either return to Sweden, or to remain in the New World in service to the Dutch. This article is part of a Primary Source Material collection compiled by the New Sweden Commemorative Commission in 1988
The past, present and future of social media in project management
Green Open Access added to TU Delft Institutional Repository 'You share, we take care!' - Taverne project https://www.openaccess.nl/en/you-share-we-take-care Otherwise as indicated in the copyright section: the publisher is the copyright holder of this work and the author uses the Dutch legislation to make this work public.Integral Design & Managemen
Expand or disappear ? Why related Mustelid species follow different roads. Lessons from the genetic study of minks, polecat and otter
The present global changes have a strong impact on the survival of many species and on their demography and population dynamics. On one hand, some species undergo strong reduction of their populations due to the fragmentation of their habitats, the competition with other species, the pollution or degradation of their habitat or the appearance of new diseases. On the other hand, many species tend to expand their distribution range) and can even be considered as invasive species in some cases.
The aim of our presentation will be to better understand which biological factors could lead to decrease populations of a species until extinction or in contrast, could help a species exanding its population densities and distribution area.
These hypotheses will be illustrated by our recent results obtained through the genetic study of the European mink Mustela lutreola, the American mink Neovison vison, the polecat Mustela putorius and the European otter Lutra lutra (Cabria et al. 2011; Michaux et al. 2005; Pigneur et al., In Prep)
Data from: Andriollo T., Gillet F., Michaux J.R., Ruedi M. (2019). The menu varies with metabarcoding practices: A case study with the bat Plecotus auritus. PLoS ONE 14(7)
<p><strong>Supporting data for: </strong>Andriollo T., Gillet F., Michaux J.R., Ruedi M. (2019). The menu varies with metabarcoding practices: a case study with the bat <em>Plecotus auritus</em>. PLoS ONE 14(7): e0219135. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0219135</p>
<p>Raw DNA sequences of prey of <em>Plecotus auritus</em>. Sampling information separated by semicolums as folows:</p>
<p>>Sequence number; Colony; Date; Sample name; Dataset; Is the sequence attributable to the diet or not (Diet); Read numbers (Size); DNA sequence</p>
An operationalization of Stevenson’s conceptualization of entrepreneurship as opportunity-based firm behavior
This is the author-version of article published as: Brown, Terrence and Davidsson, Per and Wiklund, Johan (2001) An operationalization of Stevenson’s conceptualization of entrepreneurship as opportunity-based firm behavior. Strategi
So close and so different: comparative phylogeography of two small mammal species, the yellow-necked fieldmouse (Apodemus flavicollis) and the woodmouse (Apodemus sylvaticus) in the Western Palearctic region.
peer reviewedIn Europe, concordant geographical distribution among genetic lineages within different species is rare, which suggests distinct reactions to Quaternary ice ages. This study aims to determine whether such a discrepancy also affects a pair of sympatric species, which are morphologically and taxonomically closely related but which have slight differences in their ecological habits. The phylogeographic structures of two European rodents, the Yellow-necked fieldmouse (A. flavicollis) and the woodmouse (Apodemus sylvaticus) were, therefore, compared on the basis of mitochondrial DNA cytochrome b (mtDNA cyt b) sequences (965 base pairs) from 196 specimens collected from 59 European localities spread throughout the species distributions. The results indicate that the two species survived in different ways through the Quaternary glaciations. A. sylvaticus survived in the Iberian Peninsula from where it recolonized almost all Europe at the end of the last glaciation. Conversely, the refuge from which A. flavicollis recolonized Europe, including northern Spain, during the Holocene corresponds to the Italo-Balkan area, where A. sylvaticus suffered a serious genetic bottleneck. This study confirms that even closely related species may have highly different phylogeographic histories and shows the importance of ecological plasticity of the species for their survival through climate change. Finally, it suggests that phylogeographic distinctiveness may be a general feature of European species
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