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Lacewings (Neuroptera) have predatory larvae with highly specialised mouthparts. Larvae of many groups within Neuroptera are well represented as fossils preserved in ambers; however, larvae of some groups are less often reported in the literature. Here we report such a rare case, a larva of the group Hemerobiidae, an aphidlion, preserved in a piece of Eocene Baltic amber (about 40 million years old). It is preserved together with three possible prey items, wingless aphids, most likely representatives of Germaraphis (or at least closely related to this group). The aphidlion can be identified based on the morphology of the antennae, simple curved and toothless stylets, well developed labial palps, and the absence of other mouth-part structures such as a protruding labrum or maxillary palps. A long, club-shaped distal element of the labial palps identifies the specimen as a larva of Hemerobiidae. The aphids can be identified based on their very long, beak-like mouth parts. This find is, to our knowledge, the first example of a lacewing larva preserved together with its potential prey. We briefly discuss other cases in which fossils preserved in amber allow us to reconstruct aspects of behaviour and interactions of fossil lacewing larvae.
Abstract
Non‐native invasive species are threatening ecosystems and biodiversity worldwide. High genetic variation is thought to be a critical factor for invasion success. Accordingly, the global invasion of a few clonal lineages of the gastropod Potamopyrgus antipodarum is thus both puzzling and has the potential to help illuminate why some invasions succeed while others fail. Here, we used SNP markers and a geographically broad sampling scheme (N = 1617) including native New Zealand populations and invasive North American and European populations to provide the first widescale population genetic assessment of the relationships between and among native and invasive P. antipodarum. We used a combination of traditional and Bayesian molecular analyses to demonstrate that New Zealand populations harbour very high diversity relative to the invasive populations and are the source of the two main European genetic lineages. One of these two European lineages was in turn the source of at least one of the two main North American genetic clusters of invasive P. antipodarum, located in Lake Ontario. The other widespread North American group had a more complex origin that included the other European lineage and two New Zealand clusters. Altogether, our analyses suggest that just a small handful of clonal lineages of P. antipodarum were responsible for invasion across continents. Our findings provide critical information for prevention of additional invasions and control of existing invasive populations and are of broader relevance towards understanding the establishment and evolution of asexual populations and the forces driving biological invasion.
Background
Pycnogonida (sea spiders) is the sister group of all other extant chelicerates (spiders, scorpions and relatives) and thus represents an important taxon to inform early chelicerate evolution. Notably, phylogenetic analyses have challenged traditional hypotheses on the relationships of the major pycnogonid lineages (families), indicating external morphological traits previously used to deduce inter-familial affinities to be highly homoplastic. This erodes some of the support for phylogenetic information content in external morphology and calls for the study of additional data classes to test and underpin in-group relationships advocated in molecular analyses. In this regard, pycnogonid internal anatomy remains largely unexplored and taxon coverage in the studies available is limited.
Results
Based on micro-computed X-ray tomography and 3D reconstruction, we created a comprehensive atlas of in-situ representations of the central nervous system and midgut layout in all pycnogonid families. Beyond that, immunolabeling for tubulin and synapsin was used to reveal selected details of ganglionic architecture. The ventral nerve cord consistently features an array of separate ganglia, but some lineages exhibit extended composite ganglia, due to neuromere fusion. Further, inter-ganglionic distances and ganglion positions relative to segment borders vary, with an anterior shift in several families. Intersegmental nerves target longitudinal muscles and are lacking if the latter are reduced. Across families, the midgut displays linear leg diverticula. In Pycnogonidae, however, complex multi-branching diverticula occur, which may be evolutionarily correlated with a reduction of the heart.
Conclusions
Several gross neuroanatomical features are linked to external morphology, including intersegmental nerve reduction in concert with trunk segment fusion, or antero-posterior ganglion shifts in partial correlation to trunk elongation/compaction. Mapping on a recent phylogenomic phylogeny shows disjunct distributions of these traits. Other characters show no such dependency and help to underpin closer affinities in sub-branches of the pycnogonid tree, as exemplified by the tripartite subesophageal ganglion of Pycnogonidae and Rhynchothoracidae. Building on this gross anatomical atlas, future studies should now aim to leverage the full potential of neuroanatomy for phylogenetic interrogation by deciphering pycnogonid nervous system architecture in more detail, given that pioneering work on neuron subsets revealed complex character sets with unequivocal homologies across some families.
Abstract
Two decades after the discovery of adult‐born neurons in the brains of decapod crustaceans, the deutocerebral proliferative system (DPS) producing these neural lineages has become a model of adult neurogenesis in invertebrates. Studies on crayfish have provided substantial insights into the anatomy, cellular dynamics, and regulation of the DPS. Contrary to traditional thinking, recent evidence suggests that the neurogenic niche in the crayfish DPS lacks self‐renewing stem cells, its cell pool being instead sustained via integration of hemocytes generated by the innate immune system. Here, we investigated the origin, division and migration patterns of the adult‐born neural progenitor (NP) lineages in detail. We show that the niche cell pool is not only replenished by hemocyte integration but also by limited numbers of symmetric cell divisions with some characteristics reminiscent of interkinetic nuclear migration. Once specified in the niche, first generation NPs act as transit‐amplifying intermediate NPs that eventually exit and produce multicellular clones as they move along migratory streams toward target brain areas. Different clones may migrate simultaneously in the streams but occupy separate tracks and show spatio‐temporally flexible division patterns. Based on this, we propose an extended DPS model that emphasizes structural similarities to pseudostratified neuroepithelia in other arthropods and vertebrates. This model includes hemocyte integration and intrinsic cell proliferation to synergistically counteract niche cell pool depletion during the animal's lifespan. Further, we discuss parallels to recent findings on mammalian adult neurogenesis, as both systems seem to exhibit a similar decoupling of proliferative replenishment divisions and consuming neurogenic divisions.
Analysis of partial migration strategies of Central European raptors based on ring re-encounter data
(2018)
The phenomenon of partial migration in birds in
which some individuals of a population are migratory while others stay in the breeding area is of increasing scientific interest. The strategies of partial migratory raptors from Central Europe are, however, unclear for most species. We analysed ring re-encounter data of Common Kestrels Falco tinnunculus, Eurasian Sparrowhawks Accipter nisus and Common Buzzards Buteo buteo ringed in Germany in terms of distances and directions between ringing and re-encounter sites. We investigated possible differences between sexes and age classes, as well as effects of ringing region, seasonal weather (in the form of North Atlantic Oscillation indices) and long-term temporal changes (including climate change) on migratory strategies by means of generalized linear models. We found that migration is mostly conducted by juveniles, although migratory adults were also found. In general, males tend to migrate less than females and juveniles less than adults.
Kestrels showed differences between age classes and sexes and they responded to weather in summer and autumn. The migration activities of Kestrels decreased over years. Sparrowhawks from different regions showed no differences in migration activity and no responses to long-term temporal changes. They did not respond to seasonal weather either. Buzzards showed strong responses to winter weather (‘winter escapes’) predominantly in highland regions, and a reduction of migratory intensity probably due to global warming.
The explanatory power of ringing data, however, is limited by low re-encounter rates and temporal and spatial heterogeneity in re-encounter probability. Spatial heterogeneity mainly depends on the distribution of observers as well as on their willingness to report a re-encountered ring to the corresponding ringing scheme. We analyzed a data set of ringing and re-encounter data of Kestrels, Buzzards and Sparrowhawks provided by the EURING Data Bank. We calculated monthly re-encounter rates across Europe and, for different time periods, we predicted re-encounters for individuals of these species ringed in Germany, on the assumption that re-encounter probabilities are evenly distributed at the highest value observed within the respective home ranges. Subsequently, we tested for correlation between re-encounter rates and human population density. The number of predicted re-encounters exceed the observed by 50-300 %. We found differences between monthly re-encounter rates and between different prediction periods. Distances (between ringing and re-encounter sites) differ significantly between observations and predicted re-encounters, with higher distances in predictions. Correlation between re-encounter rates and human population density is significant, but correlation coefficients are low (ρ = 0.291-0.511). Correcting for observer heterogeneity can help to analyze ring re-encounter data e.g. in terms of dispersal and migration. However, a comprehensive data collection and a digitalization of possible prior data records by the respective ringing schemes may allow advances in this method even further.
Main drivers for biodiversity loss in terrestrial ecosystems are changes in land use, climate change, enhanced nitrogen deposition and biotic exchange (invasive species). These drivers also affect dry, nutrient-poor open anthropo-zoogenic inland and coastal heathlands which often harbor a high biodiversity. To counteract biodiversity loss in coastal ecosystems, a basic step is the assessment of the various threats. Therefore it is important to select suitable model organisms for analyses of biodiversity dynamics. In this thesis the three arthropod groups Orthoptera (Ensifera and Caelifera), carabid beetles (Coleoptera: Carabidae) and spiders (Araneae) were studied, as they are very useful indicators. Besides sampling of the three arthropod groups vegetation and microclimate parameters were recorded. The studies were done between 2008 and 2010 in the coastal heathland on the Baltic island of Hiddensee, Germany. The main aim of the thesis was to analyze the impact of three drivers of heathland biodiversity loss (succession, grass encroachment, moss invasion) on the selected indicator arthropod groups. Based on this multi-level and -species approach, implications for the conservation of coastal heathlands are given. The results show that successional processes and grass encroachment have strong impact on species richness and abundance, species composition and functional groups, as well as life-history traits and functional diversity of the arthropod groups. Main findings were: Orthoptera species richness was highest in the intermediate stages (heath encroached by grasses and heath with shrubs) because of higher habitat heterogeneity and higher food supply (grasses). Opposed to that, species richness of ground-dwelling carabid beetles and spiders did not differ among the five successional stages, which contradicts the ‘habitat heterogeneity hypothesis’. In contrast to species richness, functional diversity differed among successional stages. The concept of functional diversity – which integrates species life-history trait data – therefore might be particularly suitable for biodiversity research, while the explanatory power of species richness alone might not be sufficient. The species compositions of all three taxa changed remarkably along the coastal heathland gradient indicating a high species turnover. In particular, open, dynamic habitats (‘grey dunes’ and ‘dwarf-shrub heath’) could be separated. Here, several specialized, xerothermic and threatened species occurred due to the extreme habitat conditions, but are displaced during grass and shrub encroachment. On a smaller spatial scale, the invasion of Campylopus introflexus alters habitat conditions in grey dunes and therefore affects carabid beetle and spider species and the dominant Orthoptera species Myrmeleotettix maculatus. Species richness of carabid beetles and spiders, and the abundance of adult M. maculatus grasshoppers were reduced. Species compositions of carabids and spiders changed remarkably with a loss of several species. These negative impacts could be explained by the vegetation structure of the moss which is unsuitable for web-building spiders or large carabid beetles, and by reduced germination of higher plants and therefore reduced food supply for M. maculatus and phytophagous carabid species. Within the open coastal heathland, the mosaic of grey dunes and adjacent dwarf-shrubs is important since many species perform a habitat change during their development and, besides the scarcely vegetated, thermally benefited grey dunes, need denser vegetation of adjacent dwarf-shrubs for shelter, as song posts, or for foraging. As grey dunes harbor a high abundance and species richness of threatened and specialized, mainly xerothermic and geobiont species and are important as oviposition and nymphal habitat, they are regarded as a keystone habitat within the coastal heathland. Besides these ecological studies, two studies focused on the method of pitfall trapping. It could have been shown, that pitfall trapping might be a useful sampling method for Orthoptera in open habitats. The other study demonstrated that sampling interval has a strong influence on the capture efficiency of several arthropod groups (‘digging-in effect’). Conservation practices should aim at maintaining a heterogeneous heathland mosaic with open grey dunes and Calluna stands, in addition to scattered grassy and shrub-encroached heath for the survival of species-rich heathland arthropod assemblages with a high proportion of specialized and threatened species.
Background
Asymmetries are a widespread phenomenon in otherwise bilaterally symmetric organisms, and investigation of asymmetric structures can help us gather insights into fundamental evolutionary processes such as the selection for morphological novelties caused by behavioural changes. In insects, asymmetric genitalia have evolved in almost every order, and usually it’s the sclerotized parts and most conspicuous male phallic organs that are known to exhibit asymmetries. While external copulatory organs in insects have often been subject to investigations concerning asymmetries and the evolution thereof, internal reproductive structures have received far less attention. Here we describe the internal and external male genitalia in three species of Austrophasmatidae, Mantophasmatodea, using μ-CT imaging and light microscopy. Mantophasmatodea is the most recently discovered insect order, and with 21 species described to date, it is among the smallest insect orders currently known.
Results
We confirm that male heelwalkers exhibit asymmetries in the external genitalia and associated structures, represented by asymmetric phallic lobes and cerci. Moreover, we found an extreme asymmetry within the internal male genitalia: in all adult males investigated (N = 5), the seminal vesicle, a dilatation of the vas deferens, was only developed on the right side of the male while missing on the left side.
Conclusion
The false-male-above mating position exhibited by Mantophasmatodea and especially the long copulation duration of ca. 3 days might select for this unusual absence asymmetry of the left seminal vesicle. If this holds true for all heelwalker species, this absence asymmetry constitutes another autapomorphy for Austrophasmatidae or even the insect order Mantophasmatodea.
Das Gram-positive Bakterium Staphylococcus aureus besiedelt die menschliche Haut und die oberen Atemwege, z.B. die Nase. Aus noch unbekannten Gründen können die Bakterien gelegentlich einen pathogenen Charakter entwickeln und Krankheiten wie Furunkulose, Pneumonien oder Sepsis verursachen. Dieses pathogene Potenzial in Verbindung mit dem Auftreten von zahlreichen Antibiotika-Resistenzen in vielen klinisch relevanten S. aureus-Stämmen stellt ein Risiko für die menschliche Gesundheit dar. Deshalb ist es notwendig, potenzielle Effekte der bakteriellen Produkte, die die eukaryotischen Wirtszellen relevanter Organsysteme beeinflussen könnten, zu erforschen. Ziel dieser Arbeit war es deshalb, spezifische Elemente der frühen Signaltransduktion, der Genregulation und der physiologischen Antworten von humanen immortalisierten Atemwegsepithelzellen (S9) auf Kontakt mit Staphylococcus aureus-Zellkulturüberständen sowie rekombinant hergestellten individuellen Virulenzfaktoren (Hämolysin A (Hla, ein porenformendes Toxin) und Hämolysin B (Hlb, ein Enzym mit Sphingomyelinase-Aktivität)) zu untersuchen. Diese Ansätze dienen dazu, Hinweise auf die Identität sezernierter Stoffwechselprodukte von S. aureus zu erhalten, die in den eukaryotischen Wirtszellen zu direkten Abwehr- oder Vermeidungsreaktionen (angeborene Immunität) oder zu Bakterien-induziertem „Fehlverhalten“ führen, das möglicherweise (Mit-)Ursache der Pathogenität einiger Stämme des Bakteriums ist. Quantitative Western-Blot-Analysen mit löslichen Proteinextrakten von S9-Zellen offenbarten dabei eine Aktivierung der Erk-Typ-MAPK, der p38 MAPK und der Akt1/3, aber keine Aktivierung der c-Jun N-terminalen Kinase (JNK) oder Akt2 infolge der Behandlung mit steril-filtrierten S. aureus-Überständen aus der exponentiellen Wachstumsphase (OD540nm = 1), der stationären Wachstumsphase (OD540nm = 10) bzw. nach der Behandlung mit rekombinant hergestellten S. aureus Hämolysinen (rHla, rHlb). Analysen der Produkte sogenannter „früher Gene“ zeigten eine moderate Erhöhung der Expression von c-Jun und Egr-1, und eine stärkere Erhöhung der Expression von c-Fos nach der Behandlung der S9-Zellen mit den bakteriellen Überständen oder rekombinanten Toxinen (rHla, rHlb). Da Atemwegsepithelzellen bei Kontakt mit potenziell pathogenen Bakterien bzw. sekretorischen Faktoren dieser Bakterien Chemokine zur Rekrutierung von Neutrophilen sekretieren, (speziell IL-8), wurde ein Multiplex-Assay-System eingesetzt, mit dem es möglich war, 11 verschiedene Zytokine im Kulturüberstand der S9-Zellen nach Behandlung der Zellen mit den bakteriellen OD10-Überständen bzw. rekombinanten Hla oder Hlb zu analysieren. Die S9-Zellen reagierten dabei auf die Behandlung mit dem Überstand, Hla oder Hlb mit der Sekretion der pro-inflammatorischen Zytokine IL-8, IFN-γ und IL-6, und diese Zytokin-Expression wurde teilweise vermittelt über die Signalwege der Erk-Typ-MAPK und der p38 MAPK. Weiter konnte gezeigt werden, dass Atemwegsepithelzellen infolge der Behandlung mit bakteriellem Überstand bzw. Hla Zellformveränderungen unterliegen und ihre Integrität verlieren. Dieses könnte parazelluläre Wege im Epithel öffnen, und so den Bakterien ermöglichen, ins Innere des Wirtskörpers vorzudringen.
BatNet: a deep learning-based tool for automated bat species identification from camera trap images
(2023)
Automated monitoring technologies can increase the efficiency of ecological data collection and support data-driven conservation. Camera traps coupled with infrared light barriers can be used to monitor temperate-zone bat assemblages at underground hibernacula, where thousands of individuals of multiple species can aggregate in winter. However, the broad-scale adoption of such photo-monitoring techniques is limited by the time-consuming bottleneck of manual image processing. Here, we present BatNet, an open-source, deep learning-based tool for automated identification of 13 European bat species from camera trap images. BatNet includes a user-friendly graphical interface, where it can be retrained to identify new bat species or to create site-specific models to improve detection accuracy at new sites. Model accuracy was evaluated on images from both trained and untrained sites, and in an ecological context, where community- and species-level metrics (species diversity, relative abundance, and species-level activity patterns) were compared between human experts and BatNet. At trained sites, model performance was high across all species (F1-score: 0.98–1). At untrained sites, overall classification accuracy remained high (96.7–98.2%), when camera placement was comparable to the training images (<3 m from the entrance; <45° angle relative to the opening). For atypical camera placements (>3 m or >45° angle), retraining the detector model with 500 site-specific annotations achieved an accuracy of over 95% at all sites. In the ecological case study, all investigated metrics were nearly identical between human experts and BatNet. Finally, we exemplify the ability to retrain BatNet to identify a new bat species, achieving an F1-score of 0.99 while maintaining high classification accuracy for all original species. BatNet can be implemented directly to scale up the deployment of camera traps in Europe and enhance bat population monitoring. Moreover, the pretrained model can serve as a baseline for transfer learning to automatize the image-based identification of bat species worldwide.
Deflected by the barrier function of topographical structures such as high mountain ranges, open water bodies or desert, migrating birds concentrate at certain points or corridors referred to as ‘bottlenecks’. An area like this was discovered at Mount Besh Barmag (Azerbaijan) in autumn 2007, but the data gathered during a four-week survey was insufficient to do more than hint at the existence of a major bird migration bottleneck. Therefore, a comprehensive bird migration study was conducted to analyse the magnitude of this potential bottleneck site. The study covers the periods from August to mid-November 2011 and from March to the end of May 2012 and includes daily counts at three observation points focusing on three different migrant types: passerine, waterbirds and soaring birds. In addition, a sound recorder with an omnidirectional microphone collected bird migration calls by both day and night. In total, 278 bird species were observed in an estimated passage of 1,239,369–1,514,267 diurnally migrating individuals in autumn 2011 and 646,733–817,183 individuals in spring 2012. Fifteen species passed through the study area in numbers exceeding 1% of their world populations and 34 species in more than 1% of their flyway populations in at least one of the observation periods. 84% of the observed migrating birds in autumn 2011 and 95% of them in spring 2012 passed through at heights below 50 m above ground exposing them imminently to the danger of collision with obstacles. In the analysis of nocturnal sound recordings, 119 bird species were identified of which 106 were expected to occur as migrants, and calculated estimates revealed the occurrence of 108,986 calls in autumn 2011 and 33,348 calls in spring 2012. The volume of diurnal bird migration emerging from the data with respect to species number and number of individuals is certainly a strong indication of the existence of a major bird migration bottleneck at Besh Barmag. On account of methodological constraints, the high number of night flight calls can only hint at a nocturnal bird migration bottleneck and confirmatory research aided by visual methods (radar, thermal imaging) is necessary to back up the acoustic results. The Besh Barmag bottleneck offers a great opportunity to establish a standardised long-term monitoring programme to investigate avian population dynamics in the vast and little known Eurasian landmass. Acoustic-based monitoring might be a cost-effective method, but it is limited to a few vocally prolific species only. The aim should rather be the establishment of a bird observatory as already successfully installed in a number of European bird migration bottlenecks.