Mark-recapture data collected using mist nets over a 10-yr period in Trinidad were used to estimate adult survival rates for 17 species of forest passerines. Trinidadian survival rates (mean 65%, range 45%-85%) were significantly higher than published estimates for European (mean survival 52%, range 32%-71%) and North American (mean survival 53%, range 29%-63%) passerines of similar body size (equivalent to 45% higher mean life expectancy in Trinidad). These findings were confirmed after controlling for phylogeny using a method of independent contrasts. Transient and/or young birds were an important feature of the Trinidad data, and studies that fail to allow for the presence of such birds risk underestimating adult survival. This study lends support to the hypothesis that avian survival rates are higher in the humid tropics, although the magnitude of the difference may be smaller than previously suggested.
Fungal autolysis is the natural process of self-digestion of aged hyphal cultures, occurring as a result of hydrolase activity, causing vacuolation and disruption of organelle and cell wall structure. Previously, authors have considered individual aspects of fungal lysis, in terms of either an enzyme, a process or an organism. This review considers both the physiology and morphology of fungal autolysis, with an emphasis on correlations between enzymological profiles and the morphological changes occurring during culture degeneration. The involvement of the main groups of autolytic hydrolases is examined (i.e., proteases, glucanases, and chitinases), in addition to the effects of autolysis on the morphology and products of industrial bioprocesses. We call for a concerted approach to the study of autolysis, as this will be fundamental for research to progress in this field. Increased understanding will allow for greater control of the prevention, or induction of fungal autolysis. Such advances will be applicable in the development of antifungal medicines and enable increased productivity and yields in industrial bioprocesses. Using paradigms in existing model systems, including mammalian cell death and aging in yeast, areas for future study are suggested in order to advance the study of fungal cell death.
Body surface temperature responses to food restriction in wild and captive great tits (Parus major). Journal of Experimental Biology, 223(8), [ jeb220046].
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