National Repository of Grey Literature 11 records found  1 - 10next  jump to record: Search took 0.02 seconds. 
Growth dynamics of clonal plants
Štorková, Zdeňka ; Weiser, Martin (advisor) ; Hadincová, Věroslava (referee)
The thesis focuses on the growth of clonal plants. Clonal plants are exceptional due to the formation of both generative and vegetative organs used for reproduction. The rate of growth of the reproductive organs affects the reproductive success of the plant. In this review, I show how these dynamics are determined by clonal organ type, nutrient abundance, environmental heterogeneity and plant competition for resources. These factors influence the duration of reproductive organ formation, as well as their persistence. The energy requirements of both generative and vegetative organ formations introduce trade-offs into the life of clonal plants. What correlations occur in plants in the distribution of energy into vegetative and generative reproduction has received little attention so far. Therefore, this review summarizes information from the available literature on vegetative and generative plant growth and the trade-offs between them. Key words: clonal plants, timing of reproduction, vegetative reproduction, generative reproduction, trade-off
Plant responses to deer browsing and the consequences for further browsing
Dudlová, Tamara ; Lepková, Barbora (advisor) ; Štenc, Jakub (referee)
(English) The bachelor thesis focuses on the interaction of plants and herbivores, specifically deer. The main question is if (and possibly how) the changes induced in the plants by deer browsing affect the probability of re-browsing. I tried to answer the question by reviewing published literature. Plants respond to browsing by tolerance (compensatory growth) or resistance (production of defensive chemical compounds), depending on the plant's life strategy. Tolerance prevails in adult woody plants and grasses; resistance prevails in young woody plants and forbs. In resistant plants, browsing increases the content of phenolic substances and decreases the cellulose content, while tolerant species react in the opposite way. It is the contents of these substances, which are negatively correlated, that are key to food selection by deer. Large species of deer generally prefer plants with more cellulose, which they are able to digest efficiently. Smaller species prefer plants with lower cellulose content and higher concentration of simple sugars. These more nutritious plants are protected from browsing by phenolic substances, which smaller deer species are able to neutralize more effectively. Only a few studies have addressed the issue of re-browsing of the same plants, and their results are ambiguous....
Constraints and the evolution of egg size and juvenile size in amniotes
Kubát, Jan ; Kratochvíl, Lukáš (advisor) ; Hořák, David (referee)
Amniotes (mammals, reptiles including birds) exhibit wide diversity in egg/offspring size relatively to female body size. This study reviews mechanisms determining size of propagules (such as morphological or physiological constraints, trade-off between size versus number etc.). Particular attention is paid to comparison of allometric relationship in egg/offspring size among individual amniotic lineages.
Role of genetic variance in speciation
Payne, Pavel ; Markoš, Anton (advisor) ; Rueffler, Claus (referee)
Sympatric speciation has received much attention both empirically and theoretically. However, the contribution of sympatric speciation to biodiversity remains unclear. One piece missing from the speciation puzzle is the plausibility of sympatric ecological divergence of species through adaptation in polygenic traits. I consider an environment consisting of two niches, where one value of the trait is advantageous in only one niche, and vice versa. The selection regime is described by a trade-off in viabilities between the niches. These polygenic traits can, and often do, involve epistatic interactions among and between loci, so that the contribution of the alleles to viability deviates from additivity. Epistasis then also affects the curvature of the trade-offs: predominant less-than-additive epistasis turns the curve towards concavity and predominant more-than-additive towards convexity. The curvature of the trade-off plays a crucial role in the evolution of populations. With a convex trade- off, extreme values of the trait are favored and the population tends to diverge, but relatively stringent symmetry in strength of selection within the niches and the niche proportions is necessary to maintain polymorphism. In this study I use two and three- locus haploid versions of Levene's model to...
Relationship between egg size and incubation time in geckos (Squamata: Gekkota)
Mrskočová, Jana ; Kratochvíl, Lukáš (advisor) ; Frynta, Daniel (referee)
Previous studies of the relationship between egg size and the embryonic development time showed a positive correlation between the two variables at interspecies level, thus offering the idea that the evolution of the latter could be a limiting factor for enlarging the size of eggs during evolution. Some research into interspecies and intraspecific level of reptiles doesn't confirm this correlation. At the same time, the relationship between the development time and egg size is influenced by many factors, such as shifts in ontogenetic stages of the embryo at the time of ablation of eggs, due to temperature and humidity, the presence of embryonic diapause during embryogenesis or synchronization of hatching time, of which the authors of previous studies took no account or filtered out inaccurately. I think that most of these factors can be well controlled in intraspecific studies, but, variation in egg size within species also tends to be small, which prevents a reliable test for correlation. The solution can be to compare closely related species with high variability in the size of the eggs, in our case the geckos of the genus Paroedura and family Eublepharidae. I eliminated temperature effects by comparing the time of incubation in two equal constant temperatures. The results show that, in this...
Seasonal variability of plant secondary metabolism (Artemisia sp.)
Koutská, Barbora ; Weiser, Martin (advisor) ; Dostál, Petr (referee)
Plant secondary metabolites (SM) are widely used by humans in many ways (pharmacy, biotechnology etc.). For making their use even more effective, it is important to know the seasonality of these chemicals in plants and what affect those changes. Three Artemisia species (Artemisia annua, A. absinthium, A. vulgaris) were cultivated during one vegetation season (from April to September 2016). Plant growth parameters and the beginning of their generative stages were observed, and leaf samples were collected regularly. Samples of some plants were collected repeatedly. A generalist herbivore (migratory locust), was used as a proxy for studying changes in plant secondary metabolism during the vegetation season. The results proved presence of defence secondary metabolites in plants except A. vulgaris species where the role of SM in defence was not shown. Levels of SM changed nonlinearly during the vegetational season and were time-dependent. Plant size did not influence the levels of SM in plants. Levels of SM were low at the beginning of the experiment followed by rapid increase and remaining on maximal levels. The plants which lost their biomass repetitively grew slowly and bloomed later than the plants which were clipped only once. A delay trend showing seasonality of the plant SM was not proved. In...
Relationship between egg size and incubation time in geckos (Squamata: Gekkota)
Mrskočová, Jana ; Kratochvíl, Lukáš (advisor) ; Frynta, Daniel (referee)
Previous studies of the relationship between egg size and the embryonic development time showed a positive correlation between the two variables at interspecies level, thus offering the idea that the evolution of the latter could be a limiting factor for enlarging the size of eggs during evolution. Some research into interspecies and intraspecific level of reptiles doesn't confirm this correlation. At the same time, the relationship between the development time and egg size is influenced by many factors, such as shifts in ontogenetic stages of the embryo at the time of ablation of eggs, due to temperature and humidity, the presence of embryonic diapause during embryogenesis or synchronization of hatching time, of which the authors of previous studies took no account or filtered out inaccurately. I think that most of these factors can be well controlled in intraspecific studies, but, variation in egg size within species also tends to be small, which prevents a reliable test for correlation. The solution can be to compare closely related species with high variability in the size of the eggs, in our case the geckos of the genus Paroedura and family Eublepharidae. I eliminated temperature effects by comparing the time of incubation in two equal constant temperatures. The results show that, in this...
Constraints and the evolution of egg size and juvenile size in amniotes
Kubát, Jan ; Kratochvíl, Lukáš (advisor) ; Hořák, David (referee)
Amniotes (mammals, reptiles including birds) exhibit wide diversity in egg/offspring size relatively to female body size. This study reviews mechanisms determining size of propagules (such as morphological or physiological constraints, trade-off between size versus number etc.). Particular attention is paid to comparison of allometric relationship in egg/offspring size among individual amniotic lineages.
Role of genetic variance in speciation
Payne, Pavel ; Markoš, Anton (advisor) ; Rueffler, Claus (referee)
Sympatric speciation has received much attention both empirically and theoretically. However, the contribution of sympatric speciation to biodiversity remains unclear. One piece missing from the speciation puzzle is the plausibility of sympatric ecological divergence of species through adaptation in polygenic traits. I consider an environment consisting of two niches, where one value of the trait is advantageous in only one niche, and vice versa. The selection regime is described by a trade-off in viabilities between the niches. These polygenic traits can, and often do, involve epistatic interactions among and between loci, so that the contribution of the alleles to viability deviates from additivity. Epistasis then also affects the curvature of the trade-offs: predominant less-than-additive epistasis turns the curve towards concavity and predominant more-than-additive towards convexity. The curvature of the trade-off plays a crucial role in the evolution of populations. With a convex trade- off, extreme values of the trait are favored and the population tends to diverge, but relatively stringent symmetry in strength of selection within the niches and the niche proportions is necessary to maintain polymorphism. In this study I use two and three- locus haploid versions of Levene's model to...
Trade-off between egg size and number at the level of bird families
Špaldoňová, Alexandra ; Hořák, David (advisor) ; Reif, Jiří (referee)
Trade-off between offspring size and number belongs to the most discussed concepts in the life history theory. The aim of this study was to elucidate the relationship between egg size, clutch size and female body mass at the family level in bird's and to examine whether there is the relationship between offspring size and number and life history traits specific for particular bird families. From published sources, I collected data about 5.073 species belong in 146 families. Most species of birds lay smaller clutches, on average three eggs. In 112 families from 130 tested eggs size was positively correlated with female body mass. There is evidence that egg size and clutch size are inversely related in 83 families from 130 tested but only for 34 families was significant. The relationship exists independently of female body mass across bird families and this suggests a trade-off between these traits. The relationship between the strength and shape of egg size-number correlations and life history characteristics of bird families was not frequent. According to results, the strength of correlation seems to be related to development mode and diet type. The negative egg size-number correlation is stronger when incubation period and fledging time is longer and in birds with longer lifespan. The...

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