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Looking different 'helps animals to survive'
July 24, 2009
In the animal kingdom, everything is not as it seems. Individuals of the same species can look very different from each other - what biologists term 'polymorphism.' Sometimes the number of distinct visible forms - 'exuberant polymorphisms' - in a single animal population can reach double figures. But why?
Scientists at the University of York have developed computer models that may help to explain how this level of variation arises and persists. Their research is reported in the latest issue of Evolution.
A prime example of an exuberant polymorphism is the Hawaiian Happy-face Spider, which has been studied by Dr Geoff Oxford and colleagues in the University's Department of Biology. The variations range from a common plain yellow form to rare types sporting red, black or white marks, all of which are inherited.
Dr Oxford said: "It has always been a real mystery why every population of this spider across different Hawaiian islands contains such high levels of variation. This was the starting point for our models."
Previously scientists believed that 'apostatic predation' was the most likely explanation for polymorphisms. This process involves predators developing mental search images of the appearance of the most common prey, so they are more likely to overlook prey of a different appearance. A strange consequence is that looking different from others stops an individual from standing out. This results in evolutionary selection on the prey to look different from the most common form.
However, the York researchers found that apostatic selection could not explain the sheer number of distinct forms involved in the exuberant polymorphisms of some species, but that 'dietary wariness' could. Dietary wariness is a hesitancy of predators to consume a novel food item and a consequent reluctance to incorporate it into their regular diet. The new research suggests that a modest level of predator dietary wariness can, on its own, lead to the maintenance of large numbers distinct prey forms within a single species.
Dr Daniel Franks, of the University's York Centre for Complex Systems Analysis, said: "A mutant prey individual that looks different from its fellows has a survival advantage because it will be unfamiliar to predators that will be reluctant to change their diet to accommodate it. Some prey species have evolved polymorphisms to deter predators by presenting them with a large number of visually novel foods."
University of York
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Polymorphism in Molecular Crystals (International Union of Crystallography)
by Joel Bernstein (Author)
Polymorphism--the multiplicity of structures or forms--is a term that is used in many disciplines. In chemistry it refers to the existence of more than one crystal structure for a particular chemical substance. The properties of a substance are determined by its composition and by its structure. In the last two decades, there has been a sharp rise in the interest in olymorphic systems, as an intrinsically interesting phenomenon, and as an increasingly important component in the development and marketing of a variety of materials based on organic molecule (e.g. pharmaceuticals, dyes and pigments, explosives etc). This book summarizes and brings up to date the current knowledge and understanding of polymorphism of molecular crystals, and concentrates it in one comprehensive source. The book...
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![Polymorphism [CD on Demand]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/61DlpofSViL._SL160_.jpg)
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Polymorphism [CD on Demand]
by Stone Creed
Polymorphism by Stone CreedThis product is manufactured on demand using CD-R recordable media. Amazon.com's standard return policy will apply.
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Polymorphism 0.1.0 (Original Mix)
Harald Klotzberg (Primary Contributor)
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Polymorphism in Pharmaceutical Solids, Second Edition (Drugs and the Pharmaceutical Sciences)
by Harry G. Brittain (Editor)
Using clear and practical examples, Polymorphism in Pharmaceutical Solids, Second Edition presents a complete examination of polymorphic behavior in pharmaceutical development.
Ideal for pharmaceutical development scientists and graduate students in pharmaceutical science, this updated edition includes:
NEW CHAPTERS - on the latest developments and methods in the field that give pharmaceutical development scientists the up-to-date information they need to successfully implement new drug development techniques and methods
EXPERT EDITORSHIP - from Dr. Harry G. Brittain, whose vast experience and knowledge of the pharmaceutical industry provides readers with the authoritative advice they need and trust
COMPREHENSIVE CONTENT - that includes information appropriate...
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Polymorphism in Pharmaceutical Solids (Drugs and the Pharmaceutical Sciences)
by Harry G. Brittain (Editor)
Discovery Laboratories, Inc., Milford, NJ. Text providing information on the physical properties a single compound may exhibit. Presents an examination of polymorphic behavior in pharmaceutical development. For graduate students and industrial and product development pharmacists.
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Polymorphism: Remembering Stockhausen
by Sinfonia Electronique Sinfonia Electronique (Orchestra), Sinfonia Electronique (Orchestra), richard eppedio and c.r. keyser-posner (Orchestra), Karyl Cristoffer Jones (Orchestra)
Sinfonia Electronique is an international collective of European, Asian, and North American musicians who have again come together to interpret new musical works created by its members. Once more focusing on compositions by American musicians Richard Eppedio and C.R. Keyser-Posner, and featuring performances by a select group of kindred musical spirits from various stylistic backgrounds, Sinfonia Electronique continues to move forward while maintaining a backward gaze, ever mindful of those who have come before them and blazed an amazing trail of musical mastery, leaving a legacy these performers strive to keep alive in the twenty-first century.....and beyond. Polymorphism: Remembering Stockhausen is a collection of thirteen newly-composed pieces, many infused with the spirit of...
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Polymorphism 0.2 (Original Mix)
Harald Klotzberg (Primary Contributor)
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Delphi CBT Pascal Video Training
by Business-IQ
This DVD Delphi Video series covers the Delphi programming language step-by-step, focusing on the use of Object Pascal in object-oriented programming with Delphi (Delphi OOP) .
To quote one of our students, "Delphi must be the easiest programming language." How quickly you learn it is, of course, dependent on you. It is a very powerful language and mastering it will take time, depending on your background and experience.
Whether you are an absolute beginner or a more seasoned Delphi developer, you will benefit from this Delphi Pascal video series. It will walk you through the Object Pascal language step-by-step. You will find enough theory to build your knowledge and understanding of the Delphi programming language. And, you will learn by doing through the multiple examples built...
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Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms: Methods and Protocols (Methods in Molecular Biology)
by Pui-Yan Kwok (Editor)
Univ. of California, San Francisco. Provides all the major SNP discovery and genotyping techniques in use, whether for using DNA diagnostics for identification; studying the genetic basis of human disease, or for molecular breeding programs in agriculture. Extended-outline and outline formats.
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Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms: Methods and Protocols (Methods in Molecular Biology)
by Anton A. Komar (Editor)
In recent years, single nucleotide polymorphisms have received increased and special attention in a rapidly developing field of personalized medicine and drug treatment. Comprising more than eighty percent of all known polymorphisms, single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) are primarily responsible for phenotypic differences between individuals, and have been suggested to affect the development of diseases in humans and the response to drug treatment and environmental stress. In Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms: Methods and Protocols, Second Edition, expert researchers explore the latest advances in this area, highlighting the substantial progress that has been made in SNP genotyping, examining recent developments in high-throughput genotyping approaches, and exploring our new...
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