Browsing by Subject "Biological sciences"
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Publication Biomonitoring via DNA metabarcoding and light microscopy of bee pollen in rainforest transformation landscapes of Sumatra(2022) Carneiro de Melo Moura, Carina; Setyaningsih, Christina A.; Li, Kevin; Merk, Miryam Sarah; Schulze, Sonja; Raffiudin, Rika; Grass, Ingo; Behling, Hermann; Tscharntke, Teja; Westphal, Catrin; Gailing, OliverBackground: Intense conversion of tropical forests into agricultural systems contributes to habitat loss and the decline of ecosystem functions. Plant-pollinator interactions buffer the process of forest fragmentation, ensuring gene flow across isolated patches of forests by pollen transfer. In this study, we identified the composition of pollen grains stored in pot-pollen of stingless bees, Tetragonula laeviceps , via dual-locus DNA metabarcoding (ITS2 and rbcL ) and light microscopy, and compared the taxonomic coverage of pollen sampled in distinct land-use systems categorized in four levels of management intensity (forest, shrub, rubber, and oil palm) for landscape characterization. Results: Plant composition differed significantly between DNA metabarcoding and light microscopy. The overlap in the plant families identified via light microscopy and DNA metabarcoding techniques was low and ranged from 22.6 to 27.8%. Taxonomic assignments showed a dominance of pollen from bee-pollinated plants, including oil-bearing crops such as the introduced species Elaeis guineensis (Arecaceae) as one of the predominant taxa in the pollen samples across all four land-use types. Native plant families Moraceae, Euphorbiaceae, and Cannabaceae appeared in high proportion in the analyzed pollen material. One-way ANOVA (p > 0.05), PERMANOVA (R² values range from 0.14003 to 0.17684, for all tests p-value > 0.5), and NMDS (stress values ranging from 0.1515 to 0.1859) indicated a lack of differentiation between the species composition and diversity of pollen type in the four distinct land-use types, supporting the influx of pollen from adjacent areas. Conclusions: Stingless bees collected pollen from a variety of agricultural crops, weeds, and wild plants. Plant composition detected at the family level from the pollen samples likely reflects the plant composition at the landscape level rather than the plot level. In our study, the plant diversity in pollen from colonies installed in land-use systems with distinct levels of forest transformation was highly homogeneous, reflecting a large influx of pollen transported by stingless bees through distinct land-use types. Dual-locus approach applied in metabarcoding studies and visual pollen identification showed great differences in the detection of the plant community, therefore a combination of both methods is recommended for performing biodiversity assessments via pollen identification.Publication Influence of the mating design on the additive genetic variance in plant breeding populations(2023) Lanzl, Tobias; Melchinger, Albrecht E.; Schön, Chris-CarolinThe additive genetic variance VAinherent to a breeding population is a major determinant of short- and long-term genetic gain. When estimated from experimental data, it is not only the additive variances at individual loci (QTL) but also covariances between QTL pairs that contribute to estimates of VA. Thus, estimates of VAdepend on the genetic structure of the data source and vary between population samples. Here, we provide a theoretical framework for calculating the expectation and variance of VAfrom genotypic data of a given population sample. In addition, we simulated breeding populations derived from different numbers of parents ( P = 2, 4, 8, 16) and crossed according to three different mating designs (disjoint, factorial and half-diallel crosses). We calculated the variance of VAand of the parameter b reflecting the covariance component in VA,standardized by the genic variance. Our results show that mating designs resulting in large biparental families derived from few disjoint crosses carry a high risk of generating progenies exhibiting strong covariances between QTL pairs on different chromosomes. We discuss the consequences of the resulting deflated or inflated VAestimates for phenotypic and genome-based selection as well as for applying the usefulness criterion in selection. We show that already one round of recombination can effectively break negative and positive covariances between QTL pairs induced by the mating design. We suggest to obtain reliable estimates of VAand its components in a population sample by applying statistical methods differing in their treatment of QTL covariances.Publication Selection index theory for populations under directional and stabilizing selection(2023) Wellmann, RobinBackground: The purpose of a selection index is that its use to select animals for breeding maximizes the profit of a breed in future generations. The profit of a breed is in general a quantity that predicts the satisfaction of future owners with their breed, and the satisfaction of the consumers with the products that are produced by the breed. Many traits, such as conformation traits and product quality traits have intermediate optima. Traditional selection index theory applies only to directional selection and cannot achieve any further improvement once the trait means have reached their optima. A well-founded theory is needed that extends the established selection index theory to cover directional as well as stabilizing selection as limiting cases, and that can be applied to maximize the profit of a breed in both situations. Results: The optimum selection index shifts the trait means towards the optima and, in the case of stabilizing selection, decreases the phenotypic variance, which causes the phenotypes to be closer to the optimum. The optimum index depends not only on the breeding values, but also on the squared breeding values, the allele contents of major quantitative trait loci (QTL), the QTL heterozygosities, the inbreeding coefficient of the animal, and the kinship of the animal with the population. Conclusion: The optimum selection index drives the alleles of major QTL to fixation when the trait mean approaches the optimum because decreasing the phenotypic variance shifts the trait values closer to the optimum, which increases the profit of the breed. The index weight on the kinship coefficient balances the increased genetic gain that can be achieved in future generations by outcrossing, and the increased genetic gain that can be achieved under stabilizing selection by reducing the phenotypic variance. In a model with dominance variance, it can also account for the effect of inbreeding depression. The combining ability between potential mating partners, which predicts the total merit of their offspring, could become an important parameter for mate allocation that could be used to further shift the phenotypes towards their optimum values.