Browsing by Subject "habituation"
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Item Avian Response to Road Construction Noise with Emphasis on the Endangered Golden-cheeked Warbler(2011-08-08) Lackey, Melissa A.Noise pollution can mask or distort bird songs, which inhibits mating success, predator detection, and parental response to begging calls. Road noise can cause lowered density and reproductive success in songbirds. I examined the impact of construction noise on reproductive success and territory selection of golden-cheeked warblers (Dendroica chrysoparia) at 3 sites: adjacent to road construction, adjacent to road-noise only, and a control with no noise or construction activity. I also examined birds' responses to experimental playback of construction noise to determine if warblers alter behavior in the presence of introduced road construction noise, if they have habituated to construction noise, and whether habituation is hindering their reproductive success. I used the Vickery reproductive index to evaluate productivity and automatic recording units to assess the levels of ambient noise in each site. From 2007-2009, productivity was stable in the road-noise only site and showed more annual variation in the construction and control sites; productivity was nearly identical in the latter 2 sites in 2008 and 2009. There was no significant difference in productive territory locations based on distance from road. Ambient noise was similar in the construction and roadnoise only sites but significantly different from the control. To examine habituation and territory placement, I (1) used construction noise playback to individual birds and evaluated occurrence of behavioral response as a function of distance from the roadway, and (2) established broadcast stations that simulate construction noise to determine impacts on territory selection. Of 88 surveys, 6 birds responded to construction noise playback. I conducted 18 control surveys and observed 1 behavioral response. All birds that responded were located greater than or equal to 140 m from the road. I established 3 broadcast stations per season in 2008 and 2009. In each year I placed broadcast units on the edges of randomly chosen territories identified during the previous field season. There was not a significant difference in mean territory shifts for broadcast and non-broadcast unit territories, and territory shifts did not show patterns in directionality or in reproductive success. Results suggest that construction noise does not appear to affect behavior or reproductive success of golden-cheeked warblers.Item The dynamics, interactions and phenotypes associated with the three members of the 14-3-3 family in Drosophila melanogaster(Texas A&M University, 2005-11-01) Acevedo, Summer FontaineIt has been proposed that the various 14-3-3 isotypes and isoforms present in all eukaryotes are largely functionally equivalent. However, this is not consistent with the conservation of multiple isoforms and isotypes, especially in vertebrates with seven 14-3-3 encoding genes and nine isotypes. The hypothesis tested in this thesis is that both isoform-specific and overlapping functions are likely mediated through tissue specific expression, colocalization and dimerization of 14-3-3 proteins occur in vivo. Drosophila melanogaster was selected because it offers a simple, but representative system to study these proteins functionally. This thesis focuses primarily on D14-3-3?, although the expression pattern and phenotypes associated with all three Drosophila 14-3-3s were determined. I first determined the expression pattern of the three different 14-3-3 isotypes (leoI, leoII and D14-3-3?) and described developmental phenotypes associated with mutations in 14-3-3 isotypes in Drosophila. I found that there is partial redundancy with respect to lethality. Both LEO and D14-3-3? appear required for normal germ-line and somatic gonadal development. However, they do not appear to be functionally equivalent with respect to this phenotype since LEO is unable to compensate for the loss of D14-3-3?. I also determined that D14-3-3? mutants have unique phenotypes including deficits in adult cross-vein formation and rapid habituation to olfactory and footshock stimuli. To further understand the unique role that D14-3-3? plays in the adult CNS, I mapped the areas in the brain involved in olfactory and footshock habituation. I found that although the mushroom bodies (MBs) are necessary to inhibit premature habituation such as that exhibited by D14-3-3? mutants, D14-3-3? expression specifically in the MBs is not sufficient to rescue premature habituation. Although the loss of either LEO or D14-3-3? appears to cause a deficit in olfactory associative learning, premature habituation is the cause of the deficit seen in D14-3-3? mutants. As leo mutants do not exhibit a premature habituation phenotype, it appears that within the MBs LEO and D14-3-3? are not functionally equivalent. Therefore, the data supports the hypothesis that 14-3-3s have functional specificity and redundancy likely to represent use of homo and heterodimers in different processes within the tissues of an organism.