Academic literature on the topic 'WebOS and Symbian'

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Journal articles on the topic "WebOS and Symbian"

1

McLean, Ailsa H. C., Benjamin J. Parker, Jan Hrček, Lee M. Henry, and H. Charles J. Godfray. "Insect symbionts in food webs." Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 371, no. 1702 (2016): 20150325. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2015.0325.

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Recent research has shown that the bacterial endosymbionts of insects are abundant and diverse, and that they have numerous different effects on their hosts' biology. Here we explore how insect endosymbionts might affect the structure and dynamics of insect communities. Using the obligate and facultative symbionts of aphids as an example, we find that there are multiple ways that symbiont presence might affect food web structure. Many symbionts are now known to help their hosts escape or resist natural enemy attack, and others can allow their hosts to withstand abiotic stress or affect host pl
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2

Wilcox, Justin J. S., and Hope Hollocher. "Unprecedented Symbiont Eukaryote Diversity Is Governed by Internal Trophic Webs in a Wild Non-Human Primate." Protist 169, no. 3 (2018): 307–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.protis.2018.03.001.

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3

Auderset, Alexandra, Sandi M. Smart, Yeongjun Ryu, et al. "Effects of photosymbiosis and related processes on planktic foraminifera-bound nitrogen isotopes in South Atlantic sediments." Biogeosciences 22, no. 7 (2025): 1887–905. https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-22-1887-2025.

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Abstract. Foraminifera often form symbiotic relationships with photosynthetic algae, providing a host environment and inorganic nutrients in exchange for photosynthetic organic matter from the algal symbiont. To date, the history of this relationship has been studied in paleoceanographic records using the oxygen and carbon stable isotopes of foraminiferal calcite. More recently, photosymbiotic activity has been observed to impact the nitrogen isotope ratio (δ15N) of foraminiferal tissue and the organic matter incorporated into foraminiferal tests. Dinoflagellate symbiont-bearing species appear
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Defossez, Emmanuel, Champlain Djiéto-Lordon, Doyle McKey, Marc-André Selosse, and Rumsaïs Blatrix. "Plant-ants feed their host plant, but above all a fungal symbiont to recycle nitrogen." Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 278, no. 1710 (2010): 1419–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2010.1884.

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In ant–plant symbioses, plants provide symbiotic ants with food and specialized nesting cavities (called domatia). In many ant–plant symbioses, a fungal patch grows within each domatium. The symbiotic nature of the fungal association has been shown in the ant-plant Leonardoxa africana and its protective mutualist ant Petalomyrmex phylax . To decipher trophic fluxes among the three partners, food enriched in 13 C and 15 N was given to the ants and tracked in the different parts of the symbiosis up to 660 days later. The plant received a small, but significant, amount of nitrogen from the ants.
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Vorburger, Christoph. "Defensive Symbionts and the Evolution of Parasitoid Host Specialization." Annual Review of Entomology 67, no. 1 (2022): 329–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1146/annurev-ento-072621-062042.

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Insect host–parasitoid interactions abound in nature and are characterized by a high degree of host specialization. In addition to their behavioral and immune defenses, many host species rely on heritable bacterial endosymbionts for defense against parasitoids. Studies on aphids and flies show that resistance conferred by symbionts can be very strong and highly specific, possibly as a result of variation in symbiont-produced toxins. I argue that defensive symbionts are therefore an important source of diversifying selection, promoting the evolution of host specialization by parasitoids. This i
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Lelièvre, Yann, Jozée Sarrazin, Julien Marticorena, et al. "Biodiversity and trophic ecology of hydrothermal vent fauna associated with tubeworm assemblages on the Juan de Fuca Ridge." Biogeosciences 15, no. 9 (2018): 2629–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/bg-15-2629-2018.

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Abstract. Hydrothermal vent sites along the Juan de Fuca Ridge in the north-east Pacific host dense populations of Ridgeia piscesae tubeworms that promote habitat heterogeneity and local diversity. A detailed description of the biodiversity and community structure is needed to help understand the ecological processes that underlie the distribution and dynamics of deep-sea vent communities. Here, we assessed the composition, abundance, diversity and trophic structure of six tubeworm samples, corresponding to different successional stages, collected on the Grotto hydrothermal edifice (Main Endea
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Okediran, O. O. "Mobile Operating Systems and Application Development Platforms: A Survey." J. of Advancement in Engineering and Technology Volume 1, Issue 4 (2014). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.999931.

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Earlier mobile communication technologies were dominated by vertically integrated service provision which are highly bounded mainly to voice and short message services that are organized in a monopolistic competition between few mobile virtual network operators, service providers and enhanced service providers. In the recent years, however, radical change driven by advancements in technology, witnessed the introduction and further development of smart phones where the user can get access to new applications and services by connecting to the device manufactures’ application stores and the like.
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Parmentier, Thomas, Dries Bonte, and Frederik De Laender. "A successional shift enhances stability in ant symbiont communities." Communications Biology 7, no. 1 (2024). http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s42003-024-06305-3.

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AbstractThroughout succession, communities undergo structural shifts, which can alter the relative abundances of species and how they interact. It is frequently asserted that these alterations beget stability, i.e. that succession selects for communities better able to resist perturbations. Yet, whether and how alterations of network structure affect stability during succession in complex communities is rarely studied in natural ecosystems. Here, we explore how network attributes influence stability of different successional stages of a natural network: symbiotic arthropod communities forming
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Arthofer, Patrick, Vincent Delafont, Anouk Willemsen, Florian Panhölzl, and Matthias Horn. "Defensive symbiosis against giant viruses in amoebae." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 119, no. 36 (2022). http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2205856119.

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Protists are important regulators of microbial communities and key components in food webs with impact on nutrient cycling and ecosystem functioning. In turn, their activity is shaped by diverse intracellular parasites, including bacterial symbionts and viruses. Yet, bacteria–virus interactions within protists are poorly understood. Here, we studied the role of bacterial symbionts of free-living amoebae in the establishment of infections with nucleocytoplasmic large DNA viruses (Nucleocytoviricota). To investigate these interactions in a system that would also be relevant in nature, we first i
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Vesala, Risto, Laura Arppe, and Jouko Rikkinen. "Caste-specific nutritional differences define carbon and nitrogen fluxes within symbiotic food webs in African termite mounds." Scientific Reports 9, no. 1 (2019). http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-53153-x.

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Abstract Fungus-growing termites of the genus Macrotermes cultivate symbiotic fungi (Termitomyces) in their underground nest chambers to degrade plant matter collected from the environment. Although the general mechanism of food processing is relatively well-known, it has remained unclear whether the termites get their nutrition primarily from the fungal mycelium or from plant tissues partly decomposed by the fungus. To elucidate the flows of carbon and nitrogen in the complicated food-chains within the nests of fungus-growing termites, we determined the stable isotope signatures of different
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