Publications by authors named "Anne Aagaard"

The intensification of land use over past millennia has accelerated habitat loss and fragmentation. This is hypothesized to lead to reductions in population sizes and restrictions in gene flow, processes that amplify genetic drift with profound negative impacts on species and populations. However, empirical data on the population genetic impacts of habitat fragmentation remain limited, particularly for presumed abundant species such as insects.

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In cooperatively breeding social animals, a few individuals account for all reproduction. In some taxa, sociality is accompanied by a transition from outcrossing to inbreeding. In concert, these traits reduce effective population size, potentially rendering transitions to sociality "evolutionarily dead-ends.

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How species thrive in a wide range of environments is a major focus of evolutionary biology. For many species, limited genetic diversity or gene flow among habitats means that phenotypic plasticity must play an important role in their capacity to tolerate environmental heterogeneity and to colonize new habitats. However, we have a limited understanding of the molecular components that govern plasticity in ecologically relevant phenotypes.

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Understanding the role of genetic and nongenetic variants in modulating phenotypes is central to our knowledge of adaptive responses to local conditions and environmental change, particularly in species with such low population genetic diversity that it is likely to limit their evolutionary potential. A first step towards uncovering the molecular mechanisms underlying population-specific responses to the environment is to carry out environmental association studies. We associated climatic variation with genetic, epigenetic and microbiome variation in populations of a social spider with extremely low standing genetic diversity.

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Article Synopsis
  • Bovine respiratory disease (BRD) is influenced by various viruses and bacteria, with a focus on comparing the presence of these organisms in sick versus healthy calves.
  • A study involving 46 healthy and 46 sick calves in Denmark used bronchoalveolar lavage to analyze bacterial presence, finding that Histophilus somni was significantly linked to BRD.
  • While certain bacteria were more prevalent in sick calves, isolates from both healthy and sick calves showed similarity in genotypes and were generally responsive to standard antibiotics used for BRD treatment.
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