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While the content of subjective (personal) experience is inaccessible to external observers, behavioral proxies can frame the nature of that experience and suggest its cognitive requirements. Directed attention is widely recognized as a feature of animal awareness. This descriptive study used the frequency of gaze shifts in lizards and birds as an indicator of the rate at which the animals change the perceptual segmentation of their ongoing experience. Most lizards are solitary, with social interactions limited to territorial defense and mating. Many are sit-and-wait insectivores that intersperse active foraging with long periods of sedentary activity. Others actively seek encounters with prey, either randomly (teiids) or through strategies indicative of intelligent planning (varanids). Birds typically change the direction of their attention five times faster than lizards while displaying more behavioral complexity and variety. A number of interspecies differences among both lizards and birds were observed in this study, consistent with the view that subjective experience varies uniquely across lifestyles, ecology, and phylogeny. These differences constitute variations in the structure of perceptual experience and could serve as probes for investigating neural correlates of animal consciousness.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1424329 | DOI Listing |
J Virol
September 2025
Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Molecular Genetics, College of Medicine, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, USA.
Arthropod-borne viruses (arboviruses) pose a major threat to global public health, impacting both human and animal health. Genomic characterization is important for arboviruses because it allows for an understanding of their evolution and improves timely outbreak and epidemic response. In this study, we used high-throughput sequencing and computational analyses to characterize the genomes and evolution of 46 previously unsequenced or partially sequenced arbovirus isolates collected across 23 countries between 1954 and 1984.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcology
September 2025
Laboratoire de Biométrie et Biologie Evolutive UMR 5558, CNRS, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, Villeurbanne, France.
Natal dispersal is a key process in ecology and evolution. Similarities of dispersal patterns between relatives can lead to small-scale kin structure within populations with consequences for population dynamics and genetics. Most studies have focused on birds, lizards, and small mammals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeerJ
September 2025
Finnish Museum of Natural History, Helsinki, Finland.
Tympanal organs, crucial for anti-bat defence in moths and key for taxonomy, are often overlooked due to their fragility during dissection. Using micro-CT, we analyzed the tympanal organs of 19 geometrid species, comparing diurnal and nocturnal species to understand how predators, like bats and diurnal birds or lizards, influence tympanal morphology and its allometric relationship with body size. We hypothesized that diurnal moths, with reduced anti-bat function, would have smaller tympanal organs, irrespective of body size.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPathogens
July 2025
Clinic for Birds and Reptiles, Leipzig University, 04103 Leipzig, Germany.
and have previously been described as pathogens causing hyalohyphomycosis in various species of captive chameleons and bearded dragons (). Previous studies yielded different genotypes of and based on sequencing of the internal transcribed spacer 1-5.8S rDNA (ITS-1-5.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
August 2025
Centro de Investigaciones Biológicas del Noroeste, S.C., La Paz, México.
Marine subsidies in the extremely arid islands of the northern Gulf of California have been shown to be important enhancing primary productivity and fueling the terrestrial food webs. This effect has been proved in plants, insects, lizards and rodents. The aims of our study were first to determine whether insectivorous lizards from a wide array of islands, including some in the central and southern part of the Gulf, are consuming marine derived products, and secondly to assess its impact on herbivore lizards as well.
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