AbstractThe northern spotted owl (Strix occidentalis caurina) is a threatened subspecies and the California spotted owl (Strix occidentalis occidentalis) is a subspecies of special concern in the western United States. Concern for their continued viability has arisen because of habitat loss caused by timber harvesting. The taxonomic status of the northern subspecies has been the subject of continuing controver
www.ebi.ac.ukAbstractThe adaptive function of melanin‐based coloration is a long‐standing debate. A recent genetic model suggested that pleiotropy could account for covariations between pigmentation, behaviour, morphology, physiology and life history traits. We explored whether the expression levels of genes belonging to the melanocortin system (MC1R,
www.ebi.ac.ukAbstractThe northern spotted owl (Strix occidentalis caurina) is a threatened subspecies and the California spotted owl (Strix occidentalis occidentalis) is a subspecies of special concern in the western United States. Concern for their continued viability has arisen because of habitat loss caused by timber harvesting. The taxonomic status of the northern subspecies has been the subject of continuing controver
www.ebi.ac.ukAbstractThe adaptive function of melanin‐based coloration is a long‐standing debate. A recent genetic model suggested that pleiotropy could account for covariations between pigmentation, behaviour, morphology, physiology and life history traits. We explored whether the expression levels of genes belonging to the melanocortin system (MC1R,
www.ebi.ac.ukThe bird mitogenome is generally considered to have a conservative genome size, consistent gene content, and similar gene order. As more mitogenomes are sequenced, mitochondrial (mt) gene rearrangements have been frequently identified among diverse birds. Within two genera (Bubo and Strix) of typical owls (Strigidae, Strigiformes), the rearrangement of the mt gene has been a subject of debate. In the current study, we first sequenced the whole mitogenomes of S. uralensis and B. scandiaca and res
www.ebi.ac.ukThis dataset represents a species known range extent for Strix occidentalis caurina (Northern Spotted Owl). These range maps are created by attributing sub-watershed polygons with information of a species presence, origin, seasonal and reproductive use.
doi.orgAbstractThe northern spotted owl (Strix occidentalis caurina) is a threatened subspecies and the California spotted owl (Strix occidentalis occidentalis) is a subspecies of special concern in the western United States. Concern for their continued viability has arisen because of habitat loss caused by timber harvesting. The taxonomic status of the northern subspecies has been the subject of continuing controver
www.ebi.ac.ukGenetic and morphological analyses revealed that the type specimen of Hume’s Owl Strix butleri, the geographical provenance of which is open to doubt, differs significantly from all other specimens previously ascribed to this species. Despite the absence of vocal data definitively linked to the same population as the type specimen, we consider that two species-level taxa are involved, principally because the degree of molecular differentiation is close to that seen in other taxa of Strix
www.ebi.ac.ukAbstractThe adaptive function of melanin‐based coloration is a long‐standing debate. A recent genetic model suggested that pleiotropy could account for covariations between pigmentation, behaviour, morphology, physiology and life history traits. We explored whether the expression levels of genes belonging to the melanocortin system (MC1R,
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