PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Traumatic mating may offer fitness benefits for female sea slugs

Traumatic mating may offer fitness benefits for female sea slugs
2012-08-23
(Press-News.org) Female sea slugs mate more frequently than required to produce offspring, despite the highly traumatic and biologically costly nature of their copulation, as reported Aug. 22 in the open access journal PLOS ONE.

The authors of the study, led by Rolanda Lange of the University of Tuebingen in Germany, investigated the mating behavior of a simultaneously hermaphroditic species of sea slug that mates via an extravagant ritual that involves a syringe-like penile appendage that stabs the partner to inject prostate fluids and sperm.

Surprisingly, the researchers found that the sea slugs mate more frequently than minimally required for offspring production and that both elevated and reduced mating rates are detrimental to female fitness, suggesting that there may be some additional, indirect benefits to this traumatic mating beyond reproduction.

INFORMATION:

Citation: Lange R, Gerlach T, Beninde J, Werminghausen J, Reichel V, et al. (2012) Female Fitness Optimum at Intermediate Mating Rates under Traumatic Mating. PLOS ONE 7(8): e43234. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0043234

Financial Disclosure: The German Science Foundation (grant An549/2-1) provided funds for field work and during manuscript preparation. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

Competing Interest Statement: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Disclaimer: This press release refers to upcoming articles in PLOS ONE. The releases have been provided by the article authors and/or journal staff. Any opinions expressed in these are the personal views of the contributors, and do not necessarily represent the views or policies of PLOS. PLOS expressly disclaims any and all warranties and liability in connection with the information found in the release and article and your use of such information.

About PLOS ONE

PLOS ONE is the first journal of primary research from all areas of science to employ a combination of peer review and post-publication rating and commenting, to maximize the impact of every report it publishes. PLOS ONE is published by the Public Library of Science (PLOS), the open-access publisher whose goal is to make the world's scientific and medical literature a public resource.

All works published in PLOS ONE are Open Access. Everything is immediately available—to read, download, redistribute, include in databases and otherwise use—without cost to anyone, anywhere, subject only to the condition that the original authors and source are properly attributed. For more information about PLOS ONE relevant to journalists, bloggers and press officers, including details of our press release process and our embargo policy, see the everyONE blog at http://everyone.plos.org/media.

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Traumatic mating may offer fitness benefits for female sea slugs

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Managerial role associated with more automatic decision-making

2012-08-23
Managers and non-managers show distinctly different brain activation patterns when making decisions, according to research published Aug. 22 in the open access journal PLOS ONE. The authors of the study, led by Svenja Caspers of the Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine, Research Centre Jülich in Germany, used functional MR imaging to track the decision making process for managers and non-managers. Subjects were required to perform equally repetitive decisions, one form of decision making occurring in every-day work life. The authors found that manager and non-managers ...

Many medications for elderly are prescribed inappropriately

2012-08-23
Approximately one in five prescriptions to elderly people is inappropriate, according to a study published Aug. 22 in the open access journal PLOS ONE. The authors of the study, led by Dedan Opondo of the Academic Medical Center in Amsterdam, conducted a systematic review of English-language studies of medication use in the elderly and found that the median rate of inappropriate prescriptions was 20.5%. Some of the medications with the highest rates of inappropriate use were the antihistamine diphenhydramine, the antidepressant amitriptyline, and the pain reliever propoxyphene. INFORMATION: Citation: ...

Parasitic wasps remember better if reward is greater

2012-08-23
Two parasitic wasp species show similar memory consolidation patterns in response to rewards of different quality, providing evidence that the reward value affects the type of memory that is consolidated. The full results are reported Aug. 22 in the open access journal PLOS ONE. The researchers, led by Marjolein Kruidhof of the Netherlands Institute of Ecology, tested how wasps store scents associated with situations of low reward (egg-laying into a inferior-quality host species that lays single eggs) versus high reward (egg-laying into a superior-quality host species ...

Patients with anorexia judge own body size inaccurately, view others' accurately

2012-08-23
Patients with anorexia have trouble accurately judging their own body size, but not others', according to research published Aug. 22 in the open access journal PLOS ONE. In the study, led by Dewi Guardia of the University Hospital of Lille in France, 25 patients with anorexia and 25 controls were shown a door-like aperture and asked to judge whether or not it was wide enough for them to pass through, or for another person present in the room to pass through. In previous similar experiments, anorexic patients felt they could not pass through the door even when it was easily ...

Ready. Get set. Repress!

Ready. Get set. Repress!
2012-08-23
KANSAS CITY, MO—The first step in gene expression is the exact copying of a segment of DNA by the enzyme known as RNA polymerase II, or pol II, into a mirror image RNA. Scientists recognize that pol II does not transcribe RNA via a smooth glide down the DNA highway but instead encounters an obstacle course of DNA tightly wound around barrier proteins called histones. Those proteins must be shoved aside for pol II to trundle through. Previous work from the lab of Jerry Workman, Ph.D., an investigator at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research, showed how a protein ...

Potency of statins linked to muscle side effects

2012-08-23
A study from the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine, published August 22 online by PLoS ONE, reports that muscle problems reported by patients taking statins were related to the strength or potency of the given cholesterol-lowering drugs. Adverse effects such as muscle pain and weakness, reported to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) were related to a statin's potency, or the degree by which it typically lowers cholesterol at commonly prescribed doses. "These findings underscore that stronger statins bear higher risk – and should be used ...

University of East Anglia breakthrough boosts bacterial understanding

2012-08-23
Having healthy gut bacteria could have as much to do with a strategy that insurance companies use to uncover risk as with eating the right foods, according to researchers at the University of East Anglia (UEA). Findings published today in Ecology Letters show how researchers applied a strategy used by insurance companies to understand how animals and plants recruit beneficial bacteria. The breakthrough brings scientists closer to understanding the human body's relationship with bacteria, which account for nine cells out of every 10 in our bodies. The research has ...

Native landscaping in urban areas can help native birds

Native landscaping in urban areas can help native birds
2012-08-23
AMHERST, Mass. – A recent study of residential landscape types and native bird communities in Phoenix, Ariz., led by a University of Massachusetts Amherst urban ecologist suggests that yards mimicking native vegetation and wildlands offer birds "mini refuges," helping to offset the loss of biodiversity in cities and supporting birds better than traditional grass lawns and non-native plantings. The study, led by Susannah Lerman with her advisor Paige Warren at UMass Amherst, and Hilary Gan and Eyal Shochat at Arizona State University, is one of the first to use quantitative ...

Wide circle of friends key to mid-life wellbeing for both sexes

2012-08-23
Friends are equally important to men and women, but family matters more for men's wellbeing Online First doi 10.1136/jech-2012-201113 The midlife wellbeing of both men and women seems to depend on having a wide circle of friends whom they see regularly, finds research published online in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health. A network of relatives is also important—but only for men—shows the study of more than 6500 Britons born in 1958. The authors base their findings on information collected from the participants, all of whom were part of the National ...

Global 'epidemic' of gullet cancer seems to have started in UK in 1950s

2012-08-23
A global assessment of the oesophageal adenocarcinoma epidemic Online First doi 10.1136/gutjnl-2012-302412 The global "epidemic" of one type of gullet cancer (adenocarcinoma) seems to have started in the UK during the 1950s, sparked by some as yet unknown, but common, factor, suggests research published online in Gut. There are two distinct types of gullet (oesophageal) cancer—squamous and adenocarcinoma, the latter typically affecting the lower third of the oesophagus. It was first realised that diagnoses of adenocarcinoma were increasing rapidly in several regions ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Scientists find a microbial molecule that restores liver and gut health

Regulation of the temperature stability in ordered olivine microwave dielectric ceramics with low-loss for dielectric resonant antenna

Core-cladding-like phosphor ceramics wafer: a path to ultra-high luminance

Exercise may slow epigenetic aging

RSNA AI challenge models can independently interpret mammograms

Embargoed study: Breaking the link between alcohol use and pancreatic cancer

Why common blood pressure readings may be misleading – and how to fix them

Neural navigation: FAU engineers, sensing institute map brain’s blood flow

“Skin in a syringe” a step towards a new way to heal burns

BTI, Meiogenix and FFAR announce $2 million breakthrough tomato genetics collaboration

Better calibration for cuff-based blood pressure readings

The future of ‘personalized’ cancer treatment: Antitumor mRNA-based vaccines

Common food thickeners – long thought to pass right through us – are actually digested

Off-the-shelf cancer vaccine elicits strong immune response in patients with pancreatic and colorectal cancer

New strategy to boost the effect of immunotherapy in the most aggressive form of lung cancer

Counties with animal feeding operations have more air pollution, less health insurance coverage

Mirror-like graphite films break records in strength and conductivity

AI uncovers new antibiotics in ancient microbes

AI meets CRISPR for precise gene editing

New method to synthesize carbohydrates could pave the way to biomedical advances

Plants feed through one-way routes

3D-printed kidney tumors show potential for more targeted treatment

Cats with dementia share hallmarks of humans with Alzheimer’s

AI could soon detect early voice box cancer from the sound of your voice

New survey reveals top reasons why kids avoid going to school

Playtime a mostly mutual activity between dolphins and whales

Brain cells learn faster than machine learning, new research reveals

Mixed-dimensional nanowires/nanosheet heterojunction of GaSb/Bi2O2Se for self-powered near-infrared photodetection and photocommunication

Universities that eliminated admission test requirements saw gains in student body diversity

Head-to-head against AI, pharmacy students won

[Press-News.org] Traumatic mating may offer fitness benefits for female sea slugs