RUI: Collaborative Research: Microbiological Survey and Inventory of Gregarines Parasitizing Aquatic and Riparian Insects of the Texas Big Thicket
RUI:合作研究:德克萨斯州大灌丛中寄生水生和河岸昆虫的 Gregarines 微生物调查和清查
基本信息
- 批准号:0340774
- 负责人:
- 金额:--
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:Standard Grant
- 财政年份:2004
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2004-10-01 至 2008-09-30
- 项目状态:已结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:
项目摘要
Microbiological Survey And Inventory Of Gregarines Parasitizing Aquatic And Riparian Insects Of The Texas Big Thicket: The fundamental questions of biology remain "What is it?"; and, "What does it do for a living?" These questions are answered by studies of biodiversity that survey the organisms of a region and try to understand how these organisms contribute to the stability and diversity of the system. This project is a study of biological diversity that targets an understudied group with profound scientific implications: the most common parasites (gregarine protozoans) of the planet's most common animals (insects). Although scientists estimate that over 5 million species of gregarine parasites exist, less than 2,000 species are currently known, thus the project will discover a large number of new parasitic species that play an important ecological and evolutionary role in the stability and diversity of aquatic and riparian (shoreline) habitats in the Big Thicket of eastern Texas. The project focuses on the Big Thicket, sometimes called the "Biological Crossroads of America" because plants and animals from 3 distinct life zones all occur in the region, because no thorough survey of the insect life in the Big Thicket exists. The Big Thicket is a permanently endangered habitat whose biodiversity is preserved in a series of corridor parks forming the Big Thicket National Preserve. The project will provide a robust estimate of aquatic and riparian insect diversity in the Big Thicket predicated on a public specimen base yielding both ecosystem and community data for theoretical studies and management decisions in this fragile and broadly impacted federal preserve. The project will produce host and parasite specimen collections, preserved tissue specimens for future genetic analysis, and taxonomic descriptions and identification documents in both electronic and printed form. Electronic descriptions, digital images, and project databases are available through the project's WWW site http://science.peru.edu/gregarina. This project will more than double the existing gregarine specimen base, providing data to support meta-analysis of gregarine diversity patterns and provides a skeleton for future systematic revision of the Nearctic gregarines.This project is important in a larger societal context for both scientific and infrastructural reasons. Scientifically, the project provides important information no only about insects and their parasites, but about the factors that create and maintain parasite diversity. Thus the scientific implications extend from the theoretical ecology of emerging disease to the design and evaluation of federal, state, and local biodiversity management strategies in America's parks and reserves. Perhaps more importantly, the project places a premium on undergraduate training through all phases of the research. These training opportunities will increase diversity within science: historically over 50% of our undergraduate researchers are from underrepresented groups. The project is designed to train a new generation of scientists to meet the needs of American science in the new millennium while developing and providing new Internet resources for public education and the public at large. Biological indicator data is made available for download and use in formulating public policy and resource management strategies.
微生物调查和寄生在得克萨斯州大灌木丛水生和河岸昆虫的甜菜碱库存:生物学的基本问题仍然是“它是什么?”“;“它是做什么的?“这些问题可以通过生物多样性研究来回答,这些研究调查了一个地区的生物,并试图了解这些生物如何对系统的稳定性和多样性做出贡献。该项目是一项针对生物多样性的研究,目标是一个具有深刻科学意义的未被充分研究的群体:地球上最常见的动物(昆虫)的最常见寄生虫(gregarine原生动物)。虽然科学家估计存在超过500万种的gregarine寄生虫,但目前已知的不到2,000种,因此该项目将发现大量新的寄生虫物种,这些寄生虫物种在德克萨斯州东部大灌木丛的水生和河岸(海岸线)栖息地的稳定性和多样性中发挥重要的生态和进化作用。该项目的重点是大灌木丛,有时被称为“美国生物十字路口”,因为来自3个不同生命带的植物和动物都出现在该地区,因为没有对大灌木丛中昆虫生活的彻底调查。大灌木丛是一个永久濒危的栖息地,其生物多样性被保存在一系列走廊公园中,形成了大灌木丛国家保护区。该项目将提供一个强大的估计水生和河岸昆虫多样性的大灌木丛预测的公共标本库产生生态系统和社区数据的理论研究和管理决策,在这个脆弱的和广泛影响的联邦保护区。该项目将制作宿主和寄生虫标本集、保存的组织标本供今后进行遗传分析,以及电子和印刷形式的分类说明和鉴定文件。电子描述、数字图像和项目数据库可通过该项目的万维网网站http://science.peru.edu/gregarina获得。该项目将增加一倍以上的现有gregarine标本基地,提供数据,以支持元分析的gregarine多样性模式,并提供了一个骨架,为未来的系统修订的新北gregarines.This项目是重要的,在一个更大的社会背景下的科学和基础设施的原因。该项目不仅提供了有关昆虫及其寄生虫的重要信息,而且还提供了有关创造和维持寄生虫多样性的因素的重要信息。因此,科学的影响延伸到新出现的疾病的理论生态学的设计和评估的联邦,州和地方的生物多样性管理战略,在美国的公园和保护区。也许更重要的是,该项目在研究的所有阶段都重视本科生培训。这些培训机会将增加科学的多样性:历史上,我们超过50%的本科研究人员来自代表性不足的群体。该项目旨在培养新一代科学家,以满足新千年美国科学的需要,同时为公共教育和广大公众开发和提供新的互联网资源。生物指标数据可供下载和用于制定公共政策和资源管理战略。
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
专著数量(0)
科研奖励数量(0)
会议论文数量(0)
专利数量(0)
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Richard Clopton其他文献
Richard Clopton的其他文献
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{{ truncateString('Richard Clopton', 18)}}的其他基金
RUI: Biodiversity Inventory: Gregarines Parasitizing North American Cockroaches
RUI:生物多样性清单:寄生北美蟑螂的 Gregarines
- 批准号:
1019419 - 财政年份:2010
- 资助金额:
-- - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
RUI: Microbiological Survey and Inventory: Eugregarinida (Protista: Apicomplexa) Parasitizing Selected Mandibulate Arthropods of the Nebraska Sandhills
RUI:微生物调查和清查:Eugregarinida(原生生物:Apicomplexa)寄生于内布拉斯加州沙丘的选定下颌节肢动物
- 批准号:
9705179 - 财政年份:1997
- 资助金额:
-- - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
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