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Life Sciences Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

2016

Conference

Utah State University

Biology

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Presence Of Wolbachia In Sandfly Populations And Correlation With Pesticide Resistance, Cody Bills, Carol Von Dohlen, Katie Weglarz Apr 2016

Presence Of Wolbachia In Sandfly Populations And Correlation With Pesticide Resistance, Cody Bills, Carol Von Dohlen, Katie Weglarz

Student Research Symposium

Leishmaniasis is a serious skin disease, affecting 12 million people worldwide, caused by a protozoan vectored by sand flies. These flies can harbor the bacterium Wolbachia, a microorganism which blurs the line between symbiont and parasite. On one hand, it skews sex ratios in sand fly populations but, on the other hand, it confers certain benefits, specifically increased insecticide resistance. In closely related flies, specifically the mosquito, pesticide resistance is developed when Wolbachia infection rates increase. The range of impacts of Wolbachia on their hosts may offer a secondary control pathway for sand fly populations where pesticide resistance has developed, …


Development Of Archaeal And Algalytic Bacteria Detection Systems, Andrew Walters Apr 2016

Development Of Archaeal And Algalytic Bacteria Detection Systems, Andrew Walters

Student Research Symposium

Many methods for the production of methane are being developed in response to the growing energy crisis. One such method is the digestion of wastewater algae in a UASB (Up-Flow Anaerobic Sludge Blanket) reactor. In this reactor, algae grown in wastewater treatment facilities can be digested by alga-lytic bacteria into its carbon rich substituents and later used by methanogenic archaebacteria to produce methane.

The objective of this project is to design detection systems that employ specific DNA primers that will precisely target two bacterial groups: alga-lytic and archaeal bacteria. If successful, these systems will allow us to identify the bacteria …


Tag-Team Takeover: Usurpation Of Woodpecker Nests By Western Bluebirds, Sammy Cowell, Hannah Domgaard, Phil Fischer, Teresa Lorenz, Sara Lorscheider, Mariah Panoussi, Lindsey Parrish, Taryn Rodman, Kim Sullivan Apr 2016

Tag-Team Takeover: Usurpation Of Woodpecker Nests By Western Bluebirds, Sammy Cowell, Hannah Domgaard, Phil Fischer, Teresa Lorenz, Sara Lorscheider, Mariah Panoussi, Lindsey Parrish, Taryn Rodman, Kim Sullivan

Student Research Symposium

Woodpeckers provide important ecological services by excavating nesting cavities that are used by many forest birds and animals. Black-backed woodpeckers (Picoides arcticus) have been declining throughout their range and are now a threatened species. The failure of black-backed woodpeckers to reproduce can lead to a decline of nesting cavities, which in turn can lead to a decline in secondary cavity nesters. One of the challenges black-backed woodpeckers face is displacement from their nesting cavities by aggressive secondary cavity nesters.The western bluebird (Sialia Mexicana) is known to usurp nests, even from its own kind. However, the process by which bluebirds take …