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Dive into the research topics where Alexandra Cieslak is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexandra Cieslak.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2014

Life-history specialization was not an evolutionary dead-end in Pyrenean cave beetles

Alexandra Cieslak; Javier Fresneda; Ignacio Ribera

Research on subterranean organisms has focused on the colonization process and some of the associated phenotypic changes, but little is known on the long-term evolutionary dynamics of subterranean lineages and the origin of some highly specialized complex characters. One of the most extreme modifications is the reduction of the number of larval instars in some Leptodirini beetles from the ancestral 3 to 2 and ultimately a single instar. This reduction is usually assumed to have occurred independently multiple times within the same lineage and geographical area, but its evolution has never been studied in a phylogenetic framework. Using a comprehensive molecular phylogeny, we found a low number of independent origins of the reduction in the number of instars, with a single transition, dated to the Oligocene–Miocene, from 3 to 2 and then 1 instar in the Pyrenees, the best-studied area. In the Pyrenees, the 1-instar lineage had a diversification rate (0.22 diversification events per lineage per million years) significantly higher than that of 3- or 2-instar lineages (0.10), and similar to that seen in other Coleopteran radiations. Far from being evolutionary dead-ends, ancient lineages fully adapted to subterranean life seem able to persist and diversify over long evolutionary periods.


BMC Evolutionary Biology | 2014

Thermal niche evolution and geographical range expansion in a species complex of western Mediterranean diving beetles

Amparo Hidalgo-Galiana; David Sánchez-Fernández; David T. Bilton; Alexandra Cieslak; Ignacio Ribera

BackgroundSpecies thermal requirements are one of the principal determinants of their ecology and biogeography, although our understanding of the interplay between these factors is limited by the paucity of integrative empirical studies. Here we use empirically collected thermal tolerance data in combination with molecular phylogenetics/phylogeography and ecological niche modelling to study the evolution of a clade of three western Mediterranean diving beetles, the Agabus brunneus complex.ResultsThe preferred mitochondrial DNA topology recovered A. ramblae (North Africa, east Iberia and Balearic islands) as paraphyletic, with A. brunneus (widespread in the southwestern Mediterranean) and A. rufulus (Corsica and Sardinia) nested within it, with an estimated origin between 0.60-0.25 Ma. All three species were, however, recovered as monophyletic using nuclear DNA markers. A Bayesian skyline plot suggested demographic expansion in the clade at the onset of the last glacial cycle. The species thermal tolerances differ significantly, with A. brunneus able to tolerate lower temperatures than the other taxa. The climatic niche of the three species also differs, with A. ramblae occupying more arid and seasonal areas, with a higher minimum temperature in the coldest month. The estimated potential distribution for both A. brunneus and A. ramblae was most restricted in the last interglacial, becoming increasingly wider through the last glacial and the Holocene.ConclusionsThe A. brunneus complex diversified in the late Pleistocene, most likely in south Iberia after colonization from Morocco. Insular forms did not differentiate substantially in morphology or ecology, but A. brunneus evolved a wider tolerance to cold, which appeared to have facilitated its geographic expansion. Both A. brunneus and A. ramblae expanded their ranges during the last glacial, although they have not occupied areas beyond their LGM potential distribution except for isolated populations of A. brunneus in France and England. On the islands and possibly Tunisia secondary contact between A. brunneus and A. ramblae or A. rufulus has resulted in introgression. Our work highlights the complex dynamics of speciation and range expansions within southern areas during the last glacial cycle, and points to the often neglected role of North Africa as a source of European biodiversity.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Reproducibility and Consistency of Proteomic Experiments on Natural Populations of a Non-Model Aquatic Insect

Amparo Hidalgo-Galiana; Marta Monge; David G. Biron; Francesc Canals; Ignacio Ribera; Alexandra Cieslak

Population proteomics has a great potential to address evolutionary and ecological questions, but its use in wild populations of non-model organisms is hampered by uncontrolled sources of variation. Here we compare the response to temperature extremes of two geographically distant populations of a diving beetle species (Agabus ramblae) using 2-D DIGE. After one week of acclimation in the laboratory under standard conditions, a third of the specimens of each population were placed at either 4 or 27°C for 12 h, with another third left as a control. We then compared the protein expression level of three replicated samples of 2–3 specimens for each treatment. Within each population, variation between replicated samples of the same treatment was always lower than variation between treatments, except for some control samples that retained a wider range of expression levels. The two populations had a similar response, without significant differences in the number of protein spots over- or under-expressed in the pairwise comparisons between treatments. We identified exemplary proteins among those differently expressed between treatments, which proved to be proteins known to be related to thermal response or stress. Overall, our results indicate that specimens collected in the wild are suitable for proteomic analyses, as the additional sources of variation were not enough to mask the consistency and reproducibility of the response to the temperature treatments.


Biology Letters | 2014

Developmental constraints in cave beetles

Alexandra Cieslak; Javier Fresneda; Ignacio Ribera

In insects, whilst variations in life cycles are common, the basic patterns typical for particular groups remain generally conserved. One of the more extreme modifications is found in some subterranean beetles of the tribe Leptodirini, in which the number of larval instars is reduced from the ancestral three to two and ultimately one, which is not active and does not feed. We analysed all available data on the duration and size of the different developmental stages and compared them in a phylogenetic context. The total duration of development was found to be strongly conserved, irrespective of geographical location, habitat type, number of instars and feeding behaviour of the larvae, with a single alteration of the developmental pattern in a clade of cave species in southeast France. We also found a strong correlation of the size of the first instar larva with adult size, again regardless of geographical location, ecology and type of life cycle. Both results suggest the presence of deeply conserved constraints in the timing and energy requirements of larval development. Past focus on more apparent changes, such as the number of larval instars, may mask more deeply conserved ontogenetic patterns in developmental timing.


BMC Evolutionary Biology | 2015

Lack of evolutionary adjustment to ambient temperature in highly specialized cave beetles.

Valeria Rizzo; David Sánchez-Fernández; Javier Fresneda; Alexandra Cieslak; Ignacio Ribera


Archive | 2009

Aplicaciones de protemica en ecologa y evolucin

Alexandra Cieslak; Ignacio Ribera


Archive | 2018

Figure 1 from: Sánchez-Fernández D, Rizzo V, Bourdeau C, Cieslak A, Comas J, Faille A, Fresneda J, Lleopart E, Millán A, Montes A, Pallares S, Ribera I (2018) The deep subterranean environment as a model system in ecological, biogeographical and evolutionary research. Subterranean Biology 25: 1-7. https://doi.org/10.3897/subtbiol.25.23530

David Sánchez-Fernández; Valeria Rizzo; Charles Bourdeau; Alexandra Cieslak; Jordi Comas; Arnaud Faille; Javier Fresneda; Enric Lleopart; Andrés Millán; Aitor Montes; Susana Pallarés; Ignacio Ribera


Archive | 2014

Recovering temperature signature on natural populations of aquatic insects

Amparo Hidalgo-Galiana; David G. Biron; Ignacio Ribera; Alexandra Cieslak


Archive | 2013

Are rates of thermal niche evolution in cave beetles enough to cope with climate change

David Sánchez-Fernández; Alexandra Cieslak; Arnaud Faille; Javier Fresneda; Valeria Rizzo; D. Nieto-Lugilde; Ignacio Ribera


Archive | 2013

Single origin of subterranean adaptations in a lineage of Pyrenean beetles (Coleoptera: Leiodidae)

Ignacio Ribera; Javier Fresneda; Valeria Rizzo; Alexandra Cieslak

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David G. Biron

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Marta Monge

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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