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Featured researches published by Joerns Fickel.


Oecologia | 2008

Higher masseter muscle mass in grazing than in browsing ruminants

Marcus Clauss; Reinold R Hofmann; W. Jürgen Streich; Joerns Fickel; Jürgen Hummel

Using cranioskeletal measurements, several studies have generated evidence that grazing ruminants have a more pronounced mastication apparatus, in terms of muscle insertion areas and protuberances, than browsing ruminants, with the resulting hypothesis that grazers should have larger, heavier chewing muscles than browsers. However, the only investigation of this so far [Axmacher and Hofmann (J Zool 215:463–473, 1988)] did not find differences between ruminant feeding types in the masseter muscle mass of 22 species. Here, we expand the dataset to 48 ruminant species. Regardless of phylogenetic control in the statistical treatment, there was a significant positive correlation of body mass and masseter mass, and also a significant association between percent grass in the natural diet and masseter mass. The results support the concept that ruminant species that ingest more grass have relatively larger masseter muscles, possibly indicating an increased requirement to overcome the resistance of grass forage. The comparative chewing resistance of different forage classes may represent a rewarding field of ecophysiological research.


Veterinary Microbiology | 2001

A variant of the endotheliotropic herpesvirus in Asian elephants (Elephas maximus) in European zoos.

Joerns Fickel; L.K. Richman; Richard J. Montali; W. Schaftenaar; F. Göritz; Thomas B. Hildebrandt; C. Pitra

Newly discovered, lethal elephant endotheliotropic herpesviruses (EEHV) have been identified in both Asian (Elephas maximus) and African (Loxodonta africana) elephants. Carried by otherwise healthy African elephants they can be fatal mainly for young Asian elephants. Since zoos often harbour both elephant species, we conducted a survey on the presence of EEHV in Asian elephants from 12 European zoos, 3 circuses and 1 Israeli zoo. Here, we demonstrate that all EEHV that have affected Asian elephants so far belong to the EEHV1 group. We also describe the detection and the partial sequencing of an endotheliotropic herpesvirus variant (named EEHV1b) in Asian elephants, being either an EEHV endogenous to Asian elephants or indicating different sources (African elephants) of infection.


Journal of Wildlife Management | 2005

GENETIC STRUCTURE OF POPULATIONS OF EUROPEAN BROWN HARE: IMPLICATIONS FOR MANAGEMENT

Joerns Fickel; Anke Schmidt; Mathias Putze; Heinrich Spittler; Arne Ludwig; Wolf Juergen Streich; Christian Pitra

Abstract During the last 2 decades, European brown hare (Lepus europaeus) populations have declined considerably. We evaluated whether this decline could have been associated with diminished overall fitness due to reduced genetic variability. We also estimated the extent of population differentiation. We typed 307 hares from 21 localities for 5 microsatellite loci and the mitochondrial d-loop. Analysis of molecular variance revealed a high degree of genetic variability, matrilinearily structured populations, male-biased gene flow, and lack of inbreeding. We did not identify any geographical or anthropogenic barriers to gene flow. Because extant populations are small and susceptible to random genetic drift, we recommend changes to current population management practices and periodic genetic surveys.


Molecular Ecology Resources | 2016

Impact of enrichment conditions on cross-species capture of fresh and degraded DNA

Johanna L. A. Paijmans; Joerns Fickel; Alexandre Courtiol; Michael Hofreiter; Daniel W. Förster

By combining high‐throughput sequencing with target enrichment (‘hybridization capture’), researchers are able to obtain molecular data from genomic regions of interest for projects that are otherwise constrained by sample quality (e.g. degraded and contamination‐rich samples) or a lack of a priori sequence information (e.g. studies on nonmodel species). Despite the use of hybridization capture in various fields of research for many years, the impact of enrichment conditions on capture success is not yet thoroughly understood. We evaluated the impact of a key parameter – hybridization temperature – on the capture success of mitochondrial genomes across the carnivoran family Felidae. Capture was carried out for a range of sample types (fresh, archival, ancient) with varying levels of sequence divergence between bait and target (i.e. across a range of species) using pools of individually indexed libraries on Agilent SureSelect™ arrays. Our results suggest that hybridization capture protocols require specific optimization for the sample type that is being investigated. Hybridization temperature affected the proportion of on‐target sequences following capture: for degraded samples, we obtained the best results with a hybridization temperature of 65 °C, while a touchdown approach (65 °C down to 50 °C) yielded the best results for fresh samples. Evaluation of capture performance at a regional scale (sliding window approach) revealed no significant improvement in the recovery of DNA fragments with high sequence divergence from the bait at any of the tested hybridization temperatures, suggesting that hybridization temperature may not be the critical parameter for the enrichment of divergent fragments.


European Journal of Wildlife Research | 2006

A methodological approach for non-invasive sampling for population size estimates in wild boars (Sus scrofa)

Joerns Fickel; Ulf Hohmann

Composite microsatellite genotypes were determined at five loci from 35 tissue-sampled wild boars and used as reference genotypes to estimate both allelic drop-out rate and false allele rate in comparison to genotypes from scats and hair strands of the same animals. These rates allow to assess the genotyping reliability when only non-invasively collected material is available. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification from scats was often corrupted by inhibitors and worked poorly, whereas genotyping success in hair samples was high. Body region of hair origin had no influence on PCR suitability, whereas the type of hair had. We recommend the use of bristles. PCR conditions were optimized for single-hair (bristle) genotyping.


Evolutionary Applications | 2014

Rabbit haemorrhagic disease: virus persistence and adaptation in Australia.

Nina Schwensow; Brian Cooke; John Kovaliski; Ron Sinclair; David Peacock; Joerns Fickel; Simone Sommer

In Australia, the rabbit haemorrhagic disease virus (RHDV) has been used since 1996 to reduce numbers of introduced European rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus) which have a devastating impact on the native Australian environment. RHDV causes regular, short disease outbreaks, but little is known about how the virus persists and survives between epidemics. We examined the initial spread of RHDV to show that even upon its initial spread, the virus circulated continuously on a regional scale rather than persisting at a local population level and that Australian rabbit populations are highly interconnected by virus‐carrying flying vectors. Sequencing data obtained from a single rabbit population showed that the viruses that caused an epidemic each year seldom bore close genetic resemblance to those present in previous years. Together, these data suggest that RHDV survives in the Australian environment through its ability to spread amongst rabbit subpopulations. This is consistent with modelling results that indicated that in a large interconnected rabbit meta‐population, RHDV should maintain high virulence, cause short, strong disease outbreaks but show low persistence in any given subpopulation. This new epidemiological framework is important for understanding virus–host co‐evolution and future disease management options of pest species to secure Australias remaining natural biodiversity.


Acta Veterinaria Scandinavica | 2012

Applicability of major histocompatibility complex DRB1 alleles as markers to detect vertebrate hybridization: a case study from Iberian ibex × domestic goat in southern Spain

Samer Alasaad; Joerns Fickel; Luca Rossi; Mathieu Sarasa; Buenaventura BenÃ-tez-Camacho; José E. Granados; Ramón C Soriguer

BackgroundHybridization between closely related wild and domestic species is of great concern because it can alter the evolutionary integrity of the affected populations. The high allelic variability of Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) loci usually excludes them from being used in studies to detect hybridization events. However, if a) the parental species don’t share alleles, and b) one of the parental species possesses an exceptionally low number of alleles (to facilitate analysis), then even MHC loci have the potential to detect hybrids.ResultsBy genotyping the exon2 of the MHC class II DRB1 locus, we were able to detect hybridization between domestic goats (Capra hircus) and free-ranging Iberian ibex (Capra pyrenaica hispanica) by molecular means.ConclusionsThis is the first documentation of a Capra pyrenaica × Capra hircus hybridization, which presented us the opportunity to test the applicability of MHC loci as new, simple, cost-effective, and time-saving approach to detect hybridization between wild species and their domesticated relatives, thus adding value to MHC genes role in animal conservation and management.


Nature Communications | 2010

Superconception in mammalian pregnancy can be detected and increases reproductive output per breeding season

Kathleen Roellig; Frank Goeritz; Joerns Fickel; Robert Hermes; Heribert Hofer; Thomas B. Hildebrandt

The concept of superfetation, a second conception during pregnancy, has been controversial for a long time. In this paper we use an experimental approach to demonstrate that female European brown hares (Lepus europaeus) frequently develop a second pregnancy while already pregnant and thereby increase their reproductive success. After a new, successful copulation, we confirmed additional ovulations before parturition in living, late-pregnant females by detecting a second set of fresh corpora lutea using high-resolution ultrasonography. The presence of early embryonic stages in the oviduct, demonstrated by oviduct flushing, next to fully developed fetuses in the uterus is best explained by passage of semen through the late-pregnant uterus; this was confirmed by paternity analysis using microsatellite profiling. Subsequent implantation occurred after parturition. This superfetation, categorized as superconception, significantly increased litter size and permitted females to produce up to 35.4% more offspring per breeding season. It is therefore most likely an evolutionary adaptation.


European Journal of Wildlife Research | 2007

Distribution of haplotypes and microsatellite alleles among Asian elephants (Elephas maximus) in Thailand

Joerns Fickel; Dietmar Lieckfeldt; Parntep Ratanakorn; Christian Pitra

Habitat fragmentation often promotes increased inbreeding depression due to interrupted gene flow between populations. In this study, we demonstrate that Asian elephants most likely also suffer from outbreeding depression due to cryptic speciation. We analysed mitochondrial and nuclear DNA loci from 78 Asian elephants. Haplotype genealogy and analysis of molecular variance revealed two matrilinear clades (αh, βh). Microsatellite analyses of individuals grouped according to their haplotype clade (corresponding group of nuclear genotypes called αnuc and βnuc) revealed significant genotypic differentiation between αnuc and βnuc. Such genealogically differentiated forms in a morphologically uniform species are considered indicative of cryptic speciation. The differentiation was caused by bulls, whereas considering cows only resulted in no differentiation. Such result is best explained by Haldane’s rule whereby hybrid formation between genealogical forms causes lower viability and fertility of heterogametic hybrids. Although the lack of hybrid-specific morphological characteristics renders direct testing of reduced hybrid fitness under natural conditions unfeasible, the effects of Haldane’s rule are demonstrated by reduced male-mediated gene flow between genealogical forms under sympatric conditions, as was indeed suggested by the data found in Asian elephants: male-mediated gene flow between groups αnuc and βnuc was much lower than female-mediated gene flow.


Biological Invasions | 2017

High adaptive variability and virus-driven selection on major histocompatibility complex (MHC) genes in invasive wild rabbits in Australia

Nina Schwensow; Camila J. Mazzoni; Elena Marmesat; Joerns Fickel; David Peacock; John Kovaliski; Ron Sinclair; Phillip Cassey; Brian Cooke; Simone Sommer

The rabbit haemorrhagic disease virus (RHDV) was imported into Australia in 1995 as a biocontrol agent to manage one of the most successful and devastating invasive species, the European rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus cuniculus). During the first disease outbreaks, RHDV caused mortality rates of up to 97% and reduced Australian rabbit numbers to very low levels. However, recently increased genetic resistance to RHDV and strong population growth has been reported. Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I immune genes are important for immune responses against viruses, and a high MHC variability is thought to be crucial in adaptive processes under pathogen-driven selection. We asked whether strong population bottlenecks and presumed genetic drift would have led to low MHC variability in wild Australian rabbits, and if the retained MHC variability was enough to explain the increased resistance against RHD. Despite the past bottlenecks we found a relatively high number of MHC class I sequences distributed over 2–4 loci. We identified positive selection on putative antigen-binding sites of the MHC. We detected evidence for RHDV-driven selection as one MHC supertype was negatively associated with RHD survival, fitting expectations of frequency-dependent selection. Gene duplication and pathogen-driven selection are possible (and likely) mechanisms that maintained the adaptive potential of MHC genes in Australian rabbits. Our findings not only contribute to a better understanding of the evolution of invasive species, they are also important in the light of planned future rabbit biocontrol in Australia.

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Ramón C. Soriguer

Spanish National Research Council

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