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Dive into the research topics where Zofia Sajkowska is active.

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Featured researches published by Zofia Sajkowska.


Parasites & Vectors | 2011

Anaplasmataceae and Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato in the sand lizard Lacerta agilis and co-infection of these bacteria in hosted Ixodes ricinus ticks

Anna Ekner; Krzysztof Dudek; Zofia Sajkowska; Viktória Majláthová; Igor Majláth; Piotr Tryjanowski

BackgroundAnaplasmataceae and Borrelia burgdorferi s.l. are important tick-borne bacteria maintained in nature by transmission between ticks and vertebrate hosts. However, the potential role of lizards as hosts has not been sufficiently studied.ResultsThe current study showed that 23 of 171 examined sand lizards Lacerta agilis were PCR positive for Anaplasmataceae. The nucleotide sequences of the several selected PCR products showed 100% homology with Anaplasma spp. found in Ixodes ricinus collected in Tunisia and Morocco (AY672415 - AY672420). 1.2% of lizard collar scale samples were PCR positive for B. lusitaniae. In addition, 12 of 290 examined I. ricinus were PCR positive for B. burgdorferi s.l. and 82 were PCR positive for Anaplasmatacea. The number of ticks per lizard and the number of ticks PCR positive for both microorganisms per lizard were strongly correlated. Moreover, we found a significant correlation between numbers of ticks infected with Anaplasmataceae and with B. burgdorferi s.l. living on the same lizard. However, there was no significant correlation between detection of both bacteria in the same tick.ConclusionsTo the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of Anaplasmataceae DNA and additionally the second report of B. burgdorferi s.l DNA detection in the sand lizard.


Acta Ethologica | 2013

Locomotor performance of sand lizards (Lacerta agilis): effects of predatory pressure and parasite load

Anna Ekner-Grzyb; Zofia Sajkowska; Krzysztof Dudek; Monika Gawałek; Piotr Skórka; Piotr Tryjanowski

Locomotor performance affects foraging efficiency, predator avoidance and consequently fitness. Agility and speed determine the animals social status and reflect its condition. In this study, we test how predatory pressure and parasite load influences locomotor performance of wild specimens of the sand lizard Lacerta agilis. Animals were chased on a 2-metre racetrack. Lizards with autotomy ran significantly faster than lizards with an intact tail, but there was no significant difference in running speed between individuals with fresh caudal autotomy and regenerated tails. Parasite presence and load, age and sex had no significant effect on speed. Our results indicate that autotomy either alters locomotory behaviour or that individuals with autotomised tails were those that previously survived contact with predators, and therefore represented a subgroup of the fastest individuals. Therefore, in general, predatory pressure but not parasites affected locomotor performance in lizards.


Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases | 2016

Distribution pattern and number of ticks on lizards.

Krzysztof Dudek; Piotr Skórka; Zofia Sajkowska; Anna Ekner-Grzyb; Monika Dudek; Piotr Tryjanowski

The success of ectoparasites depends primarily on the site of attachment and body condition of their hosts. Ticks usually tend to aggregate on vertebrate hosts in specific areas, but the distribution pattern may depend on host body size and condition, sex, life stage or skin morphology. Here, we studied the distribution of ticks on lizards and tested the following hypothesis: occurrence or high abundance of ticks is confined with body parts with smaller scales and larger interscalar length because such sites should provide ticks with superior attachment conditions. This study was performed in field conditions in central Poland in 2008-2011. In total, 500 lizards (Lacerta agilis) were caught and 839 ticks (Ixodes ricinus, larvae and nymphs) were collected from them. Using generalised linear mixed models, we found that the ticks were most abundant on forelimbs and their axillae, with 90% of ticks attached there. This part of the lizard body and the region behind the hindlimb were covered by the smallest scales with relatively wide gaps between them. This does not fully support our hypothesis that ticks prefer locations with easy access to skin between scales, because it does not explain why so few ticks were in the hindlimb area. We found that the abundance of ticks was positively correlated with lizard body size index (snout-vent length). Tick abundance was also higher in male and mature lizards than in female and young individuals. Autotomy had no effect on tick abundance. We found no correlation between tick size and lizard morphology, sex, autotomy and body size index. The probability of occurrence of dead ticks was positively linked with the total number of ticks on the lizard but there was no relationship between dead tick presence and lizard size, sex or age. Thus lizard body size and sex are the major factors affecting the abundance of ticks, and these parasites are distributed nearly exclusively on the hosts forelimbs and their axillae.


Journal of Biological Education | 2017

Children’s ideas about the internal structure of trees: cross-age studies

Eliza Rybska; Sue Dale Tunnicliffe; Zofia Sajkowska

Abstract Trees are important to the environment owing to their ecological services. However, many aspects of their form and function are poorly understood by the public. From their earliest years, children have an elementary knowledge about plants which they gain from their everyday observations, their parents and other people and from their kindergarten and primary schooling. The goal of this research was to investigate Polish children’s understanding of trees’ internal structure. This cross-age study involved 5-year-old children from kindergarten (n = 57, 26 boys and 31 girls) and 7-year-old children (n = 105, 57 boys and 48 girls) and 10-year-old children (83 children, 36 boys and 47 girls) from primary school. Participants were asked to draw the internal structure of a tree. The results of the study showed that there were some significant differences in the responses between age groups and between the genders. Nevertheless, there were some ideas that were shared among all age groups indicating that they might be resistant to change. The study also identified some alternative conceptions about the internal structure of plants and the influence of the media on children’s ideas.


Acta Herpetologica | 2011

Medical cautery units as a permanent and non-invasive method of marking lizards

Anna Ekner; Zofia Sajkowska; Krzysztof Dudek; Piotr Tryjanowski


Turkish Journal of Zoology | 2015

Using body condition index can be an unreliable indicator of fitness: a case of sand lizard Lacerta agilis Linnaeus, 1758 (Sauria: Lacertidae)

Krzysztof Dudek; Zofia Sajkowska; Monika Gawałek; Anna Ekner-Grzyb


Journal of Baltic Science Education | 2014

YOUNG CHILDREN’S IDEAS ABOUT SNAIL INTERNAL ANATOMY

Eliza Rybska; Sue Dale Tunnicliffe; Zofia Sajkowska


Archive | 2015

Czym jest antropologiczna teoria dydaktyki (ATD)

Eliza Rybska; Zofia Sajkowska


Archive | 2014

What's inside a tree? The ideas of five year-old children

Sue Dale Tunnicliffe; Eliza Rybyska; Zofia Sajkowska


Archive | 2014

Układ i liczba tarczek zanozdrzowych jako cecha taksonomiczna jaszczurki zwinki Lacerta agilis i jaszczurki żyworodnej Zootoca vivipara Paern and the number of postnasal shields as a taxonomic trait of sand lizard Lacerta agilis and common lizard Zootoca vivipara

Krzysztof Dudek; Zofia Sajkowska; Anna Ekner-Grzyb; Laboratorium Neurobiologii

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Krzysztof Dudek

Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań

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Anna Ekner-Grzyb

Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań

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Eliza Rybska

Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań

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Piotr Tryjanowski

Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań

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Anna Ekner

Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań

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Piotr Skórka

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Igor Majláth

Slovak Academy of Sciences

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