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Dive into the research topics where Zoltán Tóth is active.

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Featured researches published by Zoltán Tóth.


Archives of Agronomy and Soil Science | 2013

Effect of mineral and organic fertilization on crop yield, nitrogen uptake, carbon and nitrogen balances, as well as soil organic carbon content and dynamics: results from 20 European long-term field experiments of the twenty-first century

Martin Körschens; Erhard Albert; Martin Armbruster; Dietmar Barkusky; Michael Baumecker; Lothar Behle‐Schalk; Reiner Bischoff; Zoran Čergan; Frank Ellmer; Friedhelm Herbst; Sándor Hoffmann; Bodo Hofmann; Tamás Kismányoky; Jaromir Kubat; Eva Kunzova; Christina López-Fando; Ines Merbach; Wolfgang Merbach; Maria Teresa Pardor; Jutta Rogasik; Jörg Rühlmann; Heide Spiegel; Elke Schulz; Anton Tajnšek; Zoltán Tóth; Hans Wegener; Wilfried Zorn

Assembled results from 20 European long-term experiments (LTE), mainly from the first decade of the twenty-first century, are presented. The included LTEs from 17 sites are the responsibility of institutional members of the International Working Group of Long-term Experiments in the IUSS. Between the sites, average annual temperatures differ between 8.1 and 15.3°C, annual precipitation between 450 and 1400 mm, and soil clay contents between 3 and 31%. On average of 350 yield comparisons, combined mineral and organic fertilization resulted in a 6% yield benefit compared with mineral fertilization alone; in the case of winter wheat, the smallest effect was 3%, the largest effect, seen with potatoes, was 9%. All unfertilized treatments are depleted in soil organic carbon (SOC), varying between 0.36 and 2.06% SOC. The differences in SOC in unfertilized plots compared with the respective plots with combined mineral (NPK) and organic (10 t ha−1 farmyard manure) fertilization range between 0.11 and 0.72%, with an average of 0.3% (corresponding to ∼15 t ha−1). Consequently, the use of arable soils for carbon sequestration is limited and of low relevance and merely depleted soils can temporarily accumulate carbon up to their optimum C content.


Oecologia | 2015

The relative importance of prey-borne and predator-borne chemical cues for inducible antipredator responses in tadpoles.

Attila Hettyey; Zoltán Tóth; Kerstin E. Thonhauser; Joachim G. Frommen; Dustin J. Penn; Josh Van Buskirk

Chemical cues that evoke anti-predator developmental changes have received considerable attention, but it is not known to what extent prey use information from the smell of predators and from cues released through digestion. We conducted an experiment to determine the importance of various types of cues for the adjustment of anti-predator defences. We exposed tadpoles (common frog, Rana temporaria) to water originating from predators (caged dragonfly larvae, Aeshna cyanea) that were fed different types and quantities of prey outside of tadpole-rearing containers. Variation among treatments in the magnitude of morphological and behavioural responses was highly consistent. Our results demonstrate that tadpoles can assess the threat posed by predators through digestion-released, prey-borne cues and continually released predator-borne cues. These cues may play an important role in the fine-tuning of anti-predator responses and significantly affect the outcome of interactions between predators and prey in aquatic ecosystems. There has been much confusion regards terminology used in the literature, and therefore we also propose a more precise and consistent binomial nomenclature based on the timing of chemical cue release (stress-, attack-, capture-, digestion- or continually released cues) and the origin of cues (prey-borne or predator-borne cues). We hope that this new nomenclature will improve comparisons among studies on this topic.


international conference on pattern recognition | 2000

Random paintbrush transformation

Tamás Szirányi; Zoltán Tóth

A paintbrush-like image transformation is proposed. It is based on a random searching to insert brush-strokes into a generated image at decreasing scale of brush-sizes, without predefined models or interaction. One of the goals of the method is to transform the image into a representation that is very similar to the human sensation of artistic images. We introduce a sequential multiscale image decomposition method, based on simulated rectangular-shaped paintbrush strokes. The resulting images look like good-quality paintings with well-defined contours, at an acceptable distortion compared to the original image. The image can be described with the parameters of the consecutive paintbrush strokes, resulting in a parameter-series that can be used for compression. The painting process can be used for scale-space image representation, segmentation and contour detection, and image representation for retrieval purposes.


Molecular Ecology | 2009

Genetic relatedness in wintering groups of house sparrows (Passer domesticus)

András Liker; Veronika Bókony; A. Kulcsár; Zoltán Tóth; K. Szabó; B. Kaholek; Zsolt Pénzes

Social behaviour of group‐living animals is often influenced by the relatedness of individuals, thus understanding the genetic structure of groups is important for the interpretation of costs and benefits of social interactions. In this study, we investigated genetic relatedness in feeding aggregations of free‐living house sparrows (Passer domesticus) during the nonbreeding season. This species is a frequent model system for studies of social behaviour (e.g. aggression, social foraging), but we lack adequate information on the kin structure of sparrow flocks. During two winters, we ringed and observed sparrows at feeding stations, and used resightings to identify stable flock‐members and to calculate association indices between birds. We genotyped the birds using seven highly polymorphic microsatellite loci, and estimated pairwise relatedness coefficients and relatedness categories (close kin vs. unrelated) by maximum likelihood method. We found that most birds were unrelated to each other in the flocks (mean ± SE relatedness coefficient: 0.06 ± 0.002), although most individuals had at least a few close relatives in their home flock (14.3 ± 0.6% of flock‐mates). Pairwise association between individuals was not significantly related to their genetic relatedness. Furthermore, there was no difference between within‐flock vs. between‐flock relatedness, and birds had similar proportions of close kin within and outside their home flock. Finally, relatedness among members of different flocks was unrelated to the distance between their flocks. Thus, sparrow flocks were not characterized by association of relatives, nevertheless the presence of some close kin may provide opportunity for kin‐biased behaviours to evolve.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Leaders Are More Attractive: Birds with Bigger Yellow Breast Patches Are Followed by More Group-Mates in Foraging Groups

Zoltán Tóth; Matteo Griggio

Social network theory provides a perfect tool to better understand the population-level consequences of how individuals interact and make their decisions; however, this approach is generally overlooked among evolutionary biologists interested in social relationships. Here, we used social network analysis to examine the patterns of leader-follower interactions in relation to individual characteristics in foraging groups of free-living rock sparrows (Petronia petronia). We found that yellow feather ornamentation, a carotenoid-based trait, was the best predictor of leadership: birds with bigger ornaments exerted greater influence in the foraging groups and were followed by more group-mates than less elaborate individuals. An individuals tendency for eliciting followings was not influenced by sex, condition or the level of parental investment. None of the above individual characteristics had significant effect on the tendency of individuals to follow others. Our results indicate that a sexually selected trait can also play a significant role in group coordination and social organization of a species.


Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology | 2009

Kinship and aggression: do house sparrows spare their relatives?

Zoltán Tóth; Veronika Bókony; Ádám Z. Lendvai; Krisztián Szabó; Zsolt Pénzes; András Liker

Kin-selection theory predicts that relatedness may reduce the level of aggression among competing group members, leading to indirect fitness benefits for kin-favoring individuals. To test this hypothesis, we investigated whether relatedness affects aggressive behavior during social activities in captive house sparrow (Passer domesticus) flocks. We found that sparrows did not reduce their aggression towards kin, as neither the frequency nor the intensity of fights differed between close kin and unrelated flock-mates. Fighting success was also unrelated to kinship and the presence of relatives in the flock did not influence the birds’ dominance rank. These results suggest that the pay-offs of reduced aggression towards kin may be low in non-breeding flocks of sparrows, e.g. due to competition among relatives as predicted by a recent refinement of kin-selection theory. Our findings indicate that the significance of kin selection may be restricted in some social systems such as winter aggregations of birds.


Journal of Chemical Ecology | 2016

Variation in Chemical Defense Among Natural Populations of Common Toad, Bufo bufo, Tadpoles: the Role of Environmental Factors

Veronika Bókony; Ágnes M. Móricz; Zsófia Tóth; Zoltán Gál; Anikó Kurali; Zsanett Mikó; Katalin Pásztor; Márk Szederkényi; Zoltán Tóth; János Ujszegi; Bálint Üveges; Dániel Krüzselyi; Robert J. Capon; Herbert Hoi; Attila Hettyey

Defensive toxins are widespread in nature, yet we know little about how various environmental factors shape the evolution of chemical defense, especially in vertebrates. In this study we investigated the natural variation in the amount and composition of bufadienolide toxins, and the relative importance of ecological factors in predicting that variation, in larvae of the common toad, Bufo bufo, an amphibian that produces toxins de novo. We found that tadpoles’ toxin content varied markedly among populations, and the number of compounds per tadpole also differed between two geographical regions. The most consistent predictor of toxicity was the strength of competition, indicating that tadpoles produced more compounds and larger amounts of toxins when coexisting with more competitors. Additionally, tadpoles tended to contain larger concentrations of bufadienolides in ponds that were less prone to desiccation, suggesting that the costs of toxin production can only be afforded by tadpoles that do not need to drastically speed up their development. Interestingly, this trade-off was not alleviated by higher food abundance, as periphyton biomass had negligible effect on chemical defense. Even more surprisingly, we found no evidence that higher predation risk enhances chemical defenses, suggesting that low predictability of predation risk and high mortality cost of low toxicity might select for constitutive expression of chemical defense irrespective of the actual level of predation risk. Our findings highlight that the variation in chemical defense may be influenced by environmental heterogeneity in both the need for, and constraints on, toxicity as predicted by optimal defense theory.


Oikos | 2014

Inducible chemical defences in animals

Attila Hettyey; Zoltán Tóth; Josh Van Buskirk

Phenotypic plasticity is extremely widespread in the behaviour, morphology and life-history of animals. However, inducible changes in the production of defensive chemicals are described mostly in plants and surprisingly little is known about similar plasticity in chemical defences of animals. Inducible chemical defences may be common in animals because many are known to produce toxins, the synthesis of toxins is likely to be costly, and there are a few known cases of animals adjusting their toxin production to changes in environmental conditions. We outline what is known about the occurrence of inducible chemical defences in animals and argue that there is immense potential for progress in this field. Possible directions include surveying diverse taxa to explore how general its occurrence may be and testing for selection acting on inducible chemical defences. Data on inducible chemical defences would provide insight into life-history tradeoffs by enabling novel tests of how time-costs and resource-costs affect life-history. If the synthesis of toxic compounds by animals proves accessible to manipulation, as it is in plants and fungi, this will open the way to refined estimates of the fitness costs of defence, ultimately providing a clearer picture of how plasticity evolves and is maintained in nature.


Archives of Agronomy and Soil Science | 2014

Humus und Klimaänderung - Ergebnisse aus 15 langjährigen Dauerfeldversuchen

Martin Körschens; Erhard Albert; Michael Baumecker; Frank Ellmer; Michael Grunert; Sándor Hoffmann; Tamás Kismányoky; Jaromir Kubat; Eva Kunzova; Marc Marx; Jutta Rogasik; Jörg Rinklebe; Jörg Rühlmann; Carsten Schilli; Hubert Schröter; Susanne Schroetter; Kathlin Schweizer; Zoltán Tóth; Jörg Zimmer; Wilfried Zorn

Zusammenfassung Die Quantifizierung des Einflusses von Klimaänderungen auf den Humusgehalt des Bodens ist von großer wirtschaftlicher und wissenschaftlicher Bedeutung. Eine Möglichkeit dieser Quantifizierung besteht in der Auswertung von Dauerfeldversuchen mit der kontinuierlichen Bestimmung des Kohlenstoff- und Stickstoffgehaltes von Böden über einen Zeitraum von mehreren Jahrzehnten unter Wahrung des Ceteris-Paribus-Prinzips. Für die vorliegende Arbeit wurden die Ergebnisse von insgesamt 15 Dauerfeldversuchen an zehn verschiedenen Standorten mit rund 150 unterschiedlichen Düngungsvarianten ausgewertet. Die Versuchsdauer lag mit einer Ausnahme zwischen 40 und 110 Jahren. Die Corg-Daten konnten nahezu lückenlos über einen Zeitraum von jeweils 20 Jahren einbezogen werden. Die Nt-Gehalte wurden in sechs Versuchen berücksichtigt. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass bei allen Prüfgliedern mit kombinierter organisch-mineralischer Düngung in der Größenordnung, wie sie der “guten fachlichen Praxis“ oder auch der Humusbilanzmethode entspricht, keine Verringerung der Corg-Gehalte eingetreten ist. In einigen Fällen waren signifikante Erhöhungen zu verzeichnen. In 11 von 15 Versuchen war auch ohne Düngung oder mit ausschließlicher Mineraldüngung keine Reduzierung und somit keine klimabedingte Verringerung der Humusgehalte im Untersuchungszeitraum nachweisbar. Stattdessen wurde in einigen Fällen eine signifikante Erhöhung gefunden. Auch bei den Nt-Gehalten war in keinem Fall eine signifikante Verringerung festzustellen. Umfangreiche Großzahlanalysen und Dauerfeldversuchsauswertungen anderer Autoren bestätigen uneingeschränkt die Ergebnisse.


Archives of Agronomy and Soil Science | 2013

Effect of mineral and organic fertilization on soil organic carbon content as well as on grain production of cereals in the IOSDV (ILTE) long-term field experiment, Keszthely, Hungary

Tamás Kismányoky; Zoltán Tóth

The study was conducted in the international mineral and organic nitrogen fertilization trial (IOSDV) located in Keszthely in the western part of Hungary. The soil class of the study site was Ramann-type brown forest soil (Eutric Cambisol). The factors of the experiment are the increasing rate of mineral N fertilization and the complementary application of different forms of organic fertilizers in a three-course crop rotation (maize, winter wheat and winter barley) set up in 1983. The organic carbon content of the soil (Corg%) definitely increased after application of organic manure (OM), similarly to the average yield of the cultivated crops. After application of OM the increase in Corg content was 0.20%, and after straw + complementary N application it was 0.12%, compared with plots without organic manures. Mineral N fertilizer did not significantly influence the Corg content in soil over this period. Depending on the type of crop, the specific year and the N content of the soil, the combined application of mineral fertilizers and organic manures resulted in a 12–17% increase in crop yield, in general, whereas at maximum yields the increase accounted for 5–10%.

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Attila Hettyey

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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András Micsik

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Ildikó Farkas

Szent István University

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László Kovács

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Tamás Szirányi

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Sándor Turbucz

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Veronika Bókony

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Herbert Hoi

University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

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