ABSTRACT Endothermy and homeothermy are mammalian characteristics whose evolutionary origins are poorly understood. Given that fungal species rapidly lose their capacity for growth above ambient temperatures, we have proposed that mammalian endothermy enhances fitness by creating exclusionary thermal zones that protect against fungal disease. According to this view, the relative paucity of invasive fungal diseases in immunologically intact mammals relative to other infectious diseases would reflect an inability of most fungal species to establish themselves in a mammalian host. In this study, that hypothesis was tested by modeling the fitness increase with temperature versus its metabolic costs. We analyzed the tradeoff involved between the...
Access restricted to the OSU CommunityMice under standard laboratory conditions are generally housed...
According to the “aerobic capacity model,” endothermy in birds and mammals evolved as a result of na...
According to the “aerobic capacity model,” endothermy in birds and mammals evolved as a result of na...
The paucity of fungal diseases in mammals relative to insects, amphibians, and plants is puzzling. W...
The paucity of fungal diseases in mammals relative to insects, amphibians, and plants is puzzling. W...
ABSTRACT Fungi are major pathogens of plants, other fungi, rotifers, insects, and amphibians, but re...
The origin of endothermy is a puzzling phenomenon in the evolution of vertebrates. To address this i...
<div><p>The origin of endothermy is a puzzling phenomenon in the evolution of vertebrates. To addres...
Here are two indisputable facts: we are living in the age of mammals [1], and immunologically intact...
The environment of animals is inhabited by enormous fungal species, but only a few hundreds are path...
One of the most significant evolutionary advancements in vertebrates is the evolution of homeothermi...
Metabolic rate is a key ecophysiological factor determining fitness, distribution, survival and repr...
Various conceptual or qualitative models have been proposed to explain the evolution of homeothermic...
Objectives: The laboratory mouse is presently the most common model for examining mechanisms of huma...
Climate change is predicted to cause shifts in average temperature and increase extreme heat events....
Access restricted to the OSU CommunityMice under standard laboratory conditions are generally housed...
According to the “aerobic capacity model,” endothermy in birds and mammals evolved as a result of na...
According to the “aerobic capacity model,” endothermy in birds and mammals evolved as a result of na...
The paucity of fungal diseases in mammals relative to insects, amphibians, and plants is puzzling. W...
The paucity of fungal diseases in mammals relative to insects, amphibians, and plants is puzzling. W...
ABSTRACT Fungi are major pathogens of plants, other fungi, rotifers, insects, and amphibians, but re...
The origin of endothermy is a puzzling phenomenon in the evolution of vertebrates. To address this i...
<div><p>The origin of endothermy is a puzzling phenomenon in the evolution of vertebrates. To addres...
Here are two indisputable facts: we are living in the age of mammals [1], and immunologically intact...
The environment of animals is inhabited by enormous fungal species, but only a few hundreds are path...
One of the most significant evolutionary advancements in vertebrates is the evolution of homeothermi...
Metabolic rate is a key ecophysiological factor determining fitness, distribution, survival and repr...
Various conceptual or qualitative models have been proposed to explain the evolution of homeothermic...
Objectives: The laboratory mouse is presently the most common model for examining mechanisms of huma...
Climate change is predicted to cause shifts in average temperature and increase extreme heat events....
Access restricted to the OSU CommunityMice under standard laboratory conditions are generally housed...
According to the “aerobic capacity model,” endothermy in birds and mammals evolved as a result of na...
According to the “aerobic capacity model,” endothermy in birds and mammals evolved as a result of na...