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The Natural Biotic Environment of Caenorhabditis elegans .

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TLDR
An overview of the currently available information on the natural environment of Caenorhabditis elegans focuses on the biotic environment, which is usually less predictable and thus can create high selective constraints that are likely to have had a strong impact on C. elegans evolution.
Abstract
Organisms evolve in response to their natural environment. Consideration of natural ecological parameters are thus of key importance for our understanding of an organism’s biology. Curiously, the natural ecology of the model species Caenorhabditis elegans has long been neglected, even though this nematode has become one of the most intensively studied models in biological research. This lack of interest changed ∼10 yr ago. Since then, an increasing number of studies have focused on the nematode’s natural ecology. Yet many unknowns still remain. Here, we provide an overview of the currently available information on the natural environment of C. elegans. We focus on the biotic environment, which is usually less predictable and thus can create high selective constraints that are likely to have had a strong impact on C. elegans evolution. This nematode is particularly abundant in microbe-rich environments, especially rotting plant matter such as decomposing fruits and stems. In this environment, it is part of a complex interaction network, which is particularly shaped by a species-rich microbial community. These microbes can be food, part of a beneficial gut microbiome, parasites and pathogens, and possibly competitors. C. elegans is additionally confronted with predators; it interacts with vector organisms that facilitate dispersal to new habitats, and also with competitors for similar food environments, including competitors from congeneric and also the same species. Full appreciation of this nematode’s biology warrants further exploration of its natural environment and subsequent integration of this information into the well-established laboratory-based research approaches.

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Citations
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Piwi/PRG-1 Argonaute and TGF-β Mediate Transgenerational Learned Pathogenic Avoidance.

TL;DR: It is discovered that, after C. elegans have learned to avoid the pathogenic bacteria Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA14), they pass this learned behavior on to their progeny, through either the male or female germline, persisting through the fourth generation.
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A neurotransmitter produced by gut bacteria modulates host sensory behaviour

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that a neurotransmitter produced by gut bacteria mimics the functions of the cognate host molecule to override host control of a sensory decision, and thereby promotes fitness of both the host and the microorganism.
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Towards an ecology of soil microplastics

TL;DR: It is argued for a more explicitly ecological framing of this novel issue for the soil environment and their potential interactions with soil communities, including microplastic formation via microbial and faunal fragmentation of large plastic debris and organisms such as earthworms placing microplastics particles in unique pedological contexts they could not otherwise reach.
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Magnetosensitive neurons mediate geomagnetic orientation in Caenorhabditis elegans

TL;DR: It is shown that the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans orients to the earth's magnetic field during vertical burrowing migrations, and calcium imaging showed that these neurons respond to magnetic fields even without synaptic input.
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Comparative genomics of 10 new Caenorhabditis species.

TL;DR: This work presents species descriptions for 10 new Caenorhabditis species and presents draft genome sequences for nine of these new species, along with a transcriptome assembly for one, and exploits whole‐genome data to reconstruct the Caenorsedis phylogeny and use this phylogenetic tree to dissect the evolution of morphology in the genus.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Killing of Caenorhabditis elegans by Pseudomonas aeruginosa used to model mammalian bacterial pathogenesis

TL;DR: It is shown that a C. elegans pathogenicity model that is genetically tractable from the perspectives of both host and pathogen can be used to model mammalian bacterial pathogenesis.
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Avermectins, New Family of Potent Anthelmintic Agents: Producing Organism and Fermentation

TL;DR: The avermectins are a complex of chemically related agents which exhibit extraordinarily potent anthelmintic activity and are produced by a novel species of actinomycete, NRRL 8165, which is named Streptomyces avermitilis.
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The evolution of sex-biased genes and sex-biased gene expression.

TL;DR: The characteristics and expression of sex-biased genes, and the selective forces that shape this previously unappreciated source of phenotypic diversity, are discussed.
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