Stress, Adaptation, and Evolution - C03. Plant-Insect Interactions - C15. Senescence and Evolution - C16. The Species Problem - C18. Evolution of Sociality - C22. General Questions of Evolutions - G. Behavioural Ecology - BE. Development - D. Mathematical Modelling - M. Molecular Evolution and Phylogeny - ME. Genetic Variation and Fittness - V. Sex and Evolution - S. Taxonomy and Phylogeny - T. 8:00-8:30; C03.1. Artov AM ADAPTATION REACTIONS OF LUNG SURFACTANT SYSTEM 8:30-9:00; C03.2. Barsiene J Barsyte D POLYPLOIDY OF MOLLUSCS FROM ECOLOGICALLY STRESSFUL HABITATS 9:00-9:30; C03.3. M ty s CS CLIMATIC ADAPTATION IN TREES: LOW EFFECTIVITY OF NATURAL SELECTION IN LONG-LIVED ORGANISMS 9:30-10:00; C03.4. Rudenko A CELL REACTIVITY IN STRESS CONDITIONS: EVOLUTIONARY APPROACH 10:00-10:30; Coffee break 10:30-11:00; C03.5. Voron VP Filatova OV ALTERATIONS IN ANATOMICAL STRUCTURE AND ONTOGENESIS OF PINUS SYLVESTRIS L. UNDER AEROTECHNOGENIC POLLUTION 11:00-11:30; C03.6. Michailova P Petrova N CHROMOSOMAL ABERRATIONS IN IRRADIATED NATURAL POPULATION (CHERNOBYL) CHIRONOMUS BALATONICUS 8:00-8:30; C15.1. Gol'din EB Gol'dina VG TERPENE COMPOUNDS IN "INSECTPLANT" SYSTEM AS A BACKGROUND FOR BIOLOGICAL PEST CONTROL 8:30-9:00; C15.2. Honkanen T FUNCTIONAL CONSTRAINTS IN THE EVOLUTION OF PLANT DEFENSES 9:00-9:30; C15.3. Eber S Brandl R ENDOPHAGOUS INSECTS AND STRUCTURAL NICHES OF PLANTS: EVOLUTONARY CONSEQUENCES 10:30-11:00; C16.1. Ovsyannikov L LIFE-SPAN AS ATTRIBUTE OPTIMISED DURING EVOLUTION 11:00-11:30; C16.2. Pite R Matos M Rose MR Avelar T EVOLUTION OF SENESCENCE: DO GENETIC CORRELATIONS. CHANGE AS A POPULATION ADAPTS TO A NOVEL ENVIRONMENT 11:30-12:00; C16.3. Van der Gaag M PLASMIDS INVOLVED IN SENESCENCE AND LONGEVITY 14:30-15:00; C18.1. Pylkov KV Zhivotovsky LA Christiansen FB ON MODELS OF GENETIC ISOLATION BETWEEN POPULATIONS 15:00-15:30; C18.2. Sepp S SOME CONSIDERATIONS OF SPECIES PROBLEM IN ALCHEMILLA 15:30-16:00; C18.3. Snorrason SS SYMPATRIC MORPHS, POPULATIONS AND SPECIATION IN FRESHWATER FISH WITH EMPHASIS ON ARCTIC CHARR 17:30-18:00; C22.2. Reznikova ZH THE REVERSE SIDE OF MUTUALISM IN ANT COMMUNITIES: INTERSPECIES SOCIAL CONTROL 18:00-18:30; C22.3. Witting L EVOLUTION OF EUSOCIAL INSECTS 8:00-8:30; G.1.Ausderau CHR A PROCESS ONTOLOGICAL APPROACH TO INDIVIDUALITY 8:30-9:00; G. 2. Witting L FROM HISTORICAL TO DETERMINISTIC EVOLUTION 9:00-9:30; G.3. Schwefel HP NATURAL AND ARTIFICIAL EVOLUTIONARY PROCESSES: ON SOME MISUNDERSTANDINGS AND OPEN QUESTIONS 15:45-16:15; BE.1. Beye M Neumann P Moritz RFA NESTMATE RECOGNITION AND GENETICAL 16:15-16:45; BE.2. Ferguson JWH COEVOLUTION OF THE SIGNAL-RESPONSE INTERACITON IN FIELD CRICKET COMMUNICATION 16:45-17:15; BE.3. Kosina R PARENTAL DOMINANCE IN SOME TRITICEAE AMPHIPLOID 17:15-17:45; BE.4. Painter J THE ROLE OF KIN SELECTION IN THE EVOLUTION AND MAINTENANCE OF HELPING BEHAVIOUR IN THE BELL MINER MANORINA MELANOPHRYS 17:45-18:15; Coffee break 18:15-18:45; BE.5. Gordeev MI Perevozkin VP Lukjantsev SV ADAPTIVE STRATEGIES AND GENETIC CONSEQUENCES OF WATER SPIDERS' HUNTING IN MOSQUITO POPULATIONS 9:40-10:10; D.1. Boletzky SV DEVELOPMENTAL HALTS AND SWITCHES: EVOLUTIONARY LESSONS FROM IDIOSEPIUS (MOLLUSCA: CEPHALOPODA) 10:10-10:30; Coffee break 10:30-11:00; D.2.Pahnke J Mnster T Rosa A Martin W Saedler H Theissen G MADS-BOX GENES OF THE FERN CERATOPTERIS RICHARDII AND THEIR EVOLUTIONARY IMPLICATIONS 11:00-11:30; D.3. Kozhara AV MACROEVOLUTIONARY TRENDS AFFECT INTRASPECIFIC DIVERGENCE IN FISHES 11:30-12:00; D.4. Paulay G CHANCE AND EVOLUTION: MULTIPLE MORPHOLOGICAL SOLUTIONS TO A SINGLE ADAPTIVE PROBLEM IN PHOTOSYMBIOTIC CARDIIDS (MOLLUSCA) 8:00-8:30; M.1.Muehlenbein H WHAT CAN GENETIC ALGORITHMS LEARN FROM QUANTITIVE GENETICS AND VICE VEDRSA? 8:30-9:00; M.2.Nanjundiah V Behera N "UNCOMMITTED" ALLELES AND EVOLUTIONARY CHANGE 9:00-9:30; M.4. Cichon M AGEING AS A CONSEQUENCE OF OPTIMAL RESOURCE ALLOCATION 9:30-10:00; M.5. Johst K Brandl R EVOLUTION OF DISPERSAL: THE IMPACT OF THE TEMPORAL ORDER OF DISPERSAL AND REPRODUCTION WITHIN THE LIFE CYCLE INTERSPECIFIC DISTRIBUTIONS OF BODY SIZES 10:00-10:30; Coffee break 10:30-11:00; M.6.Kawata M THE ROLE OF DISPERSAL IN GROUP SELECTION 11:00-11:30; M.7. Majewski JA Cohan FM THE EFFECT OF "GLOBAL" PERIODIC SELECTION EVENTS ON EVOLUTIONARY DIVERGENCE IN PROKARYTES 11:30-12:00; M.8. McCallum HI MODELS OF HOST-PATHOGEN COEVOLUTION IN CONTINUOUS TIME 12:00-14:30; Plenary lecture, Lunch 14:30-15:00; M.9. Mylius SD Diekmann O ON EVOLUTIONARILY STABLE LIFE HISTORIES, OPTIMIZATION AND THE NEED TO BE SPECIFIC ABOUT DENSITY DEPENDENCE 15:00-15:30; M.10. Seaborg DM Pearlmutter H A COMPUTER SIMULATION SHOWING EVOLUTION IS FASTER IN LARGE POPULATIONS 15:30-16:00; M.11. Sella G Lachmann M THE MAINTENANCE OF COOPERATION IN A SPATIALLY EXPLICIT PRISONERS' DILEMMA MODEL 16:00-16:30; M.12. Van Dooren TJM Metz JAJ DELAYED MATURATION IN TEMPORALLY STRUCTURED POPULATIONS WITH NON-EQUILIBRIUM DYNAMICS 21.08. -- 15:45-19:15 15:45-16;15; ME.1. Antonov A Goremykin V Pahnke J LAND PLANT PHYLOGENY DEDUCED FROM CHLOROPLAST rDNA COMPARISONS 16:15-16:45; ME.2. Beerli P MAXIMUM LIKELIHOOD ESTIMATION OF EFFECTIVE POPULATION SIZE AND MIGRATION RATES 16:45-17:15; ME.3. Carranza S Giribet G Ribera C Baguna J Riutort M ARE THE PLATYHELMINTHES A MONOPHYLETIC PRIMITIVE GROUP? AN ASSESMENT USING 18S rDNA SEQUENCES 17:15-17:45; ME.4. Randi E Mucci N Pierpaoli M Lucchini V MOLECULAR EVOLUTION OF MTDNA CYTOCHROME B GENE IN UNGULATE MAMMALS 17:45-18:15; Coffee break 18:15-18:45; ME.5. Roelofs D Bachmann K CYTOPLASMIC INTROGRESSION IN THE AUTOGAMOUS ANNUAL MICROSERIS DOUGLASII (ASTERACEAE, LACTUEAE) 18:45-19:15; ME.6. Griffiths CS MOLECULES, MORPHOLOGY AND THE PHYLOGENY OF AN AVIAN FAMILY: THE ADVANTAGES OF PARTITIONING AND DIFFERENTIALLY WEGHTING DATA. 15:45-16:15; V.1. Bronowski AM GROWTH RATE VARIATION IN THAMNOPHIS ELEGANS: SOURCES AND FITNESS CONSEQUENCES 16:15-16:45; V.2. Van de Zande L Kappe AL Bijlsma R Van Delden W DIFFERENT LEVELS OF GENETIC VARIATION AMONG MARINE MAMMALS 16:45-17:15; V.3. Makarieva AM Gorshkov VG ACCUMULATION OF MUTATIONS IN SOMATIC CELLS, HETEROZYGOSITY AND BODY MASS IN MAMMALS: PECULIAR CORRELATION 8:00-8:25; S1. Bundgaard J Barker JSF EVOLUTION OF MATING PATTERNS IN DROSOPHILA: REMATING, SPERM TRANSFER, AND STERILE MATINGS IN DROSOPHILA BUZZATII 8:25-8:50; S2. Gade B DO PARTHENOGENS HAVE GENERAL-PURPOSE GENOTYPES? DESICCATION TOLERANCE IN PYCNOSCELUS SURINAMES AND P.INDICUS 8:50-9:15; S3. Gerace L Ramachandran S Pavlovic N Beukeboom LW Michiels NK GENETIC VARIATION IN SEXUAL AND PARTHENOLGENETIC FLATWORMS (DUGESIA POLYCHROA) DETECTED BY MICROSATELLITE ANALYSIS 9:15-9:40; S4. Korpelainen H LABILE SEX EXPRESSION IN PLANTS 9:40-10:10; Coffee break 10:10-10:35; S5. Prati D MAINTENACE OF GENETIC VARIATION IN HETEROGENEOUS ENVIRONMENT IN THE CLONAL PLANT RANUNCULUS REPTANS 10:35-11:00; S6. Tas ICQ Van Dijk PJ HYBRIDISATION BETWEEN SEXUAL AND ASEXUAL DANDELIONS: GENERATION OF NEW CLONES 11:05-11:25; S7. Weinzierl RP Storhas MG Berthold K Beukeboom LW Michiels NK THE MAINTAINANCE OF SEX IN A HERMAPHRODITE 11:25-11:50; S8. Zeitlinger J Michiels NK PARTHENOGENS HAVE HIGHER PARASITE LOADS THAN THEIR COEXISTING, SEXUAL CONSPECIFICS IN A PLANARIAN FLATWORM 14:30-15:00; T. 1. Kirsch JAW ARE MICROCHIROPTERA PARAPHYLETIC? AT-BIAS AND THE RELATIONSHIPS OF PTEROPODID AND RHINOLOPHOID BATS 15:00-15:30; T. 2. Kuta E Przywara L POLYPLOIDY IN MOSS EVOLUTION 15:30-16:00; T. 3. Minaka N RECONSTRUCTING ANCESTORS IN A CLADOGRAM: MATHEMATICAL AND BIOLOGICAL ASPECTS 16:00-16:30; T. 4. Szmidt AE Wang XR MOLECULAR GENETIC APPROACH TO STUDY PLANT BIODIVERSITY EVOLUTION OF LANGUAGE - C.02.BIASED SKULL EXPRESSION OF DIVERGENT GENOMES IN THE EXPERIMENTAL HYBRIDS OF TWO CHILEAN SPECIES OF PHYLLOTIS Reznikova ZH Ryabko B SYMBOLIC LANGUAGE IN ANTS: EXPERIMENTAL STUDY BASED ON IDEAS OF INFORMATION THEORY Spotorno AE DIVERGENCE OF AMERICAN AND AUSTRALIAN MARSUPIALS BY -BAND ANALYSIS AND THE AUSTRALIAN AFFINITIES OF AMERICAN ORAL / O10THE EFFECTS OF HABITAT FRAGMENTATION IN SOUTH AFRICAN BUFFALO POPULATION SATELLITE MEETINGDEVELOPMENT, EVOLUTION, MODELLING AND SIMULATION OF PIGMENT CELL MIGRATION AND PATTERN FORMATION IN AMBYSTOMATID SALAMANDER EMBRYOS AND LARVAE |