This collection includes most of the ASU Theses and Dissertations from 2011 to present. ASU Theses and Dissertations are available in downloadable PDF format; however, a small percentage of items are under embargo. Information about the dissertations/theses includes degree information, committee members, an abstract, supporting data or media.

In addition to the electronic theses found in the ASU Digital Repository, ASU Theses and Dissertations can be found in the ASU Library Catalog.

Dissertations and Theses granted by Arizona State University are archived and made available through a joint effort of the ASU Graduate College and the ASU Libraries. For more information or questions about this collection contact or visit the Digital Repository ETD Library Guide or contact the ASU Graduate College at gradformat@asu.edu.

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Description
In most diploid cells, autosomal genes are equally expressed from the paternal and maternal alleles resulting in biallelic expression. However, as an exception, there exists a small number of genes that show a pattern of monoallelic or biased-allele expression based on the allele’s parent-of-origin. This phenomenon is termed genomic imprinting

In most diploid cells, autosomal genes are equally expressed from the paternal and maternal alleles resulting in biallelic expression. However, as an exception, there exists a small number of genes that show a pattern of monoallelic or biased-allele expression based on the allele’s parent-of-origin. This phenomenon is termed genomic imprinting and is an evolutionary paradox. The best explanation for imprinting is David Haig's kinship theory, which hypothesizes that monoallelic gene expression is largely the result of evolutionary conflict between males and females over maternal involvement in their offspring. One previous RNAseq study has investigated the presence of parent-of-origin effects, or imprinting, in the parasitic jewel wasp Nasonia vitripennis (N. vitripennis) and its sister species Nasonia giraulti (N. giraulti) to test the predictions of kinship theory in a non-eusocial species for comparison to a eusocial one. In order to continue to tease apart the connection between social and eusocial Hymenoptera, this study proposed a similar RNAseq study that attempted to reproduce these results in unique samples of reciprocal F1 Nasonia hybrids. Building a pseudo N. giraulti reference genome, differences were observed when aligning RNAseq reads to a N. vitripennis reference genome compared to aligning reads to a pseudo N. giraulti reference. As well, no evidence for parent-of-origin or imprinting patterns in adult Nasonia were found. These results demonstrated a species-of-origin effect. Importantly, the study continued to build a repository of support with the aim to elucidate the mechanisms behind imprinting in an excellent epigenetic model species, as it can also help with understanding the phenomenon of imprinting in complex human diseases.
ContributorsUnderwood, Avery Elizabeth (Author) / Wilson, Melissa (Thesis advisor) / Buetow, Kenneth (Committee member) / Gile, Gillian (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
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Description
There is considerable recent interest in the dynamic nature of immune function in the context of an animal’s internal and external environment. An important focus within this field of ecoimmunology is on how availability of resources such as energy can alter immune function. Water is an additional resource that drives

There is considerable recent interest in the dynamic nature of immune function in the context of an animal’s internal and external environment. An important focus within this field of ecoimmunology is on how availability of resources such as energy can alter immune function. Water is an additional resource that drives animal development, physiology, and behavior, yet the influence hydration has on immunity has received limited attention. In particular, hydration state may have the greatest potential to drive fluctuations in immunity and other physiological functions in species that live in water-limited environments where they may experience periods of dehydration. To shed light on the sensitivity of immune function to hydration state, I first tested the effect of hydration states (hydrated, dehydrated, and rehydrated) and digestive states on innate immunity in the Gila monster, a desert-dwelling lizard. Though dehydration is often thought to be stressful and, if experienced chronically, likely to decrease immune function, dehydration elicited an increase in immune response in this species, while digestive state had no effect. Next, I tested whether dehydration was indeed stressful, and tested a broader range of immune measures. My findings validated the enhanced innate immunity across additional measures and revealed that Gila monsters lacked a significant stress hormone response during dehydration (though results were suggestive). I next sought to test if life history (in terms of environmental stability) drives these differences in dehydration responses using a comparative approach. I compared four confamilial pairs of squamate species that varied in habitat type within each pair—four species that are adapted to xeric environments and four that are adapted to more mesic environments. No effect of life history was detected between groups, but hydration was a driver of some measures of innate immunity and of stress hormone concentrations in multiple species. Additionally, species that exhibited a stress response to dehydration did not have decreased innate immunity, suggesting these physiological responses may often be decoupled. My dissertation work provides new insight into the relationship between hydration, stress, and immunity, and it may inform future work exploring disease transmission or organismal responses to climate change.
ContributorsMoeller, Karla T (Author) / DeNardo, Dale (Thesis advisor) / Angilletta, Michael (Committee member) / French, Susannah (Committee member) / Rutowski, Ronald (Committee member) / Sabo, John (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016
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Description
Desert environments provide considerable challenges to organisms because of high temperatures and limited food and water resources. Accordingly, desert species have behavioral and physiological traits that enable them to cope with these constraints. However, continuing human activity as well as anticipated further changes to the climate and the

Desert environments provide considerable challenges to organisms because of high temperatures and limited food and water resources. Accordingly, desert species have behavioral and physiological traits that enable them to cope with these constraints. However, continuing human activity as well as anticipated further changes to the climate and the vegetative community pose a great challenge to such balance between an organism and its environment. This is especially true in the Arabian Desert, where climate conditions are extreme and environmental disturbances substantial. This study combined laboratory and field components to enhance our understanding of dhub (Uromastyx aegyptius) ecophysiology and determine whether habitat protection influences dhub behavior and physiology.

Results of this study showed that while body mass and body condition consistently diminished as the active season progressed, they were both greater in protected habitats compared to non-protected habitats, regardless of season. Dhubs surface activity and total body water decreased while evaporative water loss and body temperature increased as the active season progressed and ambient temperature got hotter. Total body water was also significantly affected by habitat protection.

Overall, this study revealed that, while habitat protection provided more vegetation, it had little effect on seasonal changes in surface activity. While resource availability in protected areas might allow for larger dhub populations, unprotected areas showed similar body morphometrics, activity, and body temperatures. By developing an understanding of how different coping strategies are linked to particular ecological, morphological, and phylogenetic traits, we will be able to make more accurate predictions regarding the vulnerability of species. By combining previous studies pertaining to conservation of protected species with the results of my study, a number of steps in ecosystem management are recommended to help in the preservation of dhubs in the Kuwaiti desert.
ContributorsAl-Sayegh, Mohammed (Author) / DeNardo, Dale (Thesis advisor) / Angilletta, Michael (Committee member) / Smith, Andrew (Committee member) / Sabo, John (Committee member) / Majeed, Qais (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
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Description
The migratory grasshopper (Melanoplus sanguinipes) is one of the most economically important grasshoppers in the western rangelands of the United States (US), capable of causing incredible amounts of damage to crops and rangelands. While M. sanguinipes has been the focus of many research studies, areas like field nutritional physiology and

The migratory grasshopper (Melanoplus sanguinipes) is one of the most economically important grasshoppers in the western rangelands of the United States (US), capable of causing incredible amounts of damage to crops and rangelands. While M. sanguinipes has been the focus of many research studies, areas like field nutritional physiology and ecology, and interactions between nutritional physiology and biopesticide resistance have very little research. This dissertation presents a multifaceted approach through three research-driven chapters that examine the nutritional physiology of M. sanguinipes and how it interacts with an entomopathogenic fungus for grasshopper management, as well as the challenges of using biopesticides for grasshopper management. Using the Geometric Framework for Nutrition (GFN), I established baseline macronutrient intake for M. sanguinipes, both in laboratory and field populations. Through this work, I found that field and lab populations can exhibit different protein (p) to carbohydrate (c) ratios, or Intake Targets (ITs), but that the field populations had ITs that matched the nutrients available in their environment. I also used the GFN to show that infections with the fungal entomopathogen Metarhizium robertsii DWR2009 did not alter ITs in M. sanguinipes. Although, when confined to carbohydrate- or protein-biased diets, infected grasshoppers had a slightly extended lifespan relative to grasshoppers fed balanced protein:carbohydrate diets. Interestingly, in a postmortem for the grasshopper, the fungus was only able to effectively sporulate on grasshoppers fed the 1p:1c diets, suggesting that grasshopper diet can have substantial impacts on the spread of fungal biopesticides throughout a population, in the absence of any inhibitory abiotic factors. Lastly, I examined the major barriers to fungal and microsporidian biopesticide usage in the United States, including low efficacy, thermal and environmental sensitivity, non-target effects, unregistered or restricted use, and economic or accessibility barriers. I also explored potential solutions to these challenges. This dissertation's focus on Melanoplus sanguinipes and Metarhizium roberstii Strain DWR2009, generates new information about how nutritional physiology and immunology intersect to impact M. sanguinipes performance. The methodology in each of the experimental chapters provides a framework for examining other problematic grasshopper species, by determining baseline nutritional physiology, and coupling nutrition with immunology to maximize the effectiveness of biological pesticides.
ContributorsZembrzuski, Deanna (Author) / Cease, Arianne (Thesis advisor) / Harrison, Jon (Committee member) / Angilletta, Michael (Committee member) / Jaronski, Stefan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
The intracellular motility seen in the cytoplasm of angiosperm plant pollen tubes is known as reverse fountain cytoplasmic streaming (i.e., cyclosis). This effect occurs when organelles move anterograde along the cortex of the cell and retrograde down the center of the cell. The result is a displacement of cytoplasmic volume

The intracellular motility seen in the cytoplasm of angiosperm plant pollen tubes is known as reverse fountain cytoplasmic streaming (i.e., cyclosis). This effect occurs when organelles move anterograde along the cortex of the cell and retrograde down the center of the cell. The result is a displacement of cytoplasmic volume causing a cyclic motion of organelles and bulk liquid. Visually, the organelles appear to be traveling in a backwards fountain hence the name. The use of light microscopy bioimaging in this study has documented reverse fountain cytoplasmic streaming for the first time in fungal hyphae of Rhizopus oryzae and other members in the order Mucorales (Mucoromycota). This is a unique characteristic of the mucoralean fungi, with other fungal phyla (e.g., Ascomycota, Basidiomycota) exhibiting unidirectional cytoplasmic behavior that lacks rhythmic streaming (i.e., sleeve-like streaming). The mechanism of reverse fountain cytoplasmic streaming in filamentous fungi is currently unknown. However, in angiosperm plant pollen tubes it’s correlated with the arrangement and activity of the actin cytoskeleton. Thus, the current work assumes that filamentous actin and associated proteins are directly involved with the cytoplasmic behavior in Mucorales hyphae. From an evolutionary perspective, fungi in the Mucorales may have developed reverse fountain cytoplasmic streaming as a method to transport various organelles over long and short distances. In addition, the mechanism is likely to facilitate driving of polarized hyphal growth.
ContributorsShange, Phakade Mdima (Author) / Roberson, Robert W. (Thesis advisor) / Gile, Gillian (Committee member) / Baluch, Debra (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020
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Description
Parabasalia is a phylum of flagellated protists with a large range of cell sizes, spanning from as little as 7 µm in length (e.g. Pentatrichomonas hominis) to well over 300 µm (e.g. Pseudotrichonympha grassii). Many Parabasalia are associated with animals in mutualistic, parasitic, or commensal relationships. The largest

Parabasalia is a phylum of flagellated protists with a large range of cell sizes, spanning from as little as 7 µm in length (e.g. Pentatrichomonas hominis) to well over 300 µm (e.g. Pseudotrichonympha grassii). Many Parabasalia are associated with animals in mutualistic, parasitic, or commensal relationships. The largest Parabasalia species are obligate mutualists of termites, which help to digest lignocellulose. While the specific digestive roles of different protist species are mostly unknown, Parabasalia with different cell sizes are known to inhabit different regions of the termite hindgut. It is currently unclear whether these size differences are driven by selection or drift, but it is well known that cell size correlates with genome size in eukaryotes. Therefore, in order to gain insight into possible selection pressures or mechanisms for cell size increase, genome sizes were estimated for the five Parabasalia species that inhabit the hindgut of Coptotermes formosanus Shiraki. The cell volumes and C-values for the five protist species are 89,190 µm3 and 147 pg in Pseudotrichonympha grassii, 26,679 µm3 and 56 pg in Holomastigotoides hartmanni, 8,985 µm3 and 29 pg in Holomastigotoides minor, 1,996 µm3 and 12 pg in Cononympha leidyi , and 386 µm3 and 6 pg in Cononympha koidzumii. The positive correlation between genome size and cell size was maintained in this group (R2 = 0.76). These genome sizes are much larger than the previously estimated genome sizes of non-termite associated Parabasalia, which spanned 2-fold ranging from 0.088 pg (in Tetratrichomonas gallinarum) to 0.181 pg (in Trichomonas foetus). With these new estimates, the range now spans over 1,500-fold from 0.088 pg to 147 pg in P. grassii, implying potential differences in the level of selective pressures for genome size in termite-associated Parabasalia compared to other protists.
ContributorsMontoya, Samantha (Author) / Gile, Gillian (Thesis advisor) / Wideman, Jeremy (Committee member) / Chouvenc, Thomas (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
Predatory bacteria are a guild of heterotrophs that feed directly on other living bacteria. They belong to several bacterial lineages that evolved this mode of life independently and occur in many microbiomes and environments. Current knowledge of predatory bacteria is based on culture studies and simple detection in natural systems.

Predatory bacteria are a guild of heterotrophs that feed directly on other living bacteria. They belong to several bacterial lineages that evolved this mode of life independently and occur in many microbiomes and environments. Current knowledge of predatory bacteria is based on culture studies and simple detection in natural systems. The ecological consequences of their activity, unlike those of other populational loss factors like viral infection or grazing by protists, are yet to be assessed. During large-scale cultivation of biological soil crusts intended for arid soil rehabilitation, episodes of catastrophic failure were observed in cyanobacterial growth that could be ascribed to the action of an unknown predatory bacterium using bioassays. This predatory bacterium was also present in natural biocrust communities, where it formed clearings (plaques) up to 9 cm in diameter that were visible to the naked eye. Enrichment cultivation and purification by cell-sorting were used to obtain co-cultures of the predator with its cyanobacterial prey, as well as to identify and characterize it genomically, physiologically and ultrastructurally. A Bacteroidetes bacterium, unrelated to any known isolate at the family level, it is endobiotic, non-motile, obligately predatory, displays a complex life cycle and very unusual ultrastructure. Extracellular propagules are small (0.8-1.0 µm) Gram-negative cocci with internal two-membrane-bound compartmentalization. These gain entry to the prey likely using a suite of hydrolytic enzymes, localizing to the cyanobacterial cytoplasm, where growth begins into non-compartmentalized pseudofilaments that undergo secretion of vesicles and simultaneous multiple division to yield new propagules. I formally describe it as Candidatus Cyanoraptor togatus, hereafter Cyanoraptor. Its prey range is restricted to biocrust-forming, filamentous, non-heterocystous, gliding, bundle-making cyanobacteria. Molecular meta-analyses showed its worldwide distribution in biocrusts. Biogeochemical analyses of Cyanoraptor plaques revealed that it causes a complete loss of primary productivity, and significant decreases in other biocrusts properties such as water-retention and dust-trapping capacity. Extensive field surveys in the US Southwest revealed its ubiquity and its dispersal-limited, aggregated spatial distribution and incidence. Overall, its activity reduces biocrust productivity by 10% at the ecosystem scale. My research points to predatory bacteria as a significant, but overlooked, ecological force in shaping soil microbiomes.
ContributorsBethany Rakes, Julie Ann (Author) / Garcia-Pichel, Ferran (Thesis advisor) / Gile, Gillian (Committee member) / Cao, Huansheng (Committee member) / Jacobs, Bertram (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Ectotherms rely on external heat to attain target body temperatures which can vary based on the animal’s current physiological activity. Many ectotherms become thermophilic (“heat-loving”) during crucial physiological processes like digestion and reproduction, behaviorally thermoregulating to increase body temperature higher than what they otherwise prefer. However, there is a positive

Ectotherms rely on external heat to attain target body temperatures which can vary based on the animal’s current physiological activity. Many ectotherms become thermophilic (“heat-loving”) during crucial physiological processes like digestion and reproduction, behaviorally thermoregulating to increase body temperature higher than what they otherwise prefer. However, there is a positive relationship between body temperature and water loss that dictates increasing body temperature typically elicits an increase in water loss. Animals that inhabit areas where water is at least seasonally limited (e.g., deserts, wet-dry forests) may face a tradeoff between prioritizing behavioral thermophily to optimize physiological processes versus prioritizing water balance and potentially sacrificing some aspect of total performance capability.It is thus far unknown how reduced water availability and subsequent dehydration may influence thermophily in ectotherms. I hypothesized that behaviorally thermoregulating ectotherms exhibit thermophily during critical physiological events, and the extent to which thermophily is expressed is influenced by the animal’s hydric state. Using Children’s pythons (Antaresia childreni), I investigated the effects of dehydration on behavioral thermophily during digestion and reproduction. I found that dehydration caused a suppression in digestion-associated thermophily, where dehydrated snakes returned to pre-feeding body temperature sooner than they did when they were hydrated. In contrast, water deprivation at different reproductive stages had no effect on thermophily despite leading to a significant increase in the female’s plasma osmolality. ii Additionally, the timing of water deprivation during reproduction had differing effects on plasma osmolality and circulating triglyceride, total protein, and corticosterone concentrations. My research provides evidence of the sensitive and complex dynamic between body temperature, water balance, and physiological processes. At a time when many dry ecosystems are becoming hotter and drier, my investigation of dehydration and its influence on thermal dynamics and physiological metrics provides insight into cryptic effects on the vital processes of digestion and reproduction.
ContributorsAzzolini, Jill L. (Author) / Denardo, Dale F. (Thesis advisor) / John-Alder, Henry (Committee member) / Angilletta, Michael (Committee member) / Pratt, Stephen (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
To combat the global antimalarial resistance crisis effective resistance management strategies are needed. To do so, I need to gain a better understanding of the ecological interactions occurring within malaria infections. Despite the importance of the complex interplay among co-infecting strains, our current knowledge and empirical data of within-host diversity

To combat the global antimalarial resistance crisis effective resistance management strategies are needed. To do so, I need to gain a better understanding of the ecological interactions occurring within malaria infections. Despite the importance of the complex interplay among co-infecting strains, our current knowledge and empirical data of within-host diversity and malaria disease dynamics is limited. In this thesis, I explore the multifaceted dynamics of malaria infections through an ecological lens. My overall research question is: "How do ecological interactions, including niche complementarity, competition dynamics, and the cost of resistance, shape the outcomes of malaria infections, and what implications does this have on understanding and improving resistance management strategies?” In Chapter II, titled “Niche Complementarity in Malaria Infections” I demonstrate that ecological principles are observed in malarial infections by experimentally manipulating the biodiversity of rodent malaria P. chabaudi infections. I observed that some parasites experienced competitive suppression, others experienced competitive facilitation, while others were not impacted. Next, in Chapter III, titled “Determining the Differential Impact of Competition Between Genetically Distinct Plasmodium falciparum Strains” I investigate the differential effect of competition among six genetically distinct strains. The impact of competition varied between strain combinations, and both suppression and facilitation were observed, but most pairings had no competitive interactions. Lastly, in Chapter IV, titled “Assessing Fitness Costs in Malaria Parasites: A Comprehensive Review and Implications for Drug Resistance Management”, I summarize where the field currently stands and what evidence there is for the presence of a fitness cost, or lack thereof, and I highlight the current gaps in knowledge. I found that evidence from field, in vitro, and animal models are overall suggestive of the presence of a fitness cost, however, these costs were not always found. Amid the current focus on malaria eradication, it is crucial to understand the impact of biodiversity on disease severity. By incorporating an ecological approach to infectious disease systems, I can gain insights on within-host interactions and how they impact parasite fitness and transmissibility.
ContributorsSegovia, Xyonane (Author) / Huijben, Silvie (Thesis advisor) / Bean, Heather (Committee member) / Gile, Gillian (Committee member) / Hogue, Ian (Committee member) / Lake, Douglas (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2024