TY - JOUR A1 - Grohmann, Johannes A1 - Herbst, Nikolas A1 - Chalbani, Avi A1 - Arian, Yair A1 - Peretz, Noam A1 - Kounev, Samuel T1 - A Taxonomy of Techniques for SLO Failure Prediction in Software Systems JF - Computers N2 - Failure prediction is an important aspect of self-aware computing systems. Therefore, a multitude of different approaches has been proposed in the literature over the past few years. In this work, we propose a taxonomy for organizing works focusing on the prediction of Service Level Objective (SLO) failures. Our taxonomy classifies related work along the dimensions of the prediction target (e.g., anomaly detection, performance prediction, or failure prediction), the time horizon (e.g., detection or prediction, online or offline application), and the applied modeling type (e.g., time series forecasting, machine learning, or queueing theory). The classification is derived based on a systematic mapping of relevant papers in the area. Additionally, we give an overview of different techniques in each sub-group and address remaining challenges in order to guide future research. KW - taxonomy KW - survey KW - failure prediction KW - anomaly prediction KW - anomaly detection KW - self-aware computing KW - self-adaptive systems KW - performance prediction Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-200594 SN - 2073-431X VL - 9 IS - 1 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Walther, Grit A1 - Wagner, Lysett A1 - Kurzai, Oliver T1 - Updates on the taxonomy of Mucorales with an emphasis on clinically important taxa JF - Journal of Fungi N2 - Fungi of the order Mucorales colonize all kinds of wet, organic materials and represent a permanent part of the human environment. They are economically important as fermenting agents of soybean products and producers of enzymes, but also as plant parasites and spoilage organisms. Several taxa cause life-threatening infections, predominantly in patients with impaired immunity. The order Mucorales has now been assigned to the phylum Mucoromycota and is comprised of 261 species in 55 genera. Of these accepted species, 38 have been reported to cause infections in humans, as a clinical entity known as mucormycosis. Due to molecular phylogenetic studies, the taxonomy of the order has changed widely during the last years. Characteristics such as homothallism, the shape of the suspensors, or the formation of sporangiola are shown to be not taxonomically relevant. Several genera including Absidia, Backusella, Circinella, Mucor, and Rhizomucor have been amended and their revisions are summarized in this review. Medically important species that have been affected by recent changes include Lichtheimia corymbifera, Mucor circinelloides, and Rhizopus microsporus. The species concept of Rhizopus arrhizus (syn. R. oryzae) is still a matter of debate. Currently, species identification of the Mucorales is best performed by sequencing of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region. Ecologically, the Mucorales represent a diverse group but for the majority of taxa, the ecological role and the geographic distribution remain unknown. Understanding the biology of these opportunistic fungal pathogens is a prerequisite for the prevention of infections, and, consequently, studies on the ecology of the Mucorales are urgently needed. KW - Mucorales KW - taxonomy KW - pathogens KW - identification KW - ecology KW - Circinella KW - Lichtheimia KW - Mucor KW - Rhizomucor KW - Rhizopus Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-193081 SN - 2309-608X VL - 5 IS - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Deeleman-Reinhold, Christa L. A1 - Miller, Jeremy A1 - Floren, Andreas T1 - Depreissia decipiens, an enigmatic canopy spider from Borneo revisited (Araneae, Salticidae), with remarks on the distribution and diversity of canopy spiders in Sabah, Borneo JF - ZooKeys N2 - Depreissia is a little known genus comprising two hymenopteran-mimicking species, one found in Central Africa and one in the north of Borneo. The male of D. decipiens is redescribed, the female is described for the first time. The carapace is elongated, dorsally flattened and rhombus-shaped, the rear of the thorax laterally depressed and transformed, with a pair of deep pits; the pedicel is almost as long as the abdomen. The male palp is unusual, characterized by the transverse deeply split membranous tegulum separating a ventral part which bears a sclerotized tegular apophysis and a large dagger-like retrodirected median apophysis. The female epigyne consists of one pair of large adjacent spermathecae and very long copulatory ducts arising posteriorly and rising laterally alongside the spermathecae continuing in several vertical and horizontal coils over the anterior surface. Relationships within the Salticidae are discussed and an affinity with the Cocalodinae is suggested. Arguments are provided for a hypothesis that D. decipiens is not ant-mimicking as was previously believed, but is a mimic of polistinine wasps. The species was found in the canopy in the Kinabalu area only, in primary and old secondary rainforest at 200–700 m.a.s.l. Overlap of canopy-dwelling spider species with those in the understorey are discussed and examples of species richness and endemism in the canopy are highlighted. Canopy fogging is a very efficient method of collecting for most arthropods. The canopy fauna adds an extra dimension to the known biodiversity of the tropical rainforest. In southeast Asia, canopy research has been neglected, inhibiting evaluation of comparative results of this canopy project with that from other regions. More use of fogging as a collecting method would greatly improve insight into the actual species richness and species distribution in general. KW - depreissia decipiens KW - jumping spiders KW - canopy spiders KW - taxonomy KW - biodiversity KW - ant-mimicking spiders KW - wasp-mimicking KW - Mt. Kinabalu KW - rainforest KW - Cocalodinae KW - Polistine wasps KW - endemism Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-168342 VL - 556 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Barej, Michael F. A1 - Schmitz, Andreas A1 - Penner, Johannes A1 - Doumbia, Joseph A1 - Sandberger-Loua, Laura A1 - Hirschfeld, Mareike A1 - Brede, Christian A1 - Emmrich, Mike A1 - Kouamé, N'Goran Germain A1 - Hillers, Annika A1 - Gonwouo, Nono L. A1 - Nopper, Joachim A1 - Adeba, Patrick Joël A1 - Bangoura, Mohamed A. A1 - Gage, Ceri A1 - Anderson, Gail A1 - Rödel, Mark-Oliver T1 - Life in the spray zone - overlooked diversity in West African torrent-frogs (Anura, Odontobatrachidae, Odontobatrachus) JF - Zoosystematics and Evolution N2 - West African torrent-frogs of the genus Odontobatrachus currently belong to a single species: Odontobatrachus natator (Boulenger, 1905). Recently, molecular results and biogeographic separation led to the recognition of five Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs) thus identifying a species-complex. Based on these insights, morphological analyses on more than 150 adult specimens, covering the entire distribution of the family and all OTUs, were carried out. Despite strong morphological congruence, combinations of morphological characters made the differentiation of OTUs successful and allowed the recognition of five distinct species: Odontobatrachus natator, and four species new to science: Odontobatrachus arndti sp. n., O. fouta sp. n., O. smithi sp. n. and O. ziama sp. n. All species occur in parapatry: Odontobatrachus natator is known from western Guinea to eastern Liberia, O. ziama sp. n. from eastern Guinea, O. smithi sp. n. and O. fouta sp. n. from western Guinea, O. arndti sp. n. from the border triangle Guinea-Liberia-Cote d'Ivoire. In addition, for the first time the advertisement call of a West African torrent-frog (O. arndti sp. n.) is described. KW - Guinean rain forest KW - molecular data KW - conservation KW - Upper Guinea KW - new species KW - Phrynobatrachus amphibia KW - Arthroleptis amphibia KW - ivory coast KW - genus KW - biodiversity KW - Ranidae KW - Petropedetidae KW - biodiversity hotspot KW - rainforest KW - taxonomy KW - Amphibia Y1 - 2015 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-144254 VL - 91 IS - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Jahn, Martin T. A1 - Schmidt, Katrin A1 - Mock, Thomas T1 - A novel cost effective and high-throughput isolation and identification method for marine microalgae JF - Plant Methods N2 - BACKROUND: Marine microalgae are of major ecologic and emerging economic importance. Biotechnological screening schemes of microalgae for specific traits and laboratory experiments to advance our knowledge on algal biology and evolution strongly benefit from culture collections reflecting a maximum of the natural inter- and intraspecific diversity. However, standard procedures for strain isolation and identification, namely DNA extraction, purification, amplification, sequencing and taxonomic identification still include considerable constraints increasing the time required to establish new cultures. RESULTS: In this study, we report a cost effective and high-throughput isolation and identification method for marine microalgae. The throughput was increased by applying strain isolation on plates and taxonomic identification by direct PCR (dPCR) of phylogenetic marker genes in combination with a novel sequencing electropherogram based screening method to assess the taxonomic diversity and identity of the isolated cultures. For validation of the effectiveness of this approach, we isolated and identified a range of unialgal cultures from natural phytoplankton communities sampled in the Arctic Ocean. These cultures include the isolate of a novel marine Chlorophyceae strain among several different diatoms. CONCLUSIONS: We provide an efficient and effective approach leading from natural phytoplankton communities to isolated and taxonomically identified algal strains in only a few weeks. Validated with sensitive Arctic phytoplankton, this approach overcomes the constraints of standard molecular characterisation and establishment of unialgal cultures." KW - cultivation KW - direct PCR KW - isolation KW - marine microalgae KW - taxonomy Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-121255 VL - 10 IS - 26 ER - TY - THES A1 - Hannaa, Wagih T1 - Taxonomy and palaeoecology of the Cenomanian-Turonian macro-invertebrate from eastern Sinai, Egypt T1 - Taxonomie und Palökologie von Makro-Invertebraten im Bereich Cenoman-Turon im östlichen Sinai, Ägypten N2 - The present study concerened with taxonomy and palaeoecology of the Cenomanian-Turonian macrobenthic fauna which includes bivalves, gastropods, echinoids, and coral. In addtion, cephalopods are also taken in consideration. 144 taxa are identified and systematically described. Palaeoecological and taphonomic anylsis of the statistically sampled macrobenthos are also discussed. The biostratigraphic sequences along the Cenomanian-Turonian rocks were carried out on the basis of ammonites and other macrobenthic fauna such as corals and bivalves. In order to reconstruct benthic association, 41 statistically sampled were subjected to cluster ananlysis by using Past Programm (Hammer et al., 2001). 10 association and three assemblages were described in order to reconstruct the different depositional enviroments. N2 - Diese Arbeit behandelt die Taxonomie und Palökologie von Makro-Invertebraten im Bereich Cenoman-Turon im östlichen Sinai, Ägypten KW - Paläontologie KW - Taxonomie KW - Palökologie KW - Wirbellose KW - Schnecken KW - Kopffüßer KW - Muscheln KW - palaontology KW - taxonomy KW - palaeoecology Y1 - 2010 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-54405 ER -