856 research outputs found

    Climatic versus biotic constraints on carbon and water fluxes in seasonally drought-affected ponderosa pine ecosystems

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    We investigated the relative importance of climatic versus biotic controls on gross primary production (GPP) and water vapor fluxes in seasonally drought-affected ponderosa pine forests. The study was conducted in young (YS), mature (MS), and old stands (OS) over 4 years at the AmeriFlux Metolius sites. Model simulations showed that interannual variation of GPP did not follow the same trends as precipitation, and effects of climatic variation were smallest at the OS (50%), and intermediate at the YS (<20%). In the young, developing stand, interannual variation in leaf area has larger effects on fluxes than climate, although leaf area is a function of climate in that climate can interact with age-related shifts in carbon allocation and affect whole-tree hydraulic conductance. Older forests, with well-established root systems, appear to be better buffered from effects of seasonal drought and interannual climatic variation. Interannual variation of net ecosystem exchange (NEE) was also lowest at the OS, where NEE is controlled more by interannual variation of ecosystem respiration, 70% of which is from soil, than by the variation of GPP, whereas variation in GPP is the primary reason for interannual changes in NEE at the YS and MS. Across spatially heterogeneous landscapes with high frequency of younger stands resulting from natural and anthropogenic disturbances, interannual climatic variation and change in leaf area are likely to result in large interannual variation in GPP and NEE

    The rogue nature of hiatuses in a global warming climate

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    The nature of rogue events is their unlikelihood and the recent unpredicted decade-long slowdown in surface warming, the so-called hiatus, may be such an event. However, given decadal variability in climate, global surface temperatures were never expected to increase monotonically with increasing radiative forcing. Here surface air temperature from 20 climate models is analyzed to estimate the historical and future likelihood of hiatuses and “surges” (faster than expected warming), showing that the global hiatus of the early 21st century was extremely unlikely. A novel analysis of future climate scenarios suggests that hiatuses will almost vanish and surges will strongly intensify by 2100 under a “business as usual” scenario. For “CO2 stabilisation” scenarios, hiatus, and surge characteristics revert to typical 1940s values. These results suggest to study the hiatus of the early 21st century and future reoccurrences as rogue events, at the limit of the variability of current climate modelling capability

    Pharmacotherapy and Pregnancy: Highlights from the Third International Conference for Individualized Pharmacotherapy in Pregnancy

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    To address provider struggles to provide evidence-based, rational drug therapy to pregnant women, this third Conference was convened to highlight the current progress and research in the field. Speakers from academic centers, industry, and governmental institutions spoke about: the Food and Drug Administration’s role in pregnancy pharmacology and the new labeling initiative; drug registries in pregnancy; the pharmacist’s role in medication use in pregnancy; therapeutic areas such as preterm labor, gestational diabetes, nausea and vomiting in pregnancy, and hypertension; breast-feeding and medications; ethical challenges for consent in pregnancy drug studies; the potential for cord blood banks; and concerns about the fetus when studying drugs in pregnancy. The Conference highlighted several areas of collaboration within the current Obstetrics Pharmacology Research Units Network and hoped to educate providers, researchers, and agencies with the common goal to improve the ability to safely and effectively use individualized pharmacotherapy in pregnancy

    Foley catheter vs. oral misoprostol to induce labour among hypertensive women in India: a cost-consequence analysis alongside a clinical trial

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    ObjectiveTo determine the effectiveness and economic impact oftwo methods for induction of labour in hypertensive women, inlow-resource settings.DesignCost-consequence analysis of a previously reportedmulticentre, parallel, open-label randomised trial.Setting & populationA total of 602 women with a live fetus, aged≥18 years requiring delivery for pre-eclampsia or hypertension, intwo public hospitals in Nagpur, India.MethodsWe performed a formal economic evaluation alongsidethe INFORM clinical trial. Women were randomised to receivetranscervical Foley catheterisation or oral misoprostol 25 mcg.Healthcare expenditure was calculated using a provider-sidemicrocosting approach.Main outcome measuresRates of vaginal this delivery within24 hours of induction, healthcare expenditure per completedtreatment episode.ResultsInduction with oral misoprostol resulted in a (meandifference) 20.6USDreductioninhealthcareexpenditure[9520.6USD reduction in healthcare expenditure [95%CI ( ) 123.59 ( ) 72.49],andimprovedachievementofvaginaldeliverywithin24hoursofinduction,meandifference1072.49], and improved achievement ofvaginal delivery within 24 hours of induction, mean difference10% [95% CI ( 2 to 17.9%),P=0.016]. Oxytocinadministration time was reduced by 135.3 minutes [95% CI(84.4–186.2 minutes),P<0.01] and caesarean sections by 9.1%[95% CI (1.1–17%),P=0.025] for those receiving oralmisoprostol. Following probabilistic sensitivity analysis, oralmisoprostol was cost-saving in 63% of 5,000 bootstrapreplications and achieved superior rates of vaginal delivery,delivery within 24 hours of induction and vaginal delivery within24 hours of induction in 98.7%, 90.7%, and 99.4% of bootstrapsimulations. Based on univariate threshold analysis, the unit priceof oral misoprostol 25 mcg could feasibly increase 31-fold from0.24 to $7.50 per 25 mcg tablet and remain cost-saving

    Identification of tandem repeat families from long-read sequences of Humulus lupulus

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    Hop (Humulus lupulus L.) is known for its use as a bittering agent in beer and has a rich history of cultivation, beginning in Europe and now spanning the globe. There are five wild varieties worldwide, which may have been introgressed with cultivated varieties. As a dioecious species, its obligate outcrossing, non-Mendelian inheritance, and genomic structural variability have confounded directed breeding efforts. Consequently, understanding the hop genome represents a considerable challenge, requiring additional resources. In order to facilitate investigations into the transmission genetics of hop, we report here a tandem repeat discovery pipeline developed using k-mer filtering and dot plot analysis of PacBio long-read sequences from the hop cultivar Apollo. From this we identified 17 new and distinct tandem repeat sequence families, which represent candidates for FISH probe development. For two of these candidates, HuluTR120 and HuluTR225, we produced oligonucleotide FISH probes from conserved regions of and demonstrated their utility by staining meiotic chromosomes from wild hop, var. neomexicanus to address, for example, questions about hop transmission genetics. Collectively, these tandem repeat sequence families represent new resources suitable for development of additional cytogenomic tools for hop research

    Emerging data infrastructures and the new topologies of education policy

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    © The Author(s) 2018. This paper examines how datafication is creating new topologies of education policy. Specifically, we analyse how the creation of data infrastructures that enable the generation, communication and representation of digital data are changing relations of power, including both centralised and dispersed forms, and space in education. The paper uses conceptual resources from cultural topology and infrastructure studies to provide a framework for analysing spatial relations between educational data, discourses, policies and practices in new governance configurations. The paper outlines a case study of an emergent data infrastructure in Australian schooling, the National Schools Interoperability Program, to provide empirical evidence of the movement, connection and enactment of digital data across policy spaces. Key aspects of this case include the ways that data infrastructure is: (i) enabling new private and public connections across policy topologies; (ii) creating a new role for technical standards in education policy and (iii) changing the topological spaces of education governance
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