162 research outputs found

    The Potential of the Science-Religion Confluence for Affecting Policy and Administration

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    The author's understanding of the full scope of God's covenant after the Flood, together with the scientific insights of systems theory, guided him to implement a new approach in administering national restoration and protection policy. He is convinced that attempts by Congress to dismantle such legislation as the Endangered Species Act of 1973 are founded upon fear of the potential power of the conjunction of spiritual values with scientific insight

    Contracts: Is a Promise to Perform That Which Is Due a Third Party Sufficient Consideration to Support a Promise?

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    Contracts: Is a Promise to Perform That Which Is Due a Third Party Sufficient Consideration to Support a Promise

    An Environmental Agenda for the 1990s

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    In December, President-Elect Bill Clinton named the Hon. Bruce Babbitt, J.D., former governor of Arizona, as his secretary of the interior. The HSUS was pleased to welcome Governor Babbitt, most recently president of the League of Conservation Voters, to our national conference, in Boulder, Colorado, in October. In his keynote address, adapted here, Governor Babbitt discusses the environmental community\u27s new awareness of the goals it shares with The HSUS and others in animal protection

    An Environmental Agenda for the 1990s

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    In December, President-Elect Bill Clinton named the Hon. Bruce Babbitt, J.D., former governor of Arizona, as his secretary of the interior. The HSUS was pleased to welcome Governor Babbitt, most recently president of the League of Conservation Voters, to our national conference, in Boulder, Colorado, in October. In his keynote address, adapted here, Governor Babbitt discusses the environmental community\u27s new awareness of the goals it shares with The HSUS and others in animal protection

    Future of oil and gas development in the western Amazon

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    The western Amazon is one of the world's last high-biodiversity wilderness areas, characterized by extraordinary species richness and large tracts of roadless humid tropical forest. It is also home to an active hydrocarbon (oil and gas) sector, characterized by operations in extremely remote areas that require new access routes. Here, we present the first integrated analysis of the hydrocarbon sector and its associated road-building in the western Amazon. Specifically, we document the (a) current panorama, including location and development status of all oil and gas discoveries, of the sector, and (b) current and future scenario of access (i.e. access road versus roadless access) to discoveries. We present an updated 2014 western Amazon hydrocarbon map illustrating that oil and gas blocks now cover 733 414 km(2), an area much larger than the US state of Texas, and have been expanding since the last assessment in 2008. In terms of access, we documented 11 examples of the access road model and six examples of roadless access across the region. Finally, we documented 35 confirmed and/or suspected untapped hydrocarbon discoveries across the western Amazon. In the Discussion, we argue that if these reserves must be developed, use of the offshore inland model-a method that strategically avoids the construction of access roads-is crucial to minimizing ecological impacts in one of the most globally important conservation regions

    The International Gene Trap Consortium Website: a portal to all publicly available gene trap cell lines in mouse

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    Gene trapping is a method of generating murine embryonic stem (ES) cell lines containing insertional mutations in known and novel genes. A number of international groups have used this approach to create sizeable public cell line repositories available to the scientific community for the generation of mutant mouse strains. The major gene trapping groups worldwide have recently joined together to centralize access to all publicly available gene trap lines by developing a user-oriented Website for the International Gene Trap Consortium (IGTC). This collaboration provides an impressive public informatics resource comprising ∼45 000 well-characterized ES cell lines which currently represent ∼40% of known mouse genes, all freely available for the creation of knockout mice on a non-collaborative basis. To standardize annotation and provide high confidence data for gene trap lines, a rigorous identification and annotation pipeline has been developed combining genomic localization and transcript alignment of gene trap sequence tags to identify trapped loci. This information is stored in a new bioinformatics database accessible through the IGTC Website interface. The IGTC Website () allows users to browse and search the database for trapped genes, BLAST sequences against gene trap sequence tags, and view trapped genes within biological pathways. In addition, IGTC data have been integrated into major genome browsers and bioinformatics sites to provide users with outside portals for viewing this data. The development of the IGTC Website marks a major advance by providing the research community with the data and tools necessary to effectively use public gene trap resources for the large-scale characterization of mammalian gene function

    Modeling Insertional Mutagenesis Using Gene Length and Expression in Murine Embryonic Stem Cells

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    Background. High-throughput mutagenesis of the mammalian genome is a powerful means to facilitate analysis of gene function. Gene trapping in embryonic stem cells (ESCs) is the most widely used form of insertional mutagenesis in mammals. However, the rules governing its efficiency are not fully understood, and the effects of vector design on the likelihood of genetrapping events have not been tested on a genome-wide scale. Methodology/Principal Findings. In this study, we used public gene-trap data to model gene-trap likelihood. Using the association of gene length and gene expression with gene-trap likelihood, we constructed spline-based regression models that characterize which genes are susceptible and which genes are resistant to gene-trapping techniques. We report results for three classes of gene-trap vectors, showing that both length and expression are significant determinants of trap likelihood for all vectors. Using our models, we also quantitatively identifie
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