358 research outputs found

    Japan Prepares for Total War

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    A survey for American burying beetles in Southwest Missouri

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    Carrion beetles (Family Silphidae) were surveyed at 25 sites in southwestern Missouri during June and July of 2001. At each site, 4-12 pitfall traps baited with carrion were open for 24 nights. Total effort was 538 trap-nights, with average effort equal to 21.5 trap-nights per site. Seven species of silphids were recovered, including Nicrophorus marginatus, Nicrophorus orbicollis, Nicrophorus tomentosus, Oiceoptoma inaequale, Oiceoptoma novaboracense, Necrophila americana, and Necrodes surinamensis. Average species number per site was 3.82 (range 0-7). Average trapping success of all silphids at sites was 2.84 individuals per trap-night (range 0-12.5). The most abundant and widespread species were Necrophila americana and Nicrophorus marginatus, which occurred at 87% and 75% of sites, respectively. The endangered American burying beetle (Nicrophorus americanus) was not recovered in this survey

    Quantifying the stratigraphic completeness of delta shoreline trajectories

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    Understanding the incomplete nature of the stratigraphic record is fundamental for interpreting stratigraphic sequences. Methods for quantifying stratigraphic completeness for one-dimensional stratigraphic columns, defined as the proportion of time intervals of some length that contain stratigraphy, are commonplace; however, quantitative assessments of completeness in higher dimensions are lacking. Here we present a metric for defining stratigraphic completeness of two-dimensional shoreline trajectories using topset-foreset rollover positions in dip-parallel sections and describe the preservation potential of a shoreline trajectory derived from the geometry of the delta surface profile and the kinematics of the geomorphic shoreline trajectory. Two end-member forward models are required to fully constrain the preservation potential of the shoreline dependent on whether or not a topset is eroded during base level fall. A laboratory fan-delta was constructed under nonsteady boundary conditions, and one-dimensional stratigraphic column and two-dimensional shoreline completeness curves were calculated. Results are consistent with the hypothesis derived from conservation of sediment mass that completeness over all timescales should increase given increasing dimensions of analysis. Stratigraphic trajectories and completeness curves determined from forward models using experimental geomorphic trajectories compare well to values from transects when subsampled to the equivalent stratigraphic resolution as observed in the actual preserved sequence. The concept of stratigraphic completeness applied to two-dimensional trajectory analysis and the end-member forward models presented here provide novel tools for a conceptual understanding of the nature of stratigraphic preservation at basin scales

    708-4 Can the Results of SPECT Scintigraphy Safely Guide Clinical Management of Patients with Active CAD?

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    Myocardial perfusion scintigraphy is increasingly used to categorize risk in pts with known or a high likelihood of CAD. This strategy will only be cost-effective if: 1) cardiologists will largely reserve further testing such as angiography (angio) to high-risk subsets; and 2) it is shown that less severe patterns of abnormality can be safely managed medically. We previously reported angio rates after all 4, 162 SPECT studies (excluding those with angio within 90 days beforeSPECT) at our cardiology practice-based nuclear lab: 4% (69/1663) in pts with fixed defects only and/or no ischemia; 60% (682/1141) in pts with high-risk ischemia (2 of multivessel or LAD distribution ischemia and abnormal lung uptake); and 9% (123/1352) for pts with mild-moderate ischemia. In this study, we determined outcome of the 1229 pts with mild-moderate ischemia who did not have referral for angio. Patient characteristics: mean age 65 yrs; known CAD=1061 (86%); prior CABG=344; prior MI=575; prior PTCA=674; angina=592. Twenty-eight (2%) pts were lost to follow-up. The remainder were followed for a mean of 18 months. There were 22 hard events (MI=15; cardiac death=71) (1.8%) and 54 pts required PTCA or CABG (total event rate 6.3%). Mean time to any event was 13.2 months from SPECT. Freedom from hard events at 1 yr was 99% and at 2 yrs 97%. Freedom from any event was 97% at 1 yr and 91% at 2 yrs.Conclusions1) SPECT can be a highly effective strategy for selecting pts for angio; 2) Even in a self-referral setting angio is largely reserved for pts with high-risk scans; and 3) Pts with mildly-moderately abnormal scans can be treated safely with medical therapy and close follow-u

    Upper Thermal Tolerances of Early Life Stages of Freshwater Mussels

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    Freshwater mussels (order Unioniformes) fulfill an essential role in benthic aquatic communities, but also are among the most sensitive and rapidly declining faunal groups in North America. Rising water temperatures, caused by global climate change, industrial discharges, drought, or land development, could further challenge imperiled unionid communities. The aim of our study was to determine the upper thermal tolerances of the larval (glochidia) and juvenile life stages of freshwater mussels. Glochidia of 8 species of mussels were tested: Lampsilis siliquoidea, Potamilus alatus, Ligumia recta, Ellipsaria lineolata, Lasmigona complanata, Megalonaias nervosa, Alasmidonta varicosa, and Villosa delumbis. Seven of these species also were tested as juveniles. Survival trends were monitored while mussels held at 3 acclimation temperatures (17, 22, and 27°C) were exposed to a range of common and extreme water temperatures (20–42°C) in standard acute laboratory tests. The average median lethal temperature (LT50) among species in 24-h tests with glochidia was 31.6°C and ranged from 21.4 to 42.7°C. The mean LT50 in 96-h juvenile tests was 34.7°C and ranged from 32.5 to 38.8°C. Based on comparisons of LT50s, thermal tolerances differed among species for glochidia, but not for juveniles. Acclimation temperature did not affect thermal tolerance for either life stage. Our results indicate that freshwater mussels already might be living close to their upper thermal tolerances in some systems and, thus, might be at risk from rising environmental temperatures

    Intensive Rotational Grazing of Steers on Highly Erodible Land at the Adams County CRP Project

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    Grazing yearling steers is one way to utilize the forages required for participation in the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) after CRP contracts expire. In 1995, a stocker-steer intensive-rotational grazing study was conducted at the CRP Research and Demonstration Project near Corning, Iowa. A similar study was carried out in 1994. Seventy-five yearling crossbred steers grazed a 65- acre pasture that had been divided into 27 paddocks using electric fencing from May 4, 1995 to September 14, 1995. During this period, the 65-acre pasture system produced 9,975 animal-days of grazing and 11,403 pounds of gain. On a per-acre basis, this translates to 153.5 animal-days of grazing and 175.4 pounds of gain. The stocking rate was constant for the entire 133- day grazing season at 1.15 steers per acre. On May 4, 1995, the beginning of the grazing season, the average weight of the steers was 495.7 pounds. By the end of the grazing trial on September 14, 1995, the average weight of the steers had increased to 647.7 pounds. The average gain per steer during the 133-day grazing period was 152 pounds, and the average daily gain per steer was 1.14 pounds. The average bodyweight of the steers during the entire grazing season was 571.7 pounds

    Production of a videotape series to promote forage-based livestock production in the Upper Midwest

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    Although properly managed grazing can increase farm income and enhance environmental quality, it has not been widely used in the Upper Midwest. Instead, grazing has been viewed as an adjunct to row crop production, and state-of-the-art management techniques have been adopted slowly. However, recent research has developed forage grazing systems that can compete economically with row crops, especially on more erodible land. In order to implement such systems successfully, producers need practical information on the technical aspects of grazing and pasture management. Most grazing videos produced prior to this project were tailored to other geographic regions or weren\u27t sufficiently detailed. The five videotapes produced in this project cover controlled grazing, principles for managing pasture plants, animal management, fencing and water systems, and year-round systems for the Upper Midwest

    Associations of gender and a proxy of female menopausal status with histological features of drug‐induced liver injury

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    Background & AimGender and menopause may contribute to type and severity of drug‐induced liver injury (DILI) by influencing host responses to injury. The aim of this study was to assess the associations of gender and female age 50 [a proxy of menopause] with histological features of liver injury in 212 adults enrolled in the Drug‐Induced Liver Injury Network (DILIN) registry.MethodsAll participants had a causality score of at least ‘probable’, a liver biopsy within 30 days of DILI onset, and no prior chronic liver disease. Biochemical and histological injury types were classified as hepatocellular or cholestatic/mixed injury. The cohort was divided into three gender/age categories: men (41.0%), women <50 years (27.4%) and women ≄50 years of age (31.6%). Interaction of gender and age category (≄50 or not) was assessed.ResultsHepatocellular injury was more prevalent in women <50 years vs. others (P=.002). After adjusting for biochemical injury types, black race and possible ageing effects, more severe interface hepatitis was noted in biopsies of women <50 years compared to those of men and women ≄50 years (P=.009 and P=.055 respectively). Compared to those of men, biopsies of women showed greater plasma cell infiltration, hepatocyte apoptosis, hepatocyte rosettes and lobular disarray but less iron‐positive hepatocytes and histological cholestasis (P<.05). These associations persisted after excluding cases of amoxicillin/clavulanic acid, anabolic steroids or nitrofurantoin DILI which showed gender‐specific distributions.ConclusionGender and a proxy of menopause were associated with various features of inflammation and injury in DILI.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/139070/1/liv13380.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/139070/2/liv13380_am.pd
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