2,186 research outputs found

    The evolution of gregariousness in parasitoid wasps

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    Data are assembled on the clutch-size strategies adopted by extant species of parasitoid wasp. These data are used to reconstruct the history of clutch-size evolution in the group using a series of plausible evolutionary assumptions. Extant families are either entirely solitary, both solitary and gregarious, or else clutch size is unknown. Parsimony analysis suggests that the ancestors of most families were solitary, a result which is robust to different phylogenetic relationships and likely data inadequacies. This implies that solitariness was ubiquitous throughout the initial radiation of the group, and that transitions to gregariousness have subsequently occurred a minimum of 43 times in several, but not all lineages. Current data suggest that species-rich and small-bodied lineages are more likely to have evolved gregariousness, and contain more species with small gregarious brood sizes. I discuss the implications of these data for clutch-size theory

    Uneconomical Diagnosis of Cladograms: Comments on Wheeler and Nixon's Method for Sankoff Optimization

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/74972/1/j.1096-0031.1997.tb00249.x.pd

    DETERMINANTS OF WHOLESALE BEEF-CUT PRICES

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    Key determinants of monthly wholesale prices for 12 beef cuts include the quantity of the specific cut, stickiness in prices, marketing costs, quantities of pork and chicken, and seasonality. Seasonal patterns across the respective cuts are very different. Relative to the price in December, prices at the wholesale level in other months can be as much as 6 percent lower to as much as 21 percent higher.Wholesale prices, Beef cuts, Seasonality, Demand and Price Analysis, Livestock Production/Industries,

    Inferior vena cava branch variations in C57BL/6 mice have an impact on thrombus size in an IVC ligation (stasis) model

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/110835/1/jth12866.pd

    In-Stream Monitoring of Sediments and Water in the Lower Ouachita River for Site Impact to Aquatic Biota

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    Reported reduced sportfish densities in the main channel of the Ouachita River prompted an investigation, beginning in 1990, into potential causes of ongoing impairment to aquatic biota. In-stream monitoring that incorporated toxicity testing of sediments and water was conducted to discern potential sources of contaminants that might be related to the suboptimal fishery populations. Organisms selected to evaluate chronic impairment included larval fish, clams, midges and water fleas. The fathead minnow {Pimephales promelas) and cladoceran (Ceriodaphnia dubid) were used to estimate patterns of toxicity associated with water from seven designated reaches and selected tributaries of the Ouachita River. Larval survival and growth tests were conducted using the fathead minnow, while survival and reproduction were assessed for the cladoceran. An enzyme assay using the Asian clam (Corbicula fluminea), and growth and survival tests with Chironomus tentans were used to evaluate ambient sediment toxicity within these same reaches and tributaries. Ambient toxicity was rarely observed in the mainstem of the River and, moreover, represented intermittent events. However, impaired growth in larval fish, poor reproduction in cladocera, and reduced enzyme activity in clams were evident for several tributaries. Results of 10-day whole sediment tests showed significant growth reductions in C. tentans exposed to sediments collected from West and East Two bayous, Smackover and Coffee creeks. These results suggest there is intermittent impairment in tributaries of the Ouachita River due to ambient water and sediment conditions that are aside from current concerns for mercury contamination

    Individual limb mechanical analysis of gait following stroke

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    The step-to-step transition of walking requires significant mechanical and metabolic energy to redirect the center of mass. Inter-limb mechanical asymmetries during the step-to-step transition may increase overall energy demands and require compensation during single-support. The purpose of this study was to compare individual limb mechanical gait asymmetries during the step-to-step transitions, single-support and over a complete stride between two groups of individuals following stroke stratified by gait speed (≥0.8 m/s o
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