105 research outputs found

    Speciation with gene flow in marine systems

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    Over the last century, a large body of literature emerged on mechanisms driving speciation. Most of the research into these questions focussed on terrestrial systems, while research in marine systems lagged behind. Here, we review the population genetic mechanisms and geographic context of 33 potential cases of speciation with gene flow in the marine realm, using six criteria inferred from theoretical models of speciation. Speciation with gene flow occurs in a wide range of marine taxa. Single traits, which induce assortative mating and are subjected to disruptive selection, such as differences in host-associations in invertebrates or colour pattern in tropical fish, are potentially responsible for a decrease in gene flow and may be driving divergence in the majority of cases. However, much remains unknown, and with the current knowledge, the frequency of ecological speciation with gene flow in marine systems remains difficult to estimate. Standardized, generally applicable statistical methods, explicitly testing different hypotheses of speciation, are, going forward, required to confidently infer speciation with gene flow

    Shrimps of the genus Periclimenes (Crustacea, Decapoda, Palaemonidae) associated with mushroom corals (Scleractinia, Fungiidae): Linking DNA barcodes to morphology

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    Most marine palaemonid shrimp species live in symbiosis with invertebrates of various phyla. These associations range from weak epibiosis to obligatory endosymbiosis and from restricted commensalism to semi-parasitism. On coral reefs, such symbiotic shrimps can contribute to the associated biodiversity of reef corals. Among the host taxa, mushroom corals (Cnidaria: Anthozoa: Fungiidae) are known to harbour various groups of symbionts, including shrimps. Some but not all of these associated species are host-specific. Because data on the host specificity of shrimps on mushroom corals are scarce, shrimp species of the genus Periclimenes were collected from mushroom corals during fieldwork in Lembeh Strait, North Sulawesi, Indonesia. Using molecular (COI barcoding gene) and morphological methods, three species of Periclimenes were identified: P. diversipes, P. watamuae and a species new to science, P. subcorallum sp. nov., described herein. Their host specificity was variable, with eight, three and two fungiid host records, respectively. It is concluded that shrimp species of the genus Periclimenes show much overlap in their host choice and that particular morphological traits in the host species appear to play a more important role than phylogenetic affinities within the host group.publishedVersio

    Morphology and coloration of Harpiosquilla harpax (de Haan, 1844) collected from Osaka Bay and the Kii Channel, Japan, with comments on Harpiosquilla species from Okinawa Island (Crustacea: Stomatopoda: Squillidae)

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    トゲシャコ Harpiosquilla harpax (de Haan, 1844) は本邦から記載された口脚目の1種で,日本から はよく似た H. japonica Manning, 1969も記載されている.大阪湾と紀伊水道産の標本を正確に同定する ため,45個体について形態と色彩を詳細に観察した.タイプ標本との比較により今回の標本はトゲシャ コと同定され,H. japonicaは形態的特徴が合致しタイプ産地が紀伊水道に含まれることからトゲシャ コの新参異名となることが分かった.本種は顕著な突起を欠く額板と長さが幅よりも大きい尾節で特 徴付けられ,本邦以外に台湾,中国,ベトナム,ニュ-カレドニアとオーストラリアから記録されて いる.沖縄本島産のトゲシャコ属の標本を調べたところ,額板に突起を持つものが含まれ,その尾節 の長さは幅とほぼ同じであった.同様の特徴を持つ標本はインド・西太平洋の各地から記録されトゲ シャコに誤同定されてきたが,それらの中には複数種が混在する可能性があるため,沖縄本島産の種 名は決定できなかった.Two mantis shrimp species of Squillidae, Harpiosquilla harpax (de Haan, 1844) and H. japonica Manning, 1969, were originally described from Japan and both are closely similar to each other. To accurately identify Harpiosquilla material collected from Osaka Bay and the Kii Channel, morphological characters and coloration of 45 specimens were examined in detail. As a result of comparison with the type specimens of H. harpax, the present specimens are identified as that species. Because of close similarity of the morphology and the type locality contained in the Kii Channel, H. japonica is synonymized with H. harpax. Harpiosquilla harpax is characterized particularly by having the rostral plate lacking a distinct apical projection and the telson longer than broad, and it was recorded from Taiwan, China, Vietnam, New Caledonia and Australia in addition to Japan. Examination of Harpiosquilla specimens collected from Okinawa Island revealed that they have a rostral plate partly with an apical projection and a telson as broad as long. Harpiosquilla specimens having such characters were recorded from many localities in the Indo-West Pacific and have been misidentified as H. harpax. Because there is a possibility that they include multiple similar species, the species name of the specimens from Okinawa Island cannot be determined at present

    Observer variability of absolute and relative thrombus density measurements in patients with acute ischemic stroke

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    Introduction: Thrombus density may be a predictor for acute ischemic stroke treatment success. However, only limited data on observer variability for thrombus density measurements exist. This study assesses the variability and bias of four common thrombus density measurement methods by expert and non-expert observers. Methods: For 132 consecutive patients with acute ischemic stroke, three experts and two trained observers determined thrombus density by placing three standardized regions of interest (ROIs) in the thrombus and corresponding contralateral arterial segment. Subsequently, absolute and relative thrombus densities were determined using either one or three ROIs. Intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) was determined, and Bland–Altman analysis was performed to evaluate interobserver and intermethod agreement. Accuracy of the trained observer was evaluated with a reference expert observer using the same statistical analysis. Results: The highest interobserver agreement was obtained for absolute thrombus measurements using three ROIs (ICCs ranging from 0.54 to 0.91). In general, interobserver agreement was lower for relative measurements, and for using one instead of three ROIs. Interobserver agreement of trained non-experts and experts was similar. Accuracy of the trained observer measurements was comparable to the expert interobserver agreement and was better for absolute measurements and with three ROIs. The agreement between the one ROI and three ROI methods was good. Conclusion: Absolute thrombus density measurement has superior interobserver agreement compared to relative density measurement. Interobserver variation is smaller when multiple ROIs are used. Trained non-expert observers can accurately and reproducibly assess absolute thrombus densities using three ROIs

    Two-year clinical follow-up of the Multicenter Randomized Clinical Trial of Endovascular Treatment for Acute Ischemic Stroke in The Netherlands (MR CLEAN): Design and statistical analysis plan of the extended follow-up study

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    Background: MR CLEAN was the first randomized trial to demonstrate the short-term clinical effectiveness of endovascular treatment in patients with acute ischemic stroke caused by large vessel occlusion in the anterior circulation. Several other trials confirmed that endovascular treatment improves clinical outcome at three months. However, limited data are available on long-term clinical outcome. We aimed to estimate the effect of endovascular treatment on functional outcome at two-year follow-up in patients with acute ischemic stroke. Secondly, we aimed to assess the effect of endovascular treatment on major vascular events and mortality during two years of follow-up. Methods: MR CLEAN is a multicenter clinical trial with randomized treatment allocation, open-label treatment, and blinded endpoint evaluation. Patients included were 18 years or older with acute ischemic stroke caused by a proven anterior proximal artery occlusion who could be treated within six hours after stroke onset. The intervention contrast was endovascular treatment and usual care versus no endovascular treatment and usual care. The current study extended the follow-up duration from three months to two years. The primary outcome is the score on the modified Rankin scale at two years. Secondary outcomes include all-cause mortality and the occurrence of major vascular events within two years of follow-up. Discussion: The results of our study provide information on the long-term clinical effectiveness of endovascular treatment, which may have implications for individual treatment decisions and estimates of cost-effectiveness. Trial registration:NTR1804. Registered on 7 May 2009; ISRCTN10888758. Registered on 24 July 2012 (main MR CLEAN trial); NTR5073. Registered on 26 February 2015 (extended follow-up study)

    Automated entire thrombus density measurements for robust and comprehensive thrombus characterization in patients with acute ischemic stroke

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    Background and Purpose: In acute ischemic stroke (AIS) management, CT-based thrombus density has been associated with treatment success. However, currently used thrombus measurements are prone to inter-observer variability and oversimplify the heterogeneous thrombus composition. Our aim was first to introduce an automated method to assess the entire thrombus density and then to compare the measured entire thrombus density with respect to current standard manual measurements. Materials and Method: In 135 AIS patients, the density distribution of the entire thrombus was determined. Density distributions were described usingmedians, interquartile ranges (IQR), kurtosis, and skewedness. Differences between themedian of entire thrombusmeasurements and commonly applied manualmeasurements using 3 regions of interest were determined using linear regression. Results: Density distributions varied considerably with medians ranging from 20.0 to 62.8 HU and IQRs ranging from 9.3 to 55.8 HU. The average median of the thrombus density distributions (43.5 ± 10.2 HU) was lower than the manual assessment (49.6 ± 8.0 HU) (p<0.05). The difference between manual measurements and median density of entire thrombus decreased with increasing density (r = 0.64; p<0.05), revealing relatively higher manual measurements for low density thrombi such that manual density measurement tend overestimates the real thrombus density. Conclusions: Automatic measurements of the full thrombus expose a wide variety of thrombi density distribution, which is not grasped with currently used manual measurement. Furthermore, d

    Emergence of surfactant-​free micelles from ternary solutions

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    Curious effects ranging from enzyme activity to anomalies in evapn. rates that have been known for over fifty years suggest the existence and thermodn. stability of surfactant-free micelles. Only recently, joint X-ray, light and neutron scattering expts. have demonstrated that aggregates and bulk pseudo-phases coexist in presumably normal solns., in which a water insol. component is solubilized in a certain domain of concn. of a hydrotrope component like ethanol. Nevertheless, nothing is known about the mol.-level shape and structure of such aggregates. In this work we characterize mixts. of octanol, ethanol, and water by mol. dynamics simulations. For compns. in the "pre-ouzo" region (close to the single phase stability limit) we observe micelle-like aggregates that are clearly distinct from simple crit. d. fluctuations. We define an ethanol partition in the pseudo-phase from an integral of the van der Waals dispersion energy term. From this partition, octanol-rich aggregates swollen with ethanol appear with an emerging interface. Ethanol is present in the water pseudo-phase with an exponential decay similar to the one predicted by Marcelja and Radic forty years ago

    The Early Royal Society and Visual Culture

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    Recent studies have fruitfully examined the intersection between early modern science and visual culture by elucidating the functions of images in shaping and disseminating scientific knowledge. Given its rich archival sources, it is possible to extend this line of research in the case of the Royal Society to an examination of attitudes towards images as artefacts –manufactured objects worth commissioning, collecting and studying. Drawing on existing scholarship and material from the Royal Society Archives, I discuss Fellows’ interests in prints, drawings, varnishes, colorants, images made out of unusual materials, and methods of identifying the painter from a painting. Knowledge of production processes of images was important to members of the Royal Society, not only as connoisseurs and collectors, but also as those interested in a Baconian mastery of material processes, including a “history of trades”. Their antiquarian interests led to discussion of painters’ styles, and they gradually developed a visual memorial to an institution through portraits and other visual records.AH/M001938/1 (AHRC
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