3,465 research outputs found
The structure and ecological function of the interactions between plants and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi through multilayer networks
Arbuscular mycorrhizas are one of the most frequent mutualisms in terrestrial
ecosystems. Although studies on plant mutualistic interaction networks suggest
that they may leave their imprint on plant community structure and dynamics,
this has not been explicitly assessed. Thus, in the context of plant-fungi
interactions,
studies explicitly linking plant-mycorrhizal
fungi interaction networks with
key ecological functions of plant communities, such as recruitment, are lacking.
2. In this study, we analyse, in two Mediterranean forest communities of southern
Iberian Peninsula, how plant-arbuscular
mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) networks
modulate plant-plant
recruitment interaction networks. We use a new approach
integrating plant-AMF
and plant recruitment networks into a single multilayer
structure. We also develop a new metric (Interlayer Node Neighbourhood
Integration, INNI) to explore the impact of a given node on the structure across
layers.
3. The similarity of plant species in their AMF communities is positively related to
the observed frequency of recruitment interactions in the field. Results reveal
that properties of plant-AMF
networks, such as plant degree and centrality, can
explain about the properties of plant recruitment network, such as in-and
out-degree
(i.e. sapling bank and canopy service) and its modular structure. However,
these relationships differed between the two forest communities. Finally, we
identify particular AMF that contribute to integrate the neighbourhood of recruitment
interactions between plants.
4. This multilayer network approach is useful to explore the role of plant-AMF
interactions
on recruitment, a key ecosystem function enhanced by fungi. Results
provide evidence that the complex structure of plant-AMF
interactions impacts
functional and structurally plant-plant
interactions, which in turn may potentiallyMinisterio de Ciencia e Innovación, Grant/
Award Number: CGL2015-69118-
C2-
2-
P
and PGC2018-100966-
B-
I0
Numerical modeling of three-dimensional stratified tidal flow over Camarinal Sill, Strait of Gibraltar
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2011. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Geophysical Research 116 (2011): C12026, doi:10.1029/2011JC007093.The baroclinic response to barotropic tidal forcing in the Camarinal Sill area, within the Strait of Gibraltar, is investigated with a three-dimensional, fully nonlinear, nonhydrostatic numerical model. The aim of numerical efforts was the assessment of three-dimensional effects, which are potentially significant in the area because of rather irregular bottom topography, variable background stratification, and complex structure of barotropic tides. Model results reveal a complex baroclinic response under relatively moderate flood tidal currents, which includes the formation of internal hydraulic jumps upstream of the sill, internal cross waves close to the channel walls, and a plunging pycnocline at the lee side of the sill crest. These structures exhibit significant cross-channel spatial dependence and may appear to be aligned together across the channel. This fact makes their identification difficult from the surface pattern captured by remote sensing images. Under strong barotropic forcing (spring tides) the upstream hydraulic jumps are shifted to the lee side of Camarinal Sill, where a single internal hydraulic jump is formed. Significant first- and second-mode hydraulic jumps are also generated near smaller secondary sills in Tangier basin, thus extending the occurrence of intense water mixing and energy dissipation to other zones of the strait.This work is a contribution to the Spanishfunded
National Project INGRES-2 (CTM2006-02326). Partial financial
support from Acción Complementaria CTM2009-05810/E (Spanish Ministry
of Science and Innovation) and project P08-RNM-3738 from Plan
Andaluz de Investigación (Andalucia regional government) is acknowledged.2012-06-1
Plant Traits and Phylogeny Predict Soil Carbon and Nutrient Cycling in Mediterranean Mixed Forests
Soil functioning is closely linked to the interactions
between biological communities with the physical
environment. Yet, the impact of plant community
attributes on metabolic processes promoting soil
nutrient cycling remains largely unknown. We
hypothesized that the plant community acts as a
regulating agent of nutrient mobilization in soils
according to the phylogenetic and morpho-functional
traits of plant species of which it is composed.
Rhizosphere soils were collected in autumn and
spring under 32 tree and shrub species in two
Mediterranean mixed forests (four plots in each)
located in southern Spain, and nine soil enzymatic
activities related to C, N and P mobilization were
assessed. Phylogeny and morpho-functional traits of
plant species were recorded and their imprint in soil
enzymatic activities across forests was determined.
The results showed a plant phylogenetic signal for N
mobilization in both forests, while it varied across
forests for non-labile C and P mobilization. The plant
phylogenetic signals were primarily driven by lineages
that diversified through the Miocene, about 25
Myr ago. In addition, leaf traits and plant’s mycorrhizal
type explained soil enzymatic activities independently
from phylogeny. C and P mobilization
increased under ectomycorrhizal plants, whilst enhanced
N mobilization did occur under arbuscular
mycorrhizal ones. The plant community composition
led to a different carbon and nutrient mobilization
degree, which in turn was mediated by
distinct microbial communities mirroring differentiated
resource-acquisition strategies of plants. Our
results highlight the role of plant traits and mycorrhizal
interactions in modulating carbon and nutrient
cycling in Mediterranean mixed forest soils.CRUE-CSIC
Springer Natur
Treatment options beyond immunotherapy in patients with wild-type lung adenocarcinoma: a Delphi consensus
Purpose: Immunotherapy-based approaches are standard first-line treatments for advanced/metastatic lung cancer or for chemoradiotherapy consolidation in locally advanced disease. Uncertainty on how to treat patients at disease progression prompted us to develop a consensus document on post-immunotherapy options in Spain for patients with advanced wild-type lung adenocarcinoma. Methods: After extensive literature review, a 5-member scientific committee generated 33 statements in 4 domains: general aspects (n = 4); post-durvalumab in locally advanced disease (n = 6); post-first-line immunotherapy ± chemotherapy in advanced/metastatic disease (n = 11); and post-first-line platinum-based chemotherapy in advanced/metastatic disease (n = 12). A panel of 26 lung cancer experts completed 2 Delphi iterations through an online platform rating their degree of agreement/disagreement (first-round scale 1–5 and second-round scale 1–4, 1 = strongly disagree, 4/5 = strongly agree) for each statement. Second-round consensus: ≥ 70% of responses were in categories 1/2 (disagreement) or 3/4 (agreement). Results: Consensus was reached for 2/33 statements in the first Delphi round and in 29/31 statements in the second round. Important variables informing treatment at disease progression with an immunotherapy-based treatment include: disease aggressiveness, previous treatment, accumulated toxicity, progression-free interval, PD-L1 expression, and tumour mutational burden. A platinum-based chemotherapy should follow a first-line immunotherapy treatment without chemotherapy. Treatment with docetaxel + nintedanib may be appropriate post-durvalumab in refractory patients or following progression to first-line chemotherapy + immunotherapy, or second-line chemotherapy after first-line immunotherapy, or first-line chemotherapy in some patients with low/negative PD-L1 expression, or second-line immunotherapy after first-line chemotherapy. Conclusions: To support decision making following progression to immunotherapy-based treatment in patients with advanced wild-type lung adenocarcinoma, a consensus document has been developed.The project was funded by Boehringer Ingelheim
Asteroseismology with the WIRE satellite. I. Combining Ground- and Space-based Photometry of the Delta Scuti Star Epsilon Cephei
We have analysed ground-based multi-colour Stromgren photometry and
single-filter photometry from the star tracker on the WIRE satellite of the
delta scuti star Epsilon Cephei. The ground-based data set consists of 16
nights of data collected over 164 days, while the satellite data are nearly
continuous coverage of the star during 14 days. The spectral window and noise
level of the satellite data are superior to the ground-based data and this data
set is used to locate the frequencies. However, we can use the ground-based
data to improve the accuracy of the frequencies due to the much longer time
baseline. We detect 26 oscillation frequencies in the WIRE data set, but only
some of these can be seen clearly in the ground-based data. We have used the
multi-colour ground-based photometry to determine amplitude and phase
differences in the Stromgren b-y colour and the y filter in an attempt to
identify the radial degree of the oscillation frequencies. We conclude that the
accuracies of the amplitudes and phases are not sufficient to constrain
theoretical models of Epsilon Cephei. We find no evidence for rotational
splitting or the large separation among the frequencies detected in the WIRE
data set. To be able to identify oscillation frequencies in delta scuti stars
with the method we have applied, it is crucial to obtain more complete coverage
from multi-site campaigns with a long time baseline and in multiple filters.
This is important when planning photometric and spectroscopic ground-based
support for future satellite missions like COROT and KEPLER.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figures, 4 tables. Fig. 4 reduced in quality. Accepted
by A&
Ectomycorrhizal fungal network complexity determines soil multi-enzymatic activity
Soil functioning is intrinsically related to the structure of associated biological communities. This link is barely understood in the multispecies context of soil microbial communities, which often requires complex analytical approaches to discern structural and functional roles of microbial taxa inhabiting the soil. To investigate these ecological properties, we characterized the assembly and soil functioning contribution of ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fungal communities through co-occurrence network analysis. Co-occurrence networks were inferred from ECM root tips of Cistus albidus, Quercus faginea and Q. ilex on a regional scale, in Mediterranean mixed forests. Soil enzymatic activities related to carbon and nutrient cycling were also measured, and soil functionality outcomes related to ECM fungal network structure were evaluated on the community to taxon levels. Network complexity relied on habitat characteristics and seasonality, and it was linked to different dominant ECM fungal lineages across habitats. Soil enzymatic activities were habitat-dependent, driven by host plant identity and fungi with reduced structuring roles in the co-occurrence network (mainly within Thelephorales, Sebacinales and Pezizales). ECM fungal co-occurrence network structure and functioning were highly context-dependent, pointing to divergent regional fungal species pools according to their niche preferences. As increased network complexity was not related to greater soil functionality, functional redundancy might be operating in Mediterranean forest soils. The revealed differentiation between structural and functional roles of ECM fungi adds new insights into the understanding of soil fungal community assembly and its functionality in ecosystems.</p
Mesoscopic description of the annealed Ising model and Multiplicative noise
A new type of Langevin equation exhibiting a non trivial phase transition
associated with the presence of multiplicative noise is introduced. The
equation is derived as a mesoscopic representation of the microscopic annealed
Ising model (AIM) proposed by Thorpe and Beeman, and reproduces perfectly its
basic phenomenology. The AIM exhibits a non-trivial behavior as the temperature
is increased, in particular it presents a disorder-to-order phase transition at
low temperatures, and a order-to-disorder transition at higher temperatures.
This behavior resembles that of some Langevin equations with multiplicative
noise, which exhibit also two analogous phase transitions as the
noise-amplitude is increased. By comparing the standard models for
noise-induced transitions with our new Langevin equation we elucidate that the
mechanisms controlling the disorder-to-order transitions in both of them are
essentially different, even though for both of them the presence of
multiplicative noise is a key ingredient.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Síndrome de Claude secundario a traumatismo craneoencefálico
Se presenta el caso de una ni ~na de 4 a ~nos que tras un traumatismo craneoencefálico (TCE) grave por accidente doméstico presenta signos compatibles con afectación de arterias paramedianas mesencefálicas derechas, así como ausencia de función de glándula lacrimal izquierda por fractura de pe ~nasco izquierdo; ambas complicaciones rarasdel TCE
Treatment with implants in patients with diabetes. A 7-year comparative study
Introducción. La implantología oral puede constituir una modalidad terapéutica en el tratamiento prostodóncico de los
pacientes con compromiso médico. El estudio muestra la evaluación del tratamiento con implantes en pacientes con
diabetes comparados con pacientes sin diabetes.
Métodos. 48 pacientes edéntulos totales (24 pacientes diabéticos y 24 no diabéticos) fueron tratados con 96 implan-
tes con superficie arenada y grabada Galimplant ® en la mandíbula para su rehabilitación prostodóncica con sobre-
dentaduras mandibulares. 2 implantes fueron insertados en cada paciente. Los implantes fueron cargados funcional-
mente tras un periodo de tiempo de 6 semanas con retenedores de fricción. Los hallazgos clínicos (implantológicos y
prostodóncicos) se han seguido durante 7 años.
Resultados. Los resultados indican una supervivencia de los implantes del 95,8%. Durante el periodo de seguimeinto
clínico se perdieron 4 implantes (dos implantes en cada grupo). La pérdida de hueso marginal media fué de 0,7 mm en
ambos grupos. El 100% de los pacientes fueron tratados mediante una sobredentadura implantorretenida con anclajes
de fricción. En 14 pacientes se realizaron cambios en los componentes plásticos de los ataches. El seguimiento clínico
medio fue de 82,5 meses (60-102 meses).
Conclusiones. Los resultados del presente estudio indican que el tratamiento con implantes dentales en pacientes
diabéticos es una terapéutica exitosa sin diferencias entre los pacientes diabéticos y no diabéticos.
PALABRAS CLAVE: Implantes dentales, pacientes geriátricos, diabetes mellitus, sobredentaduras, oseo-
integración, implantología oral.Introduction. Implant dentistry can to constitute a therapeutic modality in the prosthodontic treatment of
medically compromised patients. This study reports the evaluation of treatment with implants in patients with
diabetes compared with patients without diabetes.
Methods. 48 edentulous patients (24 diabetic patients and 24 non-diabetic patients) were treated with 96
Galimplant ® sand-blasted and acid-etched surface implants for prosthodontic rehabilitation with mandibular
overdentures. Two implants were inserted in each patient. Implants were loaded after a healing free-loading period between 6 weeks with locator attaches. Clinical findings (implant and prosthodontics) were followed
during at 7 years.
Results. Clinical results indicate a survival rate of implants of 95.8% in both groups. Four implant was lost
during the follow-up period (two implants in each group). Media marginal bone loss was 0.7 mm in both
groups. 100% of patients were treated with overdentures retained with 2 implants with locator attaches.
Changes in plastic components of attaches were reported in 14 patients. The media follow-up was of 82.5
months (60-102 months).
Conclusions. Clinical results of this study indicate that treatment with dental implants in diabetic patients is
a successful implant treatment without differences with nondiabetic patients
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