3 research outputs found

    Daily activity patterns of large and medium-sized mammals based on camera traps data in the Central Forest Nature Reserve, Valdai Upland, Russia

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    Here are presented the results of the analysis of daily activity patterns obtained from the data of camera traps for five large mammals (elk Alces alces, wild boar Sus scrofa, brown bear Ursus arctos, grey wolf Canis lupus, Eurasian lynx Lynx lynx) and three medium ones (European badger Meles meles, raccoon dog Nyctereutes procyonoides, mountain hare Lepus timidus) for the territory of the Central Forest Nature Reserve, Valdai Upland, Russia. Data were collected in the period 2010ā€“2017 and the trap effort was 30 158 camera days from 21 locations. Most of the mammals surveyed showed activity at night and twilight hours (71% of the pictures). The hare was most active among all and dominant at night. In many respects it is similar to the activity of a raccoon dog, which type can be defined as nocturnal too. Unlike a hare, a raccoon dog has a weak peak in the daytime and less activity in the night. Badgers movements are confined to the twilight and nighttime. The share of nocturnal activity of large ungulates such as elk and wild boar was approximately the same and amounted to about 45% of all registrations. The wild boar is slightly more active during the day and in the evening and is not active at all in the morning. The elk is active in the morning, and in the daytime and to a lesser extent in the evening. The lynx and the bear have similar cathemeral activity patterns: almost half of all their meetings occurred at daylight hours and only slightly ā€“ less than 40% ā€“ at night. The brown bear had the maximum number of registrations in the daytime among all the studied species. Despite the fact that the main object of lynx feeding in the reserve is the hare, there was no high degree of overlap between them (Ī³Ė† = 0.75). In the group of large carnivores, the wolf was noticeably distinguished, more than half of its registrations were at night, and a third ā€“ on daytime. Daily activities of the wolf and its main prey elk showed a large overlap (Ī³Ė† = 0.89). The seasonal variations of daily activity of all species were also shown. According to the results of factor analysis, each of the studied species was divided into one of three separate groups. The first group included species with a tendency to nocturnal activity (wolf, elk, hare, badger, and raccoon dog), the second group ā€“ cathemeral animals (bear and lynx). In the third group was only the wild boar, whose activity was associated with the evening hours. This is the first long-term continuous camera trap survey in Russia and it provides detailed daily activity patterns for multiple large and medium-sized sympatric mammals

    Hot Spots Of Soil Respiration In A Seasonally Dry Tropical Forest In Southern Vietnam: A Brief Study Of Spatial Distribution

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    Many studies reportĀ  asymmetricalĀ  spatial distributionĀ  of soil respiration caused by presence of areas with significantly higher emission rates (so-called hot spots). For seasonally dry tropicalĀ  forest soil respirationĀ  was measured on 1 ha plot with 20m, 5m and 1 m scale in the first half of dry season. 457 measurements made in 9 series at 54 sampling points. The results suggestĀ  that lognormalĀ  spatial distributionĀ  model appears to be much more supportedĀ  rather than the normal one. A statistical methodĀ  proposed for estimation the mean value and its confidenceĀ  interval of lognormally distributed data. The mean emission rate E(RS) for the lognormal distribution amountedĀ  to 4.28 Āµmol m-2 s-1, the 95% confidenceĀ  interval is 3.93 to 4.76 Āµmol m-2 s-1. However, the standard sample mean can be used as an estimator of the mean of lognormally distributed values of soil respirationĀ  if their coefficientĀ  of variance remains approximately the same as in our study (CV=0.35).Ā  Based on the data obtained and literatureĀ  sources,Ā  recommendationsĀ  are given on the number of samplingĀ  points for estimating the spatial average value with a given accuracy

    B cellā€dependent subtypes and treatmentā€based immune correlates to survival in stage 3 and 4 lung adenocarcinomas

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    Abstract Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancerā€related deaths worldwide. Surgery and chemoradiation are the standard of care in early stages of nonā€small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), while immunotherapy is the standard of care in lateā€stage NSCLC. The immune composition of the tumor microenvironment (TME) is recognized as an indicator for responsiveness to immunotherapy, although much remains unknown about its role in responsiveness to surgery or chemoradiation. In this pilot study, we characterized the NSCLC TME using mass cytometry (CyTOF) and bulk RNA sequencing (RNAā€Seq) with deconvolution of RNAā€Seq being performed by Kassandra, a recently published deconvolution tool. Stratification of patients based on the intratumoral abundance of B cells identified that the Bā€cell rich patient group had increased expression of CXCL13 and greater abundance of PD1+ CD8 T cells. The presence of B cells and PD1+ CD8 T cells correlated positively with the presence of intratumoral tertiary lymphoid structures (TLS). We then assessed the predictive and prognostic utility of these cell types and TLS within publicly available stage 3 and 4 lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) RNAā€Seq datasets. As previously described by others, preā€treatment expression of intratumoral 12ā€chemokine TLS gene signature is associated with progression free survival (PFS) in patients who receive treatment with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI). Notably and unexpectedly preā€treatment percentages of intratumoral B cells are associated with PFS in patients who receive surgery, chemotherapy, or radiation. Further studies to confirm these findings would allow for more effective patient selection for both ICI and nonā€ICI treatments
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