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Recent pace of change in human impact on the world's ocean.
Humans interact with the oceans in diverse and profound ways. The scope, magnitude, footprint and ultimate cumulative impacts of human activities can threaten ocean ecosystems and have changed over time, resulting in new challenges and threats to marine ecosystems. A fundamental gap in understanding how humanity is affecting the oceans is our limited knowledge about the pace of change in cumulative impact on ocean ecosystems from expanding human activities - and the patterns, locations and drivers of most significant change. To help address this, we combined high resolution, annual data on the intensity of 14 human stressors and their impact on 21 marine ecosystems over 11 years (2003-2013) to assess pace of change in cumulative impacts on global oceans, where and how much that pace differs across the ocean, and which stressors and their impacts contribute most to those changes. We found that most of the ocean (59%) is experiencing significantly increasing cumulative impact, in particular due to climate change but also from fishing, land-based pollution and shipping. Nearly all countries saw increases in cumulative impacts in their coastal waters, as did all ecosystems, with coral reefs, seagrasses and mangroves at most risk. Mitigation of stressors most contributing to increases in overall cumulative impacts is urgently needed to sustain healthy oceans
Correlating the Energetics and Atomic Motions of the Metal-Insulator Transition of M1 Vanadium Dioxide
Materials that undergo reversible metal-insulator transitions are obvious
candidates for new generations of devices. For such potential to be realised,
the underlying microscopic mechanisms of such transitions must be fully
determined. In this work we probe the correlation between the energy landscape
and electronic structure of the metal-insulator transition of vanadium dioxide
and the atomic motions occurring using first principles calculations and high
resolution X-ray diffraction. Calculations find an energy barrier between the
high and low temperature phases corresponding to contraction followed by
expansion of the distances between vanadium atoms on neighbouring sub-lattices.
X-ray diffraction reveals anisotropic strain broadening in the low temperature
structure's crystal planes, however only for those with spacings affected by
this compression/expansion. GW calculations reveal that traversing this barrier
destabilises the bonding/anti-bonding splitting of the low temperature phase.
This precise atomic description of the origin of the energy barrier separating
the two structures will facilitate more precise control over the transition
characteristics for new applications and devices.Comment: 11 Pages, 8 Figure
Increased insect herbivore performance under elevated CO2 is associated with lower plant defence signalling and minimal declines in nutritional quality
Changes in insect herbivore performance under elevated atmosphere carbon dioxide concentrations e[CO2] are often driven by changes in the nutritional and defensive chemistry of their host plants. Studies addressing how the prolific pest cotton bollworm (Helicoverpa armigera) responds to e[CO2] show that performance usually declines, often associated with lower nutritional (e.g. nitrogen (N) concentrations) quality of host plants under e[CO2]. We investigated the impacts of e[CO2] on nutritional quality and anti-herbivore (jasmonate) defensive signalling in lucerne (Medicago sativa) when challenged by H. armigera. While foliar N decreased under e[CO2], other aspects of nutritional quality (soluble protein, amino acids, foliar C:N) were largely unaffected, potentially due to increased root nodulation under e[CO2]. In contrast, e[CO2] greatly reduced jasmonate signalling in M. sativa following H. armigera attack; jasmonic acid concentrations were ca. 56% lower in attacked plants grown under e[CO2]. Concurrent with this, relative growth rates of H. armigera were ca. 66% higher when feeding on e[CO2]-grown plants. In contrast with previous reports, which we meta-analytically summarise, we provide the first evidence that H. armigera performance can increase under e[CO2]. This may occur in plants, such as M. sativa, where e[CO2] has limited impacts on nutritional quality yet reduces jasmonate defence signalling. Note: An Author Correction to this article was published on 07 December 2020. The PDF available here includes the correction appended to the original
Patient Fall Reduction Quality Improvement Project
https://digitalcommons.psjhealth.org/summit_all/1049/thumbnail.jp
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