1,050 research outputs found
Original Public Meaning and Pregnancyâs Ambiguities
Relying on 1868 abortion statutes, the 2022 Supreme Court held in Dobbs v. Jackson Womenâs Health Organization that no federal constitutional right to abortion exists. Mere months later, a petition for certiorari asked the Court to determine that âpersonâ in the Fourteenth Amendment includes prenatal existence, which would require criminalization of abortion in all states. The petitioners cited Dobbs and claimed the authority of legal history in 1868 and before. These arguments will be heard again, and they are increasingly framed in terms of the âoriginal public meaningâ of the Fourteenth Amendment.
This Article refutes these arguments on their own terms. It looks at 1868, but it doesnât stop at statutes, treatises, or dictionaries. Instead, it looks at the reality of pregnancy in 1868, as experienced by the publicâin particular, by women and their doctors. This was a reality full of ambiguities. Pregnancy was not medically diagnosable until quickening; ideas of prenatal development were fluid and women let doctors take their miscarried fetal tissue and stillborn babies away for scientific study; and pregnancy loss was common, expected, and impossible to distinguish from abortion.
Women and their doctors lived these ambiguities. Nothing in the laws in 1868 changed them. These ambiguities similarly negate any possibility that the original public meaning of âpersonâ in the Fourteenth Amendment included prenatal existence
Supplementary feeding increases nestling feather corticosterone early in the breeding season in house sparrows
Several studies on birds have proposed that a lack of invertebrate prey in urbanized areas could be the main cause for generally lower levels of breeding success compared to rural habitats. Previous work on house sparrows Passer domesticus found that supplemental feeding in urbanized areas increased breeding success but did not contribute to population growth. Here, we hypothesize that supplementary feeding allows house sparrows to achieve higher breeding success but at the cost of lower nestling quality. As abundant food supplies may permit both high-and low-quality nestlings to survive, we also predict that within-brood variation in proxies of nestling quality would be larger for supplemental food broods than for unfed broods. As proxies of nestling quality, we considered feather corticosterone (CORTf), body condition (scaled mass index, SMI), and tarsus-based fluctuating asymmetry (FA). Our hypothesis was only partially supported as we did not find an overall effect of food supplementation on FA or SMI. Rather, food supplementation affected nestling phenotype only early in the breeding season in terms of elevated CORTf levels and a tendency for more variable within-brood CORTf and FA. Early food supplemented nests therefore seemed to include at least some nestlings that faced increased stressors during development, possibly due to harsher environmental (e.g., related to food and temperature) conditions early in the breeding season that would increase sibling competition, especially in larger broods. The fact that CORTf was positively, rather than inversely, related to nestling SMI further suggests that factors influencing CORTf and SMI are likely operating over different periods or, alternatively, that nestlings in good nutritional condition also invest in high-quality feathers
Stability of longitudinal bunch length feedback for heavy-ion synchrotrons
In heavy-ion synchrotrons such as the SIS18 at Helmholtzzentrum fĂŒr Schwerionenforschung, Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research (GSI), coherent oscillations of the particle bunches are damped by rf feedback systems to increase the stability and to improve the beam quality. In the longitudinal direction, important modes are the coherent longitudinal dipole and quadrupole oscillation. In this paper we present a new and rigorous approach to analyze the longitudinal feedback to damp these modes. The results are applied to the rf feedback loop at GSI that damps the quadrupole mode. The stability analysis is compared with simulations and is in good agreement with results of a beam experiment. Finally, we summarize practical implications for the operation of the feedback system regarding performance and stability
A stochastic movement simulator improves estimates of landscape connectivity
Acknowledgments This publication issued from the project TenLamas funded by the French MinistĂšre de l'Energie, de l'Ecologie, du DĂ©veloppement Durable et de la Mer through the EU FP6 BiodivERsA Eranet; by the Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) through the open call INDHET and 6th extinction MOBIGEN to V. M. Stevens, M. Baguette, and A. Coulon, and young researcher GEMS (ANR-13-JSV7-0010-01) to V. M. Stevens and M. Baguette; and by a VLIR-VLADOC scholarship awarded to J. Aben. L. Lens, J. Aben, D. Strubbe, and E. Matthysen are grateful to the Research Foundation Flanders (FWO) for financial support of fieldwork and genetic analysis (grant G.0308.13). V. M. Stevens and M. Baguette are members of the âLaboratoire d'Excellenceâ (LABEX) entitled TULIP (ANR-10-LABX-41). J. M. J. Travis and S. C. F. Palmer also acknowledge the support of NERC. A. Coulon and J. Aben contributed equally to the work.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Evolution along the Great Rift Valley: phenotypic and genetic differentiation of East African white-eyes (Aves, Zosteropidae)
The moist and cool cloud forests of East Africa represent a network of isolated habitats that are separated by dry and warm lowland savannah, offering an opportunity to investigate how strikingly different selective regimes affect species diversification. Here, we used the passerine genus Zosterops (white-eyes) from this region as our model system. Species of the genus occur in contrasting distribution settings, with geographical mountain isolation driving diversification, and savannah interconnectivity preventing differentiation. We analyze (1) patterns of phenotypic and genetic differentiation in high- and lowland species (different distribution settings), (2) investigate the potential effects of natural selection and temporal and spatial isolation (evolutionary drivers), and (3) critically review the taxonomy of this species complex. We found strong phenotypic and genetic differentiation among and within the three focal species, both in the highland species complex and in the lowland taxa. Altitude was a stronger predictor of phenotypic patterns than the current taxonomic classification. We found longitudinal and latitudinal phenotypic gradients for all three species. Furthermore, wing length and body weight were significantly correlated with altitude and habitat type in the highland species Z.poliogaster. Genetic and phenotypic divergence showed contrasting inter- and intraspecific structures. We suggest that the evolution of phenotypic characters is mainly driven by natural selection due to differences in the two macro-habitats, cloud forest and savannah. In contrast, patterns of neutral genetic variation appear to be rather driven by geographical isolation of the respective mountain massifs. Populations of the Z.poliogaster complex, as well as Z.senegalensis and Z.abyssinicus, are not monophyletic based on microsatellite data and have higher levels of intraspecific differentiation compared to the currently accepted species
Alpha-decay Rates of Yb and Gd in Solar Neutrino Detectors
The -decay rates for the nuclides Yb
and Gd have been estimated from transmission probabilities
in a systematic -nucleus potential and from an improved fit to
-decay rates in the rare-earth mass region. Whereas -decay of
Gd in natural gadolinium is a severe obstacle for the use of gadolinium
as a low-energy solar-neutrino detector, we show that
-decay does not contribute significantly to the background in a
ytterbium detector. An extremely long -decay lifetime of Yb
is obtained from calculation, which may be close to the sensitivity limit in a
low-background solar neutrino detector.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figure; An author name was correcte
Distribution and abundance of long-finned pilot whales in the North Atlantic, estimated from NASS-87 and NASS-89 data
During the summers of 1987 and 1989, large scale transect surveys were conducted
throughout the North Atlantic by several national agencies in Denmark (off Greenland),
Faroe Islands, Iceland, Norway and Spain (North Atlantic Sightings Surveys, NASS-87 and
NASS-89). This paper analyses the pilot whale (Globicephala melas) survey data collected by
three Icelandic and one Faroese survey vessel in 1987, and four Icelandic, one Faroese and
one Spanish vessel in 1989. Norwegian survey vessels operated north and east of this area in
both years, but only five groups (three primary sightings) were observed in 1989 and none in
1987. Furthermore, no sightings were made in the area north and northeast of Iceland, thus
indicating that the joint surveys covered the northernmost areas of pilot whale distribution
east of 42°W. The area further to the west was not covered in either survey. The coastal
European waters between 42-52°N were covered by the Spanish vessel in 1989. Sightings
made in 1989 by the Icelandic vessels tended to be at the southernmost boundaries of the
survey area.
The present data were examined with respect to several potential stratification factors,
namely geographic block, Beaufort (i.e. wind speed), vessel and school size, but sample size
precluded stratification by all these factors simultaneously. The encounter rate was generally
lower in the 1987 survey than in 1989, but the difference was not statistically significant. The
total estimate for the 1989 survey, covering a wider area and further to the south than in 1987,
was 778,000 (CV=0.295). This is regarded as the best available estimate of the total stock of
long-finned pilot whales in the northeastern North Atlantic Ocean, although small numbers
occur outside the NASS survey areas. The paper discusses potential biases in the abundance
estimates, and the problems of estimating pilot whale abundance from sightings data
Do wild-caught urban house sparrows show desensitized stress responses to a novel stressor?
While urbanization exposes individuals to novel challenges, urban areas may also constitute stable environments in which seasonal fluctuations are buffered. Baseline and stress-induced plasma corticosterone (cort) levels are often found to be similar in urban and rural populations. Here we aimed to disentangle two possible mechanisms underlying such pattern: (i) urban environments are no more stressful or urban birds have a better ability to habituate to stressors; or (ii) urban birds developed desensitized stress responses. We exposed wild-caught urban and rural house sparrows (Passer domesticus) to combined captivity and diet treatments (urban versus rural diet) and measured corticosterone levels both in natural tail feathers and in regrown homologous ones (cort(f)). Urban and rural house sparrows showed similar cort(f) levels in the wild and in response to novel stressors caused by the experiment, supporting the growing notion that urban environments are no more stressful during the non-breeding season than are rural ones. Still, juveniles and males originating from urban populations showed the highest cort(f) levels in regrown feathers. We did not find evidence that cort(f) was consistent within individuals across moults. Our study stresses the need for incorporating both intrinsic and environmental factors for the interpretation of variation in cort(f) between populations
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