295 research outputs found

    Proposition 11: Emergency Ambulance Employees Safety and Preparedness Act

    Get PDF

    Where are Long-Toed Salamanders Found in a Game of Hide-And-Seek With Trout?

    Get PDF
    In many alpine lakes, trout have been introduced for recreational fishing and have replaced native amphibians as top predators. In these systems, trout are associated with reducing the abundance of amphibians and have extirpated populations of long-toed salamanders ( Ambystoma macrodactylum) from many lakes. Although rare, salamander coexistence with trout may occur in some lakes where habitat characteristics such as emergent vegetation and physical barriers are present, as these environments can provide refugia from predation. We sought to identify what key habitat features might allow this co-occurrence. We sampled seven lakes with salamanders and fish and seven with only salamanders in northwestern Montana between July and August 2012. We used minnow traps to capture salamander larvae and we quantified habitat characteristics (e.g., vegetation density, structural complexity) where salamanders were captured. We compared capture rates and habitat characteristics to determine whether lakes with and without fish differed. Preliminary results suggest that salamander capture rates were higher in lakes with fish (33%, 95% CI = 13-84%), but salamanders were smaller, as larvae had 68 percent shorter tails (51-91%) in lakes with fish. Despite these differences, we did not detect any differences in habitat characteristics. Unless minnow traps were used as refugia, our findings suggest that salamanders utilize similar habitat in these lakes regardless of the presence of fish. Future work will examine factors influencing salamander growth and tail length and determine whether adding habitat complexity is an effective strategy to facilitate coexistence of salamanders and fish

    Investigating Coexistence Between Trout and Long-Toed Salamanders and the Indirect Effects of Fish Predators

    Get PDF
    In many, formerly fishless lakes in western North America, trout have been introduced for recreational fishing, replacing native amphibians as top predators. Trout are associated with reducing the abundance of amphibians and have extirpated populations of long-toed salamanders (Ambystoma macrodactylum). Salamanders and trout may coexist in some lakes, as larvae often are able to alter foraging behavior, use of open water, and time in refugia in response to predatory cues. However, salamanders are still subject to attacks and may have different body morphology in environments with fish. We sought to estimate minimum population sizes of long-toed salamanders, as well as investigate indirect effects of fish on salamander morphology. We sampled lakes with and without fish in northwestern Montana during the summers of 2012 and 2013. We caught salamander larvae using minnow traps, took several body measurements, and compared capture rates and morphological measurements between lakes with and without fish. Preliminary results suggest that more salamanders were captured per trap in lakes with fish (1.8 salamanders/trap, 95% CI = 1.3-2.4), compared to lakes without fish (0.58 salamanders/trap, 0.36-0.81), which could reflect higher population sizes or increased use of traps as refugia. However, salamanders in lakes with fish were smaller: they weighed less, had shorter snout-vent lengths, and had shorter and narrower tails. Even if salamanders are more abundant in lakes with fish, growth may be reduced. Further research into the coexistence of long-toed salamanders and trout may aid in developing conservation strategies for these and other amphibians affected by novel predators

    Politics, Bureaucracies, and Financial Markets: Bank Entry into Commercial Paper Underwriting in the United States and Japan

    Get PDF
    Americans writing about Japan seem to fall into two camps: those who think the Japanese act according to very different rules than Americans, so that the apparent similarities between the two peoples actually mask deep cultural differences; and those who think that the Japanese and the Americans are really rather similar, so that the obvious cultural differences cover more deep-rooted continuities

    The Genomics of Streptococcus Pneumoniae Carriage Isolates from UK Children and Their Household Contacts, Pre-PCV7 to Post-PCV13.

    Get PDF
    We used whole genome sequencing (WGS) analysis to investigate the population structure of 877 Streptococcus pneumoniae isolates from five carriage studies from 2002 (N = 346), 2010 (N = 127), 2013 (N = 153), 2016 (N = 187) and 2018 (N = 64) in UK households which covers the period pre-PCV7 to post-PCV13 implementation. The genomic lineages seen in the population were determined using multi-locus sequence typing (MLST) and PopPUNK (Population Partitioning Using Nucleotide K-mers) which was used for local and global comparisons. A Roary core genome alignment of all the carriage genomes was used to investigate phylogenetic relationships between the lineages. The results showed an influx of previously undetected sequence types after vaccination associated with non-vaccine serotypes. A small number of lineages persisted throughout, associated with both non-vaccine and vaccine types (such as ST199), or that could be an example of serotype switching from vaccine to non-vaccine types (ST177). Serotype 3 persisted throughout the study years, represented by ST180 and Global Pneumococcal Sequencing Cluster (GPSC) 12; the local PopPUNK analysis and core genome maximum likelihood phylogeny separated them into two clades, one of which is only seen in later study years. The genomic data showed that serotype replacement in the carriage studies was mostly due to a change in genotype as well as serotype, but that some important genetic lineages, previously associated with vaccine types, persisted

    Examining a potential brown treesnake transport pathway: shipments from Guam

    Get PDF
    Shipments of cargo and household goods have been identified as pathways for brown treesnake (Boiga irregularis) transport from Guam to other locations. We analyzed data regarding shipments of military household goods leaving Guam during 2006 to 2009 to identify the potential for human transport of brown treesnakes to the United States by determining when shipments most commonly occur and identifying primary receiving areas. We found that the number of shipments was highest during the months of May and June and that California receives more shipments (23% of total shipments) than any other location. Approximately 98% of shipments originated from the U.S. Navy and U.S. Air Force, with naval shipments increasing over time. Guam is currently undergoing a military buildup during which shipments are expected to increase, suggesting the need for increased vigilance and prioritization of inspection efforts
    corecore