107 research outputs found
The reproductive cycle of the thorny skate (Amblyraid radiata) in the western Gulf of Maine
The thorny skate (Amblyraja radiata) is a large species of skate that is endemic to the waters of the western north Atlantic in the Gulf of Maine. Because the biomass of thorny skates has recently declined below threshold levels mandated by the Sustainable Fisheries Act, commercial harvests from this region are prohibited. We have undertaken a comprehensive study to gain insight into the life history of this skate. The present study describes and characterizes the reproductive cycle of female and male thorny skates, based on monthly samples taken off the coast of New Hampshire, from May 2001 to May 2003. Gonadosomatic index (GSI), shell gland weight, follicle size, and egg case formation, were assessed for 48 female skates. In general, these reproductive parameters remained relatively constant throughout most of the year. However, transient but significant increases in shell gland weight and GSI were observed during certain months. Within the cohort of specimens sampled monthly throughout the year, a subset of females always had large preovulatory follicles present in their ovaries. With the exception of June and September specimens, egg cases undergoing various stages of development were observed in the uteri of specimens captured during all other months of the year. For males (n=48), histological stages Ill through VI (SIII-SVI) of spermatogenesis, GSI, and hepatosomatic index (HSI) were examined. Although there appeared to be monthly fluctuations in spermatogenesis, GSI, and HSI, no significant differences were found. The production and maintenance of mature spermatocysts (SVI) within the testes was observed throughout the year. These findings collectively indicate that the thorny skate is reproductively active year round
The reproductive cycle of the thorny skate (Amblyraja radiata) in the western Gulf of Maine
The thorny skate (Amblyraja radiata) is a large species of
skate that is endemic to the waters of the western north Atlantic in the Gulf of Maine. Because the biomass of thorny skates has recently declined below threshold levels mandated by the Sustainable Fisheries Act, commercial
harvests from this region are prohibited. We have undertaken
a comprehensive study to gain insight into the life history of this skate. The present study describes and
characterizes the reproductive cycle of female and male thorny skates, based on monthly samples taken off the coast of New Hampshire, from May 2001 to May 2003. Gonadosomatic
index (GSI), shell gland weight, follicle size, and egg case formation, were assessed for 48 female skates. In general, these reproductive parameters remained relatively constant throughout most of the year. However, transient but significant increases in shell gland weight and GSI were
obser ved during certain months. Within the cohort of specimens sampled monthly throughout the year, a subset of females always had large preovulatory follicles present in their ovaries. With the exception of June and September specimens, egg cases undergoing various stages of development were observed in the uteri of specimens captured during all other months of the year. For males (n=48), histological stages III through VI (SIIIâSVI) of spermatogenesis, GSI, and hepatosomatic index (HSI) were
examined. Although there appeared to be monthly fluctuations in spermatogenesis, GSI, and HSI, no significant differences were found. The production and maintenance of mature spermatocysts (SVI) within the testes was observed throughout the year. These findings collectively indicate that the thorny skate is reproductively active year round
Research priorities in trans health: a Delphi-study
PurposeProgress has been made in understanding trans health needs, but research priorities are often set by policy or healthcare professionals without trans input, which may not reflect public needs. Our study sought to identify trans health research priorities in France from both researchers and the trans community.MethodsExpert stakeholders (health and social sciences professionals, trans individuals, and their families) answered a three-round Delphi survey on trans health research priorities. The first round involved an open-ended questionnaire, analyzed qualitatively. In the second round, participants ranked research propositions from round one using a Likert scale. The studyâs second phase involved a two-hour workshop with experts and trans individuals.Results53 participants (32% trans individuals/relatives, 60% health professionals) contributed 217 responses to open-ended questions, leading to 44 research priorities. After the two voting rounds, a total of five proposals reached a strong consensus cut-off and were considered as the main research priorities: evaluation of the effect of puberty blocker use in trans children and adolescents (95%), evaluation of the effect of supporting trans children and adolescents (92%), study of the support systems available for trans youth and their parents (86%), persistence of trans identity around puberty (prevalence, persistent persons characteristics) (86%), and needs assessment survey of the support for adolescents and their families (83%). Thirteen other proposals were considered moderate priorities.ConclusionThe main consensus in our French study concerned research on trans-youth care and support needs. Our results may guide further trans-health research that meets the publicâs needs and desires
Altered paired associative stimulation-induced plasticity in NMDAR encephalitis
Objective: To determine whether neurophysiological mechanisms indicating cortical excitability, long-term potentiation (LTP)-like plasticity, GABAergic and glutamatergic function are altered in patients with anti-N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) encephalitis and whether they can be helpful as markers of diagnostic assessment, disease progression, and potentially therapy response. Methods: Neurophysiological characterizations of patients with NMDAR encephalitis (n = 34, mean age: 28 Âą 11 years; 30 females) and age/gender-matched healthy controls (n = 27, 28.5 Âą 10 years; 25 females) were performed using transcranial magnetic stimulation-derived protocols including resting motor threshold, recruitment curve, intracortical facilitation, short intracortical inhibition, and cortical silent period. Paired associative stimulation (PAS) was applied to assess LTP-like mechanisms which are mediated through NMDAR. Moreover, resting state functional connectivity was determined using functional magnetic resonance imaging. Results: PAS-induced plasticity differed significantly between groups (P = 0.0056). Cortical excitability, as assessed via motor-evoked potentials after PAS, decreased in patients, whereas it increased in controls indicating malfunctioning of NMDAR in encephalitis patients. Lower PAS-induced plasticity significantly correlated with the modified Rankin Scale (mRS) (r = â0.41; P = 0.0031) and was correlated with lower functional connectivity within the motor network in NMDAR encephalitis patients (P < 0.001, uncorrected). Other neurophysiological parameters were not significantly different between groups. Follow-up assessments were available in six patients and demonstrated parallel improvement of PAS-induced plasticity and mRS. Interpretation: Assessment of PAS-induced plasticity may help to determine NMDAR dysfunction and disease severity in NMDAR encephalitis, and might even aid as a sensitive, noninvasive, and well-tolerated âelectrophysiological biomarkerâ to monitor therapy response in the future.Clinical Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov: Identifier: NCT0186557
Luminous K-band Selected Quasars from UKIDSS
The largest K-band flux-limited sample of luminous quasars to date has been
constructed from the UKIDSS Large Area Survey Early Data Release, covering an
effective area of 12.8 deg^2. Exploiting the K-band excess of all quasars with
respect to foreground stars, including quasars experiencing dust reddening and
objects with non-standard SEDs, a list of targets suitable for spectroscopic
follow-up observations with the AAOmega multi-object spectrograph is
constructed, resulting in more than 200 confirmed AGN. KX-selection
successfully identifies as quasar candidates objects that are excluded from the
SDSS quasar selection algorithm due to their colours being consistent with the
stellar locus in optical colour space (with the space density of the excluded
objects agreeing well with results from existing completeness analyses). Nearly
half of the KX-selected quasars with K<17.0 at z<3 are too faint in the i-band
to have been targeted by the SDSS quasar selection algorithm, revealing a large
population of quasars with red i-K colours. The majority of these objects have
significant amounts of host galaxy light contributing to their K-band
magnitudes, consistent with previous predictions. The remaining objects are
morphologically stellar and have colours consistent with quasars experiencing
SMC-type reddening with 0.10<E(B-V)<0.25. The i-K colour distribution indicates
that <10 per cent of the quasar population is missing from this K-band selected
sample due to dust reddening, and comparisons with simulations strongly favour
an obscured fraction of <20 per cent. (Abridged)Comment: 22 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS. Resolution
of Figure 2 has been reduced for astro-ph submission. The complete Table 5
can be found at http://www.aip.de/People/nmaddox/KX/catalogue.tx
Using a complete spectroscopic survey to find red quasars and test the KX method
We present an investigation of quasar colour-redshift parameter space in
order to search for radio-quiet red quasars and to test the ability of a
variant of the KX quasar selection method to detect quasars over a full range
of colour without bias. This is achieved by combining IRIS2 imaging with the
complete Fornax Cluster Spectroscopic Survey to probe parameter space
unavailable to other surveys. We construct a new sample of 69 quasars with
measured bJ - K colours. We show that the colour distribution of these quasars
is significantly different from that of the Large Bright Quasar Survey's
quasars at a 99.9% confidence level. We find 11 of our sample of 69 quasars
have signifcantly red colours (bJ - K >= 3.5) and from this, we estimate the
red quasar fraction of the K <= 18.4 quasar population to be 31%, and robustly
constrain it to be at least 22%. We show that the KX method variant used here
is more effective than the UVX selection method, and has less colour bias than
optical colour-colour selection methods.Comment: 11 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
SDSS J092455.87+021924.9: an Interesting Gravitationally Lensed Quasar from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
We report the discovery of a new gravitationally lensed quasar from the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey, SDSS J092455.87+021924.9 (SDSS J0924+0219). This object was
selected from among known SDSS quasars by an algorithm that was designed to
select another known SDSS lensed quasar (SDSS 1226-0006A,B). Five separate
components, three of which are unresolved, are identified in photometric
follow-up observations obtained with the Magellan Consortium's 6.5m Walter
Baade telescope at Las Campanas Observatory. Two of the unresolved components
(designated A and B) are confirmed to be quasars with z=1.524; the velocity
difference is less than 100 km sec^{-1} according to spectra taken with the W.
M. Keck Observatory's Keck II telescope on Mauna Kea. A third stellar
component, designated C, has the colors of a quasar with redshift similar to
components A and B. The maximum separation of the point sources is 1.78". The
other two sources, designated G and D, are resolved. Component G appears to be
the best candidate for the lensing galaxy. Although component D is near the
expected position of the fourth lensed component in a four image lens system,
its properties are not consistent with being the image of a quasar at z~1.5.
Nevertheless, the identical redshifts of components A and B and the presence of
component C strongly suggest that this object is a gravitational lens. Our
observations support the idea that a foreground object reddens the fourth
lensed component and that another unmodeled effect (such as micro- or
milli-lensing) demagnificates it, but we cannot rule out the possibility that
SDSS0924+0219 is an example of the relatively rare class of ``three component''
lens systems.Comment: 24 pages, 6 figures, accepted by A
Impact of voxelotor (GBT440) on unconjugated bilirubin and jaundice in sickle cell disease
For many patients with sickle cell disease (SCD), jaundice is a significant clinical disease manifestation that impacts on patient well-being. We report a case of a patient with SCD and chronic jaundice treated with voxelotor (GBT440), a novel small molecule hemoglobin oxygen affinity modulator and potential disease-modifying therapy for SCD. The case patient is a 27- year-old Black male with a long history of SCD with clinical jaundice and scleral icterus. After starting voxelotor, the patient reported that his jaundice cleared within one week, and that he felt much better with more energy, and was relieved after his eyes cleared. Voxelotor reduced bilirubin and unconjugated bilirubin (by up to 76%), and hemoglobin improved from 9.9 g/dL at baseline to 11.1 g/dL at 90 days. Jaundice impacts many adults with SCD, significantly impacting self-image. Voxelotor treatment reduced bilirubin levels and improved jaundice, resulting in an improved sense of well-being in our case patient
On convergence and threshold properties of discrete lotka-volterra population protocols
In this work we focus on a natural class of population protocols whose dynamics are modeled by the discrete version of Lotka-Volterra equations with no linear term. In such protocols, when an agent a of type (species) i interacts with an agent b of type (species) j with a as the initiator, then bâs type becomes i with probability Pij. In such an interaction, we think of a as the predator, b as the prey, and the type of the prey is either converted to that of the predator or stays as is. Such protocols capture the dynamics of some opinion spreading models and generalize the well-known Rock-Paper-Scissors discrete dynamics. We consider the pairwise interactions among agents that are scheduled uniformly at random. We start by considering the convergence time and show that any Lotka-Volterra-type protocol on an n-agent populati
Age and growth estimates of the thorny skate (Amblyraja radiata) in the western Gulf of Maine
The northwest Atlantic population of thorny skates (Amblyraja radiata) inhabits an area that ranges from Greenland and Hudson Bay, Canada, to South Carolina. Despite such a wide range, very little is known about most aspects of the biology of this species. Recent stock
assessment studies in the northeast United States indicate that the biomass of the thorny skate is below the threshold levels mandated by the Sustainable Fisheries Act. In order
to gain insight into the life history of this skate, we estimated age and growth for thorny skates, using vertebral
band counts from 224 individuals ranging in size from 29 to 105 cm total length (TL). Age bias plots and the coefficient of variation indicated that our aging method represents a nonbiased and precise approach for the age assessment of A. radiata. Marginal increments were significantly different between months (Kruskal-Wallis P<0.001); a distinct trend of increasing monthly increment growth began in August. Age-at-length data were used to determine the von Bertalanffy growth parameters for this
population: Lâ = 127 cm (TL) and k= 0.11 for males; Lâ = 120 cm (TL) and k= 0.13 for females. The oldest age estimates obtained for the thorny skate were 16 years for both males and females, which corresponded to total lengths of 103 cm and 105 cm, respectively
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