151 research outputs found

    Multi-year salutary effects of windstorm and fire on river cane

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    Canebrakes are monodominant stands of cane (Arundinaria gigantea [Walter] Muhl.), a bamboo native to and once prominent in the southeastern USA. Canebrakes were important wildlife habitat within the bottomland hardwood forest ecosystem. They have been reduced in areal coverage by an estimated 98% since European settlement due to land conversion and the drastic alteration of disturbance regimes in their floodplain habitat. Ongoing canebrake restoration efforts are hampered by incomplete understanding of the role of natural disturbance in cane ecology. We used a large tornado blow down and multiple prescribed fires to quantify the response of cane to the sequential disturbances of windstorm and fire in the Tensas Watershed of northeastern Louisiana using number and condition of bamboo stems (culms) as response variables. We hypothesized that culms would be more abundant in burned than in unburned stands and that culm populations in burned stands would be younger than in unburned stands. In this study, conducted four years post fire, effects of both windstorm and burning were additive and beneficial. Results indicate that periodic aboveground disturbance has three salutary effects on cane ramet demography: 1) clonal growth following disturbances more than compensates for any culms killed; 2) the cohort of new culms is younger than the culms they replace; and 3) disturbance appears to inoculate some cane stands for several years against local die-offs. Fire is a valuable tool for canebrake management. By periodically resetting cane stands, fires and other disturbances may have played a key role in canebrake formation and persistence over time

    Special issue on remote sensing of ocean color : Theory and applications

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    The editorial team are delighted to present this Special Issue of Sensors focused on Remote Sensing of Ocean Color: Theory and Applications. We believe that this is a timely opportunity to showcase current developments across a broad range of topics in ocean color remote sensing (OCRS). Although the field is well-established, in this Special Issue we are able to highlight advances in the applications of the technology, our understanding of the underpinning science, and its relevance in the context of monitoring climate change and engaging public participation

    Multiple health behaviours among mothers and partners in England : clustering, social patterning and intra-couple concordance

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    Research on multiple health behaviours is increasing but little is known about parental behaviours and how they covary. Our study investigates cigarette smoking, alcohol intake, fruit and vegetable (F&V) consumption and physical activity among mothers and co-resident partners in England. Using the UK Household Longitudinal Study, we examined (i) clustering of health behaviours using observed-expected ratios and latent class analysis (ii) socio-demographic correlates of the derived latent classes and (iii) intra-couple concordance of individual health behaviours and their latent classes. We identified five latent classes for mothers and partners: Never smoked drinkers (28% of mothers; 29% of partners), Abstainers (25%; 17%), Drinkers and ex-smokers (19%; 26%), Unhealthy low frequency drinkers (18%; 16%) and Unhealthiest behaviour group (11%; 12%). These had distinctive social profiles. Never smoked drinkers were more likely than those in other groups to be white and socially advantaged: married, older, and with higher educational qualifications and incomes. Abstainers were non-smokers who never or occasionally drank, and were disproportionately drawn from ethnic minority groups and middle/lower income families. Drinkers and ex-smokers were the most physically active group and were more likely to be socially advantaged. Unhealthy low frequency drinkers were more likely to be disadvantaged and have a limiting long-standing illness. The Unhealthiest behaviour group had the highest proportion of smokers, heavy smokers and binge drinkers and the lowest F&V intake and physical activity levels. They were largely white and socially disadvantaged: younger, non-married and with lower educational levels. Mothers and their partners typically shared the same risk behaviours, and 44 per cent of partners and mothers belonged to the same latent class. Our findings point to the potential for a broadening of research and policy perspectives, from separate behaviours to combinations of behaviours, and from individuals to the domestic units and communities of which they are part

    Distinctive temporal profiles of detergent-soluble and -insoluble tau and AĪ² species in human Alzheimer's disease

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    Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology relevant proteins tau and beta-amyloid (AĪ²) exist as an array of post-translationally modified and conformationally altered species with varying abundance, solubility and toxicity. Insoluble neurofibrillary tau tangles and AĪ² plaques are end-stage AD hallmarks, yet may carry less disease significance compared to soluble species. At present, it is unclear how soluble and insoluble tau and AĪ² relate to each other as well as to disease progression. Here, detergent soluble and insoluble fractions generated from post-mortem human temporal lobe samples (Brodmann area 21) were probed for tau and AĪ² markers in immuno-dot assays. Measures were quantified according to diagnosis (AD cf. Non-AD), neuropathological severity, and correlated with disease progression (Braak stages). All markers were elevated within AD cases cf. non-AD controls (p &lt; 0.05) independent of solubility. However, when considered according to neuropathological severity, phospho-tau (detected via CP13 and AT8 antibodies) was elevated early within the soluble fraction (p &lt; 0.05 intermediate cf. low severity) and emerged only later within the insoluble fraction (p &lt; 0.05 high cf. low severity). In contrast, PHF1 phospho-tau, TOC1 reactive tau oligomers and amyloid markers rose within the two fractions simultaneously. Independent of solubility, cognitive correlations were observed for tau makers and for fibrillary amyloid (OC), however only soluble total AĪ² was significantly correlated with intellectual impairment. Following the exclusion of end-stage cases, only soluble total AĪ² remained correlated with cognition. The data indicate differential rates of protein aggregation during AD progression and confirm the disease relevance of early emerging soluble AĪ² species.</p

    NLRP3 inflammasome inhibition with MCC950 improves insulin sensitivity and inflammation in a mouse model of frontotemporal dementia

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    Acknowledgments: This study was supported by ARUK project grant PG2017B-11 and ARUK summer scholarship funding from the Scottish ARUK network. The authors would like to thank Prof. Gernot Riedel for his support of the in vivo experimentation.Peer reviewedPostprin

    Synaptic Loss, ER Stress and Neuro-inflammation Emerge Late in the Lateral Temporal Cortex and Associate with Progressive Tau Pathology in Alzheimerā€™s Disease

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    Acknowledgements We would like to deeply thank all donors and their families for the tissue provided for this study. Human tissue samples were supplied by the Brains for Dementia Research programme, jointly funded by Alzheimerā€™s Research UK, the Alzheimerā€™s Society and the Medical Research Council, and sourced from the MRC London Neurodegenerative Diseases Brain Bank, the Manchester Brain Bank, the South West Dementia Brain Bank (SWDBB), the Newcastle Brain Tissue Resource and the Oxford Brain Bank. The Newcastle Brain Tissue Resource and Oxford Brain Bank are also supported by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Units. The South West Dementia Brain Bank (SWDBB) receives additional support from BRACE (Bristol Research into Alzheimerā€™s and Care of the Elderly). Use of human tissue for this work was approved by Brains for Dementia Research from London ā€“ City and East NRES committee 08/H0704/128+5. The work presented here was funded by Alzheimerā€™s Research UK (Grant refs: ARUK-PPG2014A-21, ARUK-NSG2015-1, ARUK-NCG2017A-3 awarded to DK and BP). HB was supported by an Alzheimerā€™s Society Doctoral Training Centre grant (grant ref: 228) to BP. MKā€™s participation in the project was funded by ARUK Scotland Network pump priming award to DK and BP. Antibodies CP13 and PHF1 were generously provided by Prof. Peter Davies. TOC1 antibodies were a gift from Nicholas Kanaan at Michigan State University (originally created by Lester Binder at Northwestern University). Funding The work presented here was funded by Alzheimerā€™s Research UK (Grant refs: ARUK-PPG2014A-21, ARUK-NSG2015-1, ARUK-NCG2017A-3 awarded to DK and BP). HB was supported by an Alzheimerā€™s Society Doctoral Training Centre grant (grant ref:228) to BP. MKā€™s participation in the project was funded by ARUK Scotland Network pump priming award to DK and BP.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
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