53 research outputs found
Historical development of the survivorship of zoo rhinocerosesâA comparative historical analysis
Zoo animal husbandry is a skill that should be developing constantly. In theory, this should lead to an improvement of zoo animal survivorship over time. Additionally, it has been suggested that species that are at a comparatively higher risk of extinction in their natural habitats (in situ) might also be more difficult to keep under zoo conditions (ex situ). Here, we assessed these questions for three zooâmanaged rhinoceros species with different extinction risk status allocated by the IUCN: the âcritically endangeredâ black rhino (Diceros bicornis), the âvulnerableâ greater oneâhorned (GOH) rhino (Rhinoceros unicornis), and the ânear threatenedâ white rhino (Ceratotherium simum). Comparing zoo animals â„1 year of age, the black rhino had the lowest and the white rhino the highest survivorship, in congruence with their extinction risk status. Historically, the survivorship of both black and white rhino in zoos improved significantly over time, whereas that of GOH rhino stagnated. Juvenile mortality was generally low and decreased even further in black and white rhinos over time. Together with the development of population pyramids, this shows increasing competence of the global zoo community to sustain all three species. Compared to the continuously expanding zoo population of GOH and white rhinos, the zooâmanaged black rhino population has stagnated in numbers in recent years. Zoos do not only contribute to conservation by propagating ex situ populations, but also by increasing speciesâspecific husbandry skills. We recommend detailed research to understand specific factors responsible for the stagnation but also the general improvement of survivorship of zooâmanaged rhinos
Assessing zoo giraffe survivorship: Methodological aspects, historical improvement and a rapid demographic shift
Giraffe have been kept in zoos for a long time. They have traditionally been considered difficult to maintain due to various husbandry requirements, including their nature as intrinsic browsers. However, zoo animals are expected to achieve higher survivorship than free-ranging conspecifics due to protection against dangers that would be experienced in their natural habitat. Global zoo giraffe data was analysed for historical developments of juvenile and adult survivorship, assessing the data with various demographic measures and comparing it to that of populations from natural habitats. Additionally, zoo population structure was analysed, in particular with respect to two events that occurred in parallel in 2014âa recommendation to restrict the number of new offspring given by the European Endangered Species Programme (EEP) studbook coordinator and the culling of a designated âsurplusâ giraffe at Copenhagen Zoo that attracted global media attention. Both juvenile and adult giraffe survivorship has increased over time, suggesting advances in giraffe husbandry. For juveniles, this process has been continuous, whereas for adults the major progress has been in the most recent cohort (from 2000 onwards), in parallel with the publication of various husbandry guidelines. Zoo giraffe survivorship is now generally above that observed in natural habitats. Simple survivorship analyses appear suitable to describe these developments. Since 2014, the global giraffe population has undergone a rapid demographic shift from a growing to an ageing population, indicating a drastic limitation of reproduction rather than a system where reproduction is allowed and selected animals are killed (and possibly fed to carnivores). Thus, giraffe are both a showcase example for the historical progress made in zoo animal husbandry due to efforts of the zoo community and serve as an example to discuss implications of different methods of zoo population management
Reproductive non-seasonality in rhinoceroses: A review of the in-situ literature and birth records of ex-situ institutions
Mammals whose breeding activity is triggered by seasonal photoperiodic cues typically maintain seasonal reproduction in zoos, with births accumulating to various degrees in spring. For zoo-kept rhinoceroses, accumulation of births in autumn has been suggested, which would make this group unusual. We compare birthing (and hence conception) patterns of free-ranging rhinoceros populations from the scientific literature with those of the global zoo populations based on birth data available from Species360, to facilitate deductions on the cues that trigger rhinoceros reproduction. The patterns do not indicate a photoperiodic element in rhinoceros reproduction but suggest suppression of conception in free-ranging populations at times of resource scarcity. This is not evident in zoos. However, a slight accumulation of autumn births, due to a slight reduction in births in spring, is visible in the zoo populations. Given rhinoceros gestation periods, this is linked to reduced conceptions in NovemberâDecember. The most parsimonious interpretation is management-related, as has been suggested (Roth 2006, Int. Zoo Yb. 40(1): 130â143): not all facilities are prepared to allow mating at times when outdoor husbandry is reduced due to weather restrictions. Given the long interbirth intervals of rhinoceroses, missed conception opportunities of 1â2 months are unlikely to affect population demographics. Nevertheless, detailed recording of approaches to facilitate mating during winter months by those zoos that achieve this may increase the general skill of rhinoceros management
The historical development of zoo elephant survivorship
In the discussion about zoo elephant husbandry, the report of Clubb et al. (2008, Science 322: 1649) that zoo elephants had a âcompromised survivorshipâ compared to certain non-zoo populations is a grave argument, and was possibly one of the triggers of a large variety of investigations into zoo elephant welfare, and changes in zoo elephant management. A side observation of that report was that whereas survivorship in African elephants (Loxodonta africana) improved since 1960, this was not the case in Asian elephants (Elephas maximus). We used historical data (based on the Species360 database) to revisit this aspect, including recent developments since 2008. Assessing the North American and European populations from 1910 until today, there were significant improvements of adult (â„10 years) survivorship in both species. For the period from 1960 until today, survivorship improvement was significant for African elephants and close to a significant improvement in Asian elephants; Asian elephants generally had a higher survivorship than Africans. Juvenile (<10 years) survivorship did not change significantly since 1960 and was higher in African elephants, most likely due to the effect of elephant herpes virus on Asian elephants. Current zoo elephant survivorship is higher than some, and lower than some other non-zoo populations. We discuss that in our view, the shape of the survivorship curve, and its change over time, are more relevant than comparisons with specific populations. Zoo elephant survivorship should be monitored continuously, and the expectation of a continuous trend towards improvement should be met
The Novel Atypical Dopamine Uptake Inhibitor (S)-CE-123 Partially Reverses the Effort-Related Effects of the Dopamine Depleting Agent Tetrabenazine and Increases Progressive Ratio Responding
Animal studies of effort-based choice behavior are being used to model effort-related
motivational dysfunctions in humans. With these procedures, animals are offered a choice
between high-effort instrumental actions leading to highly valued reinforcers vs. low effort/
low reward options. Several previous studies have shown that dopamine (DA) uptake
inhibitors, including GBR12909, lisdexamfetamine, methylphenidate, and PRX-14040,
can reverse the effort-related effects of the vesicular monoamine transport blocker
tetrabenazine, which inhibits DA storage. Because many drugs that block DA transport
act as major stimulants that also release DA, and produce a number of undesirable
side effects, there is a need to develop and characterize novel atypical DA transport
inhibitors. (S)-CE-123 ((S)-5-((benzhydrylsulfnyl) methyl)thiazole) is a recently developed
analog of modafnil with the biochemical characteristics of an atypical DA transport
blocker. The present paper describes the enantioselective synthesis and initial chemical
characterization of (S)-CE-123, as well as behavioral experiments involving effort-based
choice and microdialysis studies of extracellular DA. Rats were assessed using the fxed
ratio 5/chow feeding choice test. Tetrabenazine (1.0 mg/kg) shifted choice behavior,
decreasing lever pressing and increasing chow intake. (S)-CE-123 was coadministered
at doses ranging from 6.0 to 24.0 mg/kg, and the highest dose partially but signifcantly
reversed the effects of tetrabenazine, although this dose had no effect on fxed ratio
responding when administered alone. Additional experiments showed that (S)-CE-123
signifcantly increased lever pressing on a progressive ratio/chow feeding choice task and
that the effective dose (24.0 mg/kg) increased extracellular DA in nucleus accumbens core.
In summary, (S)-CE-123 has the behavioral and neurochemical profle of a compound
that can block DA transport, reverse the effort-related effects of tetrabenazine, and
increase selection of high-effort progressive ratio responding. This suggests that (S)-CE-
123 or a similar compound could be useful as a treatment for effort-related motivational
dysfunction in humans
Discovering multiword expressions
In this paper, we provide an overview of research on multiword expressions (MWEs), from a natural lan- guage processing perspective. We examine methods developed for modelling MWEs that capture some of their linguistic properties, discussing their use for MWE discovery and for idiomaticity detection. We con- centrate on their collocational and contextual preferences, along with their fixedness in terms of canonical forms and their lack of word-for-word translatatibility. We also discuss a sample of the MWE resources that have been used in intrinsic evaluation setups for these methods
Building in Hongkong. Field Excursion of the Department of Civil Engineering of the HTWG Konstanz 2012
Hongkong steht als Welthandelsmetropole auch fĂŒr Superlative des Bauens. Dies gilt fĂŒr die in britischer Zeit errichteten Bauten, aber auch fĂŒr die nach der Ăbergabe an China entstandenen HochhĂ€user und BrĂŒckenbauwerke. Der Exkursionsbericht der FakultĂ€t Bauingenieurwesen der HTWG Konstanz gibt einen Eindruck von diesen AktivitĂ€ten. Er schildert BrĂŒcken- und Hochhausbauten, Tunnelbaustellen und die Baustelle eines KlĂ€rschlammverbrennungswerks, die wĂ€hrend einer Exkursionswoche im September 2012 besichtigt wurden. DarĂŒber hinaus gibt er einen Einblick in die wirtschaftliche Dynamik der Stadt.As a global metropolis Hongkong also stands for outstanding building activities. The report depicts the impressions during a student field excursion of the Faculty of Civil Engineering of the University of Applied Sciences Konstanz, Germany, to construction sites in Hongkong in September 2012
A Practical Guide for the Effective Evaluation of Twitter User Geolocation
Geolocating Twitter users---the task of identifying their home
locations---serves a wide range of community and business applications such as
managing natural crises, journalism, and public health. Many approaches have
been proposed for automatically geolocating users based on their tweets; at the
same time, various evaluation metrics have been proposed to measure the
effectiveness of these approaches, making it challenging to understand which of
these metrics is the most suitable for this task. In this paper, we propose a
guide for a standardized evaluation of Twitter user geolocation by analyzing
fifteen models and two baselines in a controlled experimental setting. Models
are evaluated using ten metrics over four geographic granularities. We use rank
correlations to assess the effectiveness of these metrics.
Our results demonstrate that the choice of effectiveness metric can have a
substantial impact on the conclusions drawn from a geolocation system
experiment, potentially leading experimenters to contradictory results about
relative effectiveness. We show that for general evaluations, a range of
performance metrics should be reported, to ensure that a complete picture of
system effectiveness is conveyed. Given the global geographic coverage of this
task, we specifically recommend evaluation at micro versus macro levels to
measure the impact of the bias in distribution over locations. Although a lot
of complex geolocation algorithms have been applied in recent years, a majority
class baseline is still competitive at coarse geographic granularity. We
propose a suite of statistical analysis tests, based on the employed metric, to
ensure that the results are not coincidental.Comment: Accepted in the journal of ACM Transactions on Social Computing
(TSC). Extended version of the ASONAM 2018 short paper. Please cite the
TSC/ASONAM version and not the arxiv versio
Transcriptomic analysis of crustacean neuropeptide signaling during the moult cycle in the green shore crab, Carcinus maenas
Abstract Background Ecdysis is an innate behaviour programme by which all arthropods moult their exoskeletons. The complex suite of interacting neuropeptides that orchestrate ecdysis is well studied in insects, but details of the crustacean ecdysis cassette are fragmented and our understanding of this process is comparatively crude, preventing a meaningful evolutionary comparison. To begin to address this issue we identified transcripts coding for neuropeptides and their putative receptors in the central nervous system (CNS) and Y-organs (YO) within the crab, Carcinus maenas, and mapped their expression profiles across accurately defined stages of the moult cycle using RNA-sequencing. We also studied gene expression within the epidermally-derived YO, the only defined role for which is the synthesis of ecdysteroid moulting hormones, to elucidate peptides and G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) that might have a function in ecdysis. Results Transcriptome mining of the CNS transcriptome yielded neuropeptide transcripts representing 47 neuropeptide families and 66 putative GPCRs. Neuropeptide transcripts that were differentially expressed across the moult cycle included carcikinin, crustacean hyperglycemic hormone-2, and crustacean cardioactive peptide, whilst a single putative neuropeptide receptor, proctolin R1, was differentially expressed. Carcikinin mRNA in particular exhibited dramatic increases in expression pre-moult, suggesting a role in ecdysis regulation. Crustacean hyperglycemic hormone-2 mRNA expression was elevated post- and pre-moult whilst that for crustacean cardioactive peptide, which regulates insect ecdysis and plays a role in stereotyped motor activity during crustacean ecdysis, was elevated in pre-moult. In the YO, several putative neuropeptide receptor transcripts were differentially expressed across the moult cycle, as was the mRNA for the neuropeptide, neuroparsin-1. Whilst differential gene expression of putative neuropeptide receptors was expected, the discovery and differential expression of neuropeptide transcripts was surprising. Analysis of GPCR transcript expression between YO and epidermis revealed 11 to be upregulated in the YO and thus are now candidates for peptide control of ecdysis. Conclusions The data presented represent a comprehensive survey of the deduced C. maenas neuropeptidome and putative GPCRs. Importantly, we have described the differential expression profiles of these transcripts across accurately staged moult cycles in tissues key to the ecdysis programme. This study provides important avenues for the future exploration of functionality of receptor-ligand pairs in crustaceans
Unsupervised compositionality prediction of nominal compounds
Nominal compounds such as red wine and nut case display a continuum of compositionality, with varying contributions from the components of the compound to its semantics. This article proposes a framework for compound compositionality prediction using distributional semantic models, evaluating to what extent they capture idiomaticity compared to human judgments. For evaluation, we introduce data sets containing human judgments in three languages: English, French, and Portuguese. The results obtained reveal a high agreement between the models and human predictions, suggesting that they are able to incorporate information about idiomaticity. We also present an in-depth evaluation of various factors that can affect prediction, such as model and corpus parameters and compositionality operations. General crosslingual analyses reveal the impact of morphological variation and corpus size in the ability of the model to predict compositionality, and of a uniform combination of the components for best results
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