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Significant groundwater contribution to Antarctic ice streams hydrologic budget
Satellite observations have revealed active hydrologic systems beneath Antarctic ice streams, but sources and sinks of water within these systems are uncertain. Here we use numerical simulations of ice streams to estimate the generation, flux, and budget of water beneath five ice streams on the Siple Coast. We estimate that 47% of the total hydrologic input (0.98 km3 yr−1) to Whillans (WIS), Mercer (MIS), and Kamb (KIS) ice streams comes from the ice sheet interior and that only 8% forms by local basal melting. The remaining 45% comes from a groundwater reservoir, an overlooked source in which depletion significantly exceeds recharge. Of the total input to Bindschadler (BIS) and MacAyeal (MacIS) ice streams (0.56 km3 yr−1), 72% comes from the interior, 19% from groundwater, and 9% from local melting. This contrasting hydrologic setting modulates the ice streams flow and has important implications for the search for life in subglacial lakes.This work was carried out with support from the Isaac Newton Trust, Cecil H. and Ida M. Green Foundation and Natural Environment Research Council (grant NE/E005950/1 and NE/J005800/1).This is the final version of the article. It was originally published in Geophysical Research Letters and is also available from the Wiley website at http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/2014GL059250/abstract. © American Geophysical Union 201
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Reactivation of Kamb Ice Stream tributaries triggers century-scale reorganization of Siple Coast ice flow in West Antarctica
Ongoing, centennial-scale flow variability within the Ross ice streams of West Antarctica suggests that the present-day positive mass balance in this region may reverse in the future. Here, we use a three-dimensional ice-sheet model to simulate ice flow in this region over 250 years. The flow responds to changing basal properties, as a subglacial till layer interacts with water transported in an active subglacial hydrological system. We show that a persistent weak bed beneath the tributaries of the dormant Kamb Ice Stream is a source of internal ice-flow instability, which reorganizes all ice streams in this region, leading to a reduced (positive) mass balance within decades and a net loss of ice within two centuries. This hitherto unaccounted for flow variability could raise sea-level by 5mm this century. Better constraints on future sea-level change from this region will require improved estimates of geothermal heat flux and subglacial water transport.This work was carried out with support from the Isaac Newton trust, Cecil H. and Ida M. Green Foundation and Natural Environment Research Council (grants NE/E005950/1 and NE/J005800/1). SFP was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science, Biological and Environmental Research program. ST acknowledges support from National Science Foundation (grant #0338295). SPC was supported by funding from the Cryospheric Sciences program of NASA and HAF was supported by funding from NSF (grant ANT-0838885 (Fricker)). The source code for the results presented can be obtained by contacting the corresponding author directlyThis is the final version of the article. It first appeared from Wiley via http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/2015GL06578
Bait uptake by wild badgers and its implications for oral vaccination against tuberculosis
This is the final version. Available from Public Library of Science via the DOI in this record.Data Availability: All relevant data are within the paper and its Supporting Information files.The deployment of baits containing vaccines or toxins has been used successfully in the management of wildlife populations, including for disease control. Optimisation of deployment strategies seeks to maximise uptake by the targeted population whilst ensuring cost-effectiveness. Tuberculosis (TB) caused by infection with Mycobacterium bovis affects a broad range of mammalian hosts across the globe, including cattle, wildlife and humans. The control of TB in cattle in the UK and Republic of Ireland is hampered by persistent infection in European badgers (Meles meles). The present study aimed to determine the best strategy for maximising uptake of an oral vaccine by wild badgers, using a surrogate novel bait deployed at 40 badger social groups. Baits contained a blood-borne biomarker (Iophenoxic Acid, IPA) in order to measure consumption in badgers subsequently cage trapped at targeted setts. Evidence for the consumption of bait was found in 83% (199/240) of captured badgers. The probability that badgers had consumed at least one bait (IPA >10 μg ml-1) was significantly higher following deployment in spring than in summer. Lower uptake amongst social groups where more badgers were captured, suggested competition for baits. The probability of bait consumption was significantly higher at groups where main and outlier setts were provided with baits than at those where outliers were present but not baited. Badgers captured 10–14 days post bait feeding had significantly higher levels of bait uptake compared to those caught 24–28 days later. Uptake rates did not vary significantly in relation to badger age and whether bait was placed above ground or down setts. This study suggests that high levels of bait uptake can be achieved in wild badger populations and identifies factors influencing the potential success of different deployment strategies. The implications for the development of an oral badger vaccine are discussed.Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA
Higher sociability leads to lower reproductive success in female kangaroos: Sociability and fitness in kangaroos
In social mammals, social integration is generally assumed
to improve females’ reproductive success. Most species
demonstrating this relationship exhibit complex forms of social
bonds and interactions. However, female eastern grey kangaroos
(Macropus giganteus) exhibit differentiated social relationships,
yet do not appear to cooperate directly. It is unclear what the
fitness consequences of such sociability could be in species that
do not exhibit obvious forms of cooperation. Using 4 years of
life history, spatial and social data from a wild population of
approximately 200 individually recognizable female eastern
grey kangaroos, we tested whether higher levels of sociability
are associated with greater reproductive success. Contrary to
expectations, we found that the size of a female’s social
network, her numbers of preferential associations with other
females and her group sizes all negatively influenced her
reproductive success. These factors influenced the survival of
dependent young that had left the pouch rather than those that
were still in the pouch. We also show that primiparous females
(first-time breeders) were less likely to have surviving young.
Our findings suggest that social bonds are not always beneficial
for reproductive success in group-living species, and that female
kangaroos may experience trade-offs between successfully
rearing young and maintaining affiliative relationships
Higher sociability leads to lower reproductive success in female kangaroos
In social mammals, social integration is generally assumed to improve females' reproductive success. Most species demonstrating this relationship exhibit complex forms of social bonds and interactions. However, female eastern grey kangaroos (Macropus giganteus) exhibit differentiated social relationships, yet do not appear to cooperate directly. It is unclear what the fitness consequences of such sociability could be in species that do not exhibit obvious forms of cooperation. Using 4 years of life history, spatial and social data from a wild population of approximately 200 individually recognizable female eastern grey kangaroos, we tested whether higher levels of sociability are associated with greater reproductive success. Contrary to expectations, we found that the size of a female's social network, her numbers of preferential associations with other females and her group sizes all negatively influenced her reproductive success. These factors influenced the survival of dependent young that had left the pouch rather than those that were still in the pouch. We also show that primiparous females (first-time breeders) were less likely to have surviving young. Our findings suggest that social bonds are not always beneficial for reproductive success in group-living species, and that female kangaroos may experience trade-offs between successfully rearing young and maintaining affiliative relationships
Batch solution of small PDEs with the OPS DSL
In this paper we discuss the challenges and optimisations opportunities when solving a large number of small, equally sized discretised PDEs on regular grids. We present an extension of the OPS (Oxford Parallel library for Structured meshes) embedded Domain Specific Language, and show how support can be added for solving multiple systems, and how OPS makes it easy to deploy a variety of transformations and optimisations. The new capabilities in OPS allow to automatically apply data structure transformations, as well as execution schedule transformations to deliver high performance on a variety of hardware platforms. We evaluate our work on an industrially representative finance simulation on Intel CPUs, as well as NVIDIA GPUs
Nutrient additions three decades on: potential interactions of nutrients and climate in the recovery of a high latitude serpentine system
Nutrient addition experiments initiated in 1980 on the Keen of Hamar, Shetland Isles, have produced a unique dataset of long-term vegetation response to amendments of major plant growth nutrients (N, P, NP, NPK and NPKCa). Previous studies have reported the notable impact of phosphorus on the ‘serpentine debris’ community, and the negligible effect of nitrogen. However, a survey in 2010 provided our first indication that the experimentally-induced phosphorus effect was weakening and this was consolidated by further surveys of vegetation cover and community composition. This community shift might have been different had the local climate acted synergistically with phosphorus additions: in the last few years of the study the Shetland Isles experienced particularly low spring rainfall – the dry spell may have been a well-timed environmental filter driving community recovery rather than a permanent change of state to heathland on an organic soil. The longevity of our investigation is a unique opportunity to explore vegetation response to the key drivers of global environmental change, namely climate change, eutrophication as a result of agricultural intensification, and the potential for invasion of species as new resource-rich niches become available
Social feasibility assessments in conservation translocations
This is the final version. Available on open access from Cell Press via the DOI in this recordImproving the effectiveness of conservation translocations could contribute to reversing global biodiversity loss. Although evaluations of ecological factors affecting translocation outcomes are commonplace, consideration of human social factors remains rare, hindering improvements to this conservation practice. We analysed 550 translocation case studies to explore the inclusion of social factors in project feasibility assessments. Reviewed projects often failed to assess social feasibility, and assessments, where attempted, tended to be narrow in scope. Consequently, challenges such as proactively addressing conflict often remained unaddressed. Insufficient knowledge sharing and prioritisation of ecological feasibility, to the detriment of social feasibility, remain barriers to effective planning. Successful outcomes of translocations are linked to early assessment of social feasibility and to the establishment of long-term commitments between people, places, and partners.Vincent Wildlife TrustDurrell Wildlife Conservation TrustUniversity of Exete
Formalizing Data Deletion in the Context of the Right to be Forgotten
The right of an individual to request the deletion of their personal data by
an entity that might be storing it -- referred to as the right to be forgotten
-- has been explicitly recognized, legislated, and exercised in several
jurisdictions across the world, including the European Union, Argentina, and
California. However, much of the discussion surrounding this right offers only
an intuitive notion of what it means for it to be fulfilled -- of what it means
for such personal data to be deleted.
In this work, we provide a formal definitional framework for the right to be
forgotten using tools and paradigms from cryptography. In particular, we
provide a precise definition of what could be (or should be) expected from an
entity that collects individuals' data when a request is made of it to delete
some of this data. Our framework captures several, though not all, relevant
aspects of typical systems involved in data processing. While it cannot be
viewed as expressing the statements of current laws (especially since these are
rather vague in this respect), our work offers technically precise definitions
that represent possibilities for what the law could reasonably expect, and
alternatives for what future versions of the law could explicitly require.
Finally, with the goal of demonstrating the applicability of our framework
and definitions, we consider various natural and simple scenarios where the
right to be forgotten comes up. For each of these scenarios, we highlight the
pitfalls that arise even in genuine attempts at implementing systems offering
deletion guarantees, and also describe technological solutions that provably
satisfy our definitions. These solutions bring together techniques built by
various communities
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