192 research outputs found
Food and Beverage Marketing on California High School Campuses Survey: Findings and Recommendations
Assesses marketing of food and beverages at 20 California public high schools. Provides recommendations for eliminating commercial influences that promote unhealthy foods and beverages, consumer education, and establishing business partnership guidelines
Collaborations for Success: Teachers, Families, and Funders Working Together
Samuels shows how collaboration with families, colleagues, and funders helped her to survive and thrive as a new teacher. She knew from the start that she could not go it alone and sought opportunities at every turn to work with others
The Federal Child Nutrition Commodity Program: A Report on Nutritional Quality
Examines the types of food California schools order through the USDA Child Nutrition Commodity Program and how they affect the nutritional value of school meals. Includes policy recommendations for ensuring that meals meet nutritional guidelines
Polarization of superfluid turbulence
We show that normal fluid eddies in turbulent helium II polarize the tangle
of quantized vortex lines present in the flow, thus inducing superfluid
vorticity patterns similar to the driving normal fluid eddies. We also show
that the polarization is effective over the entire inertial range. The results
help explain the surprising analogies between classical and superfluid
turbulence which have been observed recently.Comment: 3 figure
Hypocrea rufa/Trichoderma viride: a reassessment, and description of five closely related species with and without warted conidia
The type species of the genus Hypocrea (Hypocreaceae,
Hypocreales, Ascomycota, Fungi), H. rufa, is re-defined and
epitypified using a combination of phenotype (morphology of teleomorphs and
anamorphs, and characteristics in culture) and phylogenetic analyses of the
translation-elongation factor 1α gene. Its anamorph, T. viride,
the type species of Trichoderma, is re-described and epitypified.
Eidamia viridescens is combined as Trichoderma viridescens
and is recognised as one of the most morphologically and phylogenetically
similar relatives of T. viride. Its teleomorph is newly described as
Hypocrea viridescens. Contrary to frequent citations of H.
rufa and T. viride in the literature, this species is relatively
rare. Although both T. viride and T. viridescens have a wide
geographic distribution, their greatest genetic diversity appears to be in
Europe and North America. Hypocrea vinosa is characterised and its
anamorph, T. vinosum sp. nov., is described. Conidia of T.
vinosum are subglobose and warted. The new species T. gamsii is
proposed. It shares eidamia-like morphology of conidiophores with T.
viridescens, but it has smooth, ellipsoidal conidia that have the longest
L/W ratio that we have seen in Trichoderma. Trichoderma scalesiae, an
endophyte of trunks of Scalesia pedunculata in the Galapagos Islands,
is described as new. It only produces conidia on a low-nutrient agar to which
filter paper has been added. Additional phylogenetically distinct clades are
recognised and provisionally delimited from the species here described.
Trichoderma neokoningii, a T. koningii-like species, is
described from a collection made in Peru on a fruit of Theobroma
cacao infected with Moniliophthora roreri
The Trichoderma koningii aggregate species
The morphological concept of Trichoderma koningii is found to
include several species that differ from each other in details of phenotype
(including conidium morphology, growth rate) and biogeography. Phylogenetic
analysis utilizing partial sequences of the translation-elongation factor 1
alpha (tef1), as well as fragments of actin and calmodulin genes,
indicate that phenotypic characters typical of T. koningii evolved
independently in three well-separated main lineages. Combined molecular and
phenotype data lead to the development of a taxonomy with the recognition of
twelve taxonomic species and one variety within the three lineages. These
lineages include: (1) T. koningii and T. ovalisporum and the
new species T. caribbaeum var. caribbaeum, T. caribbaeum
var. aequatoriale, T. dorotheae, T. dingleyae, T. intricatum, T.
koningiopsis, T. petersenii and T. taiwanense; (2) the new
species T. rogersonii and T. austrokoningii, and (3) the new
anamorph T. stilbohypoxyli
Metabolic imprinting, programming and epigenetics - a review of present priorities and future opportunities
Metabolic programming and metabolic imprinting describe early life events, which impact upon on later physiological outcomes. Despite the increasing numbers of papers and studies, the distinction between metabolic programming and metabolic imprinting remains confusing. The former can be defined as a dynamic process whose effects are dependent upon a critical window(s) while the latter can be more strictly associated with imprinting at the genomic level. The clinical end points associated with these phenomena can sometimes be mechanistically explicable in terms of gene expression mediated by epigenetics. The predictivity of outcomes depends on determining if there is causality or association in the context of both early dietary exposure and future health parameters. The use of biomarkers is a key aspect of determining the predictability of later outcome, and the strengths of particular types of biomarkers need to be determined. It has become clear that several important health endpoints are impacted upon by metabolic programming/imprinting. These include the link between perinatal nutrition, nutritional epigenetics and programming at an early developmental stage and its link to a range of future health risks such as CVD and diabetes. In some cases, the evidence base remains patchy and associative, while in others, a more direct causality between early nutrition and later health is clear. In addition, it is also essential to acknowledge the communication to consumers, industry, health care providers, policy-making bodies as well as to the scientific community. In this way, both programming and, eventually, reprogramming can become effective tools to improve health through dietary intervention at specific developmental point
The Grizzly, October 7, 2010
Career Services Recognized as LGBTQA Certified • Berman Museum Celebrates Community within Collegeville • Residents of Reimert Hall Collect Can Tabs for Troops • UC Goes Pink \u2710 • Novak\u27s Art Exhibit Shares History of Baseball • CAB October Preview • Ursinus Dance Group Knows How to Move It • Seeking Tenure: Professor Gregory Scranton, MCS • School Spirit with Mucus • Sounding Off on UC Ginkgo Trees • Men\u27s Lacrosse Joins in the Fight Against Cancerhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1820/thumbnail.jp
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