1,374 research outputs found
Seed Removal by the Red-Rumped Agouti, \u3ci\u3eDasyprocta leporina\u3c/i\u3e, on a Caribbean Island
Agoutis are important seed dispersers as well as predators of numerous plant species in Neotropical continental rainforests, but little is known about their role as seed removers (dispersers and predators) on islands. We investigated seed removal of seven rain forest species on the island of Dominica in the Lesser Antilles by the entire seed-remover community and specifically by the Red-rumped Agouti, Dasyprocta leporina, a scatterhoarding rodent introduced to the island approximately 2500 years ago. We recorded removal rates in three regions of Dominica from 168 experimentally placed seed groups containing a total of 1356 seeds. Seed groups were either accessible to the entire seed-remover community or placed within exclosures designed to exclude agoutis. Within 13 days, 47 percent and 28 percent of seeds had been removed from control groups and agouti exclosure groups, respectively. Thus, agoutis were responsible for removal of 19 percent of seeds. Seed removal was greater in areas with higher regional conspecific adult densities regardless of treatment. Species with smaller seeds were preferentially taken by seed removers other than agoutis, whereas agoutis were responsible for the majority of the removal of the seeds of larger-seeded species. This introduced scatterhoarder clearly plays an important role in determining the movement and fate of seeds in Dominican rain forests, particularly for the largest-seeded species that much of the rest of the animal community does not disperse or consume
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Tropical rainforests getting their fix: The ecological drivers and consequences of nitrogen-fixing trees in regenerating Costa Rican rainforests
Tropical rainforests have an unparalleled capacity to sequester carbon, harbor biodiversity, and cycle water and nutrients due to their high rates of primary production. The large biomass stocks and rapid regeneration rates of these forests are often attributed to ample soil nitrogen and quick recovery of the nitrogen cycle in tropical soils following disturbance. Symbiotic nitrogen-fixing trees, which are relatively abundant at tropical latitudes, have the greatest capacity to provide tropical rainforests with new nitrogen, yet the ecological drivers of tropical symbiotic nitrogen fixers and their effects on the forests they inhabit are not well understood. This dissertation consists of four chapters that examine the patterns, environmental controls, and ecological consequences of symbiotic nitrogen-fixing trees in regenerating and intact rainforests in the Caribbean lowlands of Costa Rica. In chapter 1, I use field sampling in a chronosequence of rainforest plots to show that symbiotic nitrogen fixation declines through succession despite increases in the basal area of nitrogen-fixing trees. Chapters 2 and 3 describe results from a controlled shadehouse experiment assessing the effects of light, soil nitrogen, and plant competition on nitrogen fixation rates and the growth and biomass allocation of nitrogen fixers and non-fixers. In chapter 2, I demonstrate that light regulates nitrogen fixation more strongly than soil nitrogen availability. This is a departure from the historical focus on soil nitrogen as the primary regulator of nitrogen fixation and has the potential to resolve longstanding paradoxes of tropical nitrogen cycling. In chapter 3, I show that nitrogen fixation provides some resistance to competitive effects from neighboring plants in nitrogen-limited conditions, and that nitrogen fixers in these conditions downregulate their fixation rates in the presence of a competitor. This chapter also demonstrates that nitrogen fixation does not represent a significant structural cost to the plant, as reduced root biomass of nitrogen fixers more than compensates for allocation to nodule production. Finally, in Chapter 4, I demonstrate that nitrogen-fixing trees in our chronosequence plots do not promote forest growth, as expected given their capacity to fertilize their neighbors, but rather inhibit forest growth because they are strong competitors. These chapters describe several unexpected findings – i.e. that light primarily drives nitrogen fixation and that nitrogen fixers slow forest growth – which provide new and important insight into the role that nitrogen-fixing trees play in the growth of Costa Rican rainforests
Obituary: Arthur Cruickshank 1932 - 2011. A native Gondwanan, who studied the former continent's fossil tetrapods
Dr Arthur Richard Ivor Cruickshank died
on 4th December 2011, aged 79, in the
Borders General Hospital, Melrose, Scotland.
Arthur Cruickshank was part of the post-war
generation of palaeontologists who laid the
foundations on which today’s researchers
build. Appropriately for someone from
an expatriate Scots family living in Kenya,
much of his work was on the extinct reptiles
of the great southern palaeocontinent of
Gondwana
Obituary: Arthur Cruickshank 1932 – 2011. A native of Gondwanaland, who studied the former continent’s fossil tetrapods
Developments towards practical free-space quantum cryptography
We describe a free space quantum cryptography system which is designed to allow continuous unattended key exchanges for periods of several days, and over ranges of a few kilometres. The system uses a four-laser faint-pulse transmission system running at a pulse rate of 10MHz to generate the required four alternative polarization states. The receiver module similarly automatically selects a measurement basis and performs polarization measurements with four avalanche photodiodes. The controlling software can implement the full key exchange including sifting, error correction, and privacy amplification required to generate a secure key
Thermal Energy Storage for Load Shifting
The following document accounts for the progress made in the prototype development of our design solution since the Critical Design Review, and our group’s response to recent world events which greatly impacted planned activities. Our design challenge is to develop a thermal energy storage system which will sequester the energy from a photovoltaic (PV) array during the day and allow for its dispersal at night in the form of near boiling water. Looking at our user’s needs, we broke our design solution into four components: water heating, storage, distribution, and controls. Research of all components was conducted to ascertain which systems should be developed and which system components could be purchased. Engineering specifications were developed to directly address customer needs and to create performance goals which our final solution can be measured against. During this phase, our group was tasked with procuring all required materials, manufacturing our prototype, and conducting verification testing. The system configuration was selected in the previous phase, and lists of components were compiled, along with manufacturing steps. We have constructed our prototype, and we have completed some preliminary testing, however there is more work to be completed by our sponsor. The selected system composition is outlined, including supporting documentation for testing procedures. Our Final Design Review outlines all final development activities which have taken place and next steps required for further iteration of our prototype
Climate simulation of the latest Permian: Implications for mass extinction
This report presents the results of climate modeling research which indicates that elevated levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere at the end of the Permian period led to climatic conditions inhospitable to both marine and terrestrial life. The Permian-Triassic boundary (about 251 million years ago) was the time of the largest known mass extinction in Earth's history, when greater than ninety percent of all marine species, and approximately seventy percent of all terrestrial species, died out. The model, which used paleogeography and paleotopography correct for the time period, indicated that warm high-latitude surface air temperatures and elevated carbon dioxide levels may have resulted in slowed circulation and stagnant, anoxic conditions in Earth's oceans. The report also suggests that the excess carbon dioxide (and sulfur dioxide) may have originated from volcanic activity associated with eruption of the Siberian Trap flood basalts, which took place at the same time. Educational levels: Undergraduate lower division, Undergraduate upper division, Graduate or professional
A directly comparative two-gate case-control diagnostic accuracy study of the pure tone screen and HearCheck Screener tests for identifying hearing impairment in school children
This is the final version. Available on open access from BMJ Publishing Group via the DOI in this recordObjectives This study directly compared the accuracy of two audiometry-based tests for screening school children for hearing impairment: the currently used test, pure tone screen and a device newly applied to children, HearCheck Screener.
Design Two-gate case–control diagnostic test accuracy study.
Setting and participants Hearing impaired children (‘intended cases’) aged 4–6 years were recruited between February 2013 and August 2014 from collaborating audiology services. Children with no previously identified impairment (‘intended controls’) were recruited from Foundation and Year 1 of schools between February 2013 and June 2014 in central England. The reference standard was pure tone audiometry. Tests were administered at Nottingham Hearing Biomedical Research Unit or, for some intended cases only, in the participant’s home.
Main outcome measures Sensitivity and specificity of the pure tone screen and HearCheck tests based on pure tone audiometry result as reference standard.
Results 315 children (630 ears) were recruited; 75 from audiology services and 240 from schools. Full test and reference standard data were obtained for 600 ears; 155 ears were classified as truly impaired and 445 as truly hearing based on the pure tone audiometry assessment. Sensitivity was estimated to be 94.2% (95% CI 89.0% to 97.0%) for pure tone screen and 89.0% (95% CI 82.9% to 93.1%) for HearCheck (difference=5.2% favouring pure tone screen; 95% CI 0.2% to 10.1%; p=0.02). Estimates for specificity were 82.2% (95% CI 77.7% to 86.0%) for pure tone screen and 86.5% (95% CI 82.5% to 89.8%) for HearCheck (difference=4.3% favouring HearCheck; 95% CI0.4% to 8.2%; p=0.02).
Conclusion Pure tone screen was better than HearCheck with respect to sensitivity but inferior with respect to specificity. As avoiding missed cases is arguably of greater importance for school entry screening, pure tone screen is probably preferable in this context.National Institute for Health Research (NIHR)University of ExeterNottingham University Hospitals National Health Service (NHS) TrustCCS NHS TrustAddenbrookes Hospital, Cambridge University Hospitals Foundation TrustUniversity of Nottingha
A directly comparative two-gate case–control diagnostic accuracy study of the pure tone screen and HearCheck screener tests for identifying hearing impairment in school children
Objectives: This study directly compared the accuracy of two audiometry-based tests for screening school children for hearing impairment: the currently used test, pure tone screen and a device newly applied to children, HearCheck Screener.
Design: Two-gate case–control diagnostic test accuracy study.
Setting and participants: Hearing impaired children (‘intended cases’) aged 4–6 years were recruited between February 2013 and August 2014 from collaborating audiology services. Children with no previously identified impairment (‘intended controls’) were recruited from Foundation and Year 1 of schools between February 2013 and June 2014 in central England. The reference standard was pure tone audiometry. Tests were administered at Nottingham Hearing Biomedical Research Unit or, for some intended cases only, in the participant’s home.
Main outcome measures: Sensitivity and specificity of the pure tone screen and HearCheck tests based on pure tone audiometry result as reference standard.
Results: 315 children (630 ears) were recruited; 75 from audiology services and 240 from schools. Full test and reference standard data were obtained for 600 ears; 155 ears were classified as truly impaired and 445 as truly hearing based on the pure tone audiometry assessment. Sensitivity was estimated to be 94.2% (95% CI 89.0% to 97.0%) for pure tone screen and 89.0% (95% CI 82.9% to 93.1%) for HearCheck (difference=5.2% favouring pure tone screen; 95% CI 0.2% to 10.1%; p=0.02). Estimates for specificity were 82.2% (95% CI 77.7% to 86.0%) for pure tone screen and 86.5% (95% CI 82.5% to 89.8%) for HearCheck (difference=4.3% favouring HearCheck; 95% CI0.4% to 8.2%; p=0.02).
Conclusion: Pure tone screen was better than HearCheck with respect to sensitivity but inferior with respect to specificity. As avoiding missed cases is arguably of greater importance for school entry screening, pure tone screen is probably preferable in this context
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