2,609 research outputs found
Plant Diversity, Soil Microbial Communities, And Ecosystem Function: Are There Any Links?
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/117152/1/ecy20038482042.pd
Resource availability controls fungal diversity across a plant diversity gradient
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/75108/1/j.1461-0248.2006.00965.x.pd
A new hammer to crack an old nut : interspecific competitive resource capture by plants is regulated by nutrient supply, not climate
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Range contraction enables harvesting to extinction
Economic incentives to harvest a species usually diminish as its abundance
declines, because harvest costs increase. This prevents harvesting to
extinction. A known exception can occur if consumer demand causes a declining
species' harvest price to rise faster than costs. This threat may affect rare
and valuable species, such as large land mammals, sturgeons, and bluefin tunas.
We analyze a similar but underappreciated threat, which arises when the
geographic area (range) occupied by a species contracts as its abundance
declines. Range contractions maintain the local densities of declining
populations, which facilitates harvesting to extinction by preventing abundance
declines from causing harvest costs to rise. Factors causing such range
contractions include schooling, herding, or flocking behaviors--which,
ironically, can be predator-avoidance adaptations; patchy environments; habitat
loss; and climate change. We use a simple model to identify combinations of
range contractions and price increases capable of causing extinction from
profitable overharvesting, and we compare these to an empirical review. We find
that some aquatic species that school or forage in patchy environments
experience sufficiently severe range contractions as they decline to allow
profitable harvesting to extinction even with little or no price increase; and
some high-value declining aquatic species experience severe price increases.
For terrestrial species, the data needed to evaluate our theory are scarce, but
available evidence suggests that extinction-enabling range contractions may be
common among declining mammals and birds. Thus, factors causing range
contraction as abundance declines may pose unexpectedly large extinction risks
to harvested species.Comment: 25 pages total, 8 pages main text, 17 pages supporting informatio
Biodiversity and ecosystem stability in a decade-long grassland experiment
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v441/n7093/full/nature04742.htmlHuman-driven ecosystem simplification has highlighted questions about how the number of species in an ecosystem influences its functioning. Although biodiversity is now known to affect ecosystem productivity1–6, its effects on stability are debated6–13. Here we present a long-term experimental field test of the diversity–stability hypothesis. During a decade of data collection in an experiment that directly controlled the number of perennial prairie species4 , growing-season climate varied considerably, causing year-to-year variation in abundances of plant species and in ecosystem productivity. We found that greater numbers of plant species led to greater temporal stability of ecosystem annual aboveground plant production. In particular, the decadal temporal stability of the ecosystem, whether measured with intervals of two, five or ten years, was significantly greater at higher plant diversity and tended to increase as plots matured. Ecosystem stability was also positively dependent on root mass, which is a measure of perenniating biomass. Temporal stability of the ecosystem increased with diversity, despite a lower temporal stability of individual species, because of both portfolio (statistical averaging) and overyielding effects. However, we found no evidence of a covariance effect. Our results indicate that the reliable, efficient and sustainable supply of some foods (for example, livestock fodder), biofuels and ecosystem services can be enhanced by the use of biodiversity
Robust LHC Higgs Search in Weak Boson Fusion
We demonstrate that an LHC Higgs search in weak boson fusion production with
subsequent decay to weak boson pairs is robust against extensions of the
Standard Model or MSSM involving a large number of Higgs doublets. We also show
that the transverse mass distribution provides unambiguous discrimination of a
continuum Higgs signal from the Standard Model.Comment: 12p, 2 figs., additional comments on backgrounds, version to appear
in PR
Determining the Structure of Higgs Couplings at the LHC
Higgs boson production via weak boson fusion at the CERN Large Hadron
Collider has the capability to determine the dominant CP nature of a Higgs
boson, via the tensor structure of its coupling to weak bosons. This
information is contained in the azimuthal angle distribution of the two
outgoing forward tagging jets. The technique is independent of both the Higgs
boson mass and the observed decay channel.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, version accepted for publication in PR
Using Phylogenetic, Functional and Trait Diversity to Understand Patterns of Plant Community Productivity
BACKGROUND:Two decades of research showing that increasing plant diversity results in greater community productivity has been predicated on greater functional diversity allowing access to more of the total available resources. Thus, understanding phenotypic attributes that allow species to partition resources is fundamentally important to explaining diversity-productivity relationships. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS:Here we use data from a long-term experiment (Cedar Creek, MN) and compare the extent to which productivity is explained by seven types of community metrics of functional variation: 1) species richness, 2) variation in 10 individual traits, 3) functional group richness, 4) a distance-based measure of functional diversity, 5) a hierarchical multivariate clustering method, 6) a nonmetric multidimensional scaling approach, and 7) a phylogenetic diversity measure, summing phylogenetic branch lengths connecting community members together and may be a surrogate for ecological differences. Although most of these diversity measures provided significant explanations of variation in productivity, the presence of a nitrogen fixer and phylogenetic diversity were the two best explanatory variables. Further, a statistical model that included the presence of a nitrogen fixer, seed weight and phylogenetic diversity was a better explanation of community productivity than other models. CONCLUSIONS:Evolutionary relationships among species appear to explain patterns of grassland productivity. Further, these results reveal that functional differences among species involve a complex suite of traits and that perhaps phylogenetic relationships provide a better measure of the diversity among species that contributes to productivity than individual or small groups of traits
Propensity score matching and persistence correction to reduce bias incomparative effectiveness: the effect of cinacalcet use on all-causemortality
Purpose: The generalisability of randomised controlled trials (RCTs) may be limited by restrictive entry criteria or by their experimental nature. Observational research can provide complementary findings but is prone to bias. Employing propensity score matching, to reduce such bias, we compared the real-life effect of cinacalcet use on all-cause mortality (ACM) with findings from the Evaluation of Cinacalcet Therapy to Lower Cardiovascular Events (EVOLVE) RCT in chronic haemodialysis patients.
Methods: Incident adult haemodialysis patients receiving cinacalcet, recruited in a prospective observational cohort from 2007-2009 (AROii; n = 10,488), were matched to non-exposed patients regardless of future exposure status. The effect of treatment crossover was investigated with inverse probability of censoring weighted and lag-censored analyses. EVOLVE ACM data were analysed largely as described for the primary composite endpoint.
Results: AROii patients receiving cinacalcet (n = 532) were matched to 1790 non-exposed patients. The treatment effect of cinacalcet on ACM in the main AROii analysis (hazard ratio 1.03 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.78-1.35]) was closer to the null than for the Intention to Treat (ITT) analysis of EVOLVE (0.94 [95%CI 0.85-1.04]). Adjusting for non-persistence by 0- and 6-month lag-censoring and by inverse probability of censoring weight, the hazard ratios in AROii (0.76 [95%CI 0.51-1.15], 0.84 [95%CI 0.60-1.18] and 0.79 [95%CI 0.56-1.11], respectively) were comparable with those of EVOLVE (0.82 [95%CI 0.67-1.01], 0.83 [95%CI 0.73-0.96] and 0.87 [95%CI 0.71-1.06], respectively).
Conclusions: Correcting for treatment crossover, we observed results in the 'real-life' setting of the AROii observational cohort that closely mirrored the results of the EVOLVE RCT. Persistence-corrected analyses revealed a trend towards reduced ACM in haemodialysis patients receiving cinacalcet therapy.Funding: DWreports having received research funding from Abbott,Genzyme and AstraZeneca and honoraria from Amgen,Abbott, Fresenius, Janssen, Otsuka, Shire and Vifor
Modeling the clonal heterogeneity of stem cells
Recent experimental studies suggest that tissue stem cell pools are composed of functionally diverse clones. Metapopulation models in ecology concentrate on collections of populations and their role in stabilizing coexistence and maintaining selected genetic or epigenetic variation. Such models are characterized by expansion and extinction of spatially distributed populations. We develop a mathematical framework derived from the multispecies metapopulation model of Tilman et al (1994) to study the dynamics of heterogeneous stem cell metapopulations. In addition to normal stem cells, the model can be applied to cancer cell populations and their response to treatment. In our model disturbances may lead to expansion or contraction of cells with distinct properties, reflecting proliferation, apoptosis, and clonal competition. We first present closed-form expressions for the basic model which defines clonal dynamics in the presence of exogenous global disturbances. We then extend the model to include disturbances which are periodic and which may affect clones differently. Within the model framework, we propose a method to devise an optimal strategy of treatments to regulate expansion, contraction, or mutual maintenance of cells with specific properties
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