80 research outputs found

    A novel method for the rapid enumeration of planktonic salmon lice in a mixed zooplankton assemblage using fluorescence

    Get PDF
    The relative rarity of the planktonic larval stages of salmon lice in comparison to other animals captured in a zooplankton assemblage is an obstacle to estimating their abundance and distribution. Due to the labour intensiveness of standard plankton sorting approaches, the planktonic stages of salmon lice remain understudied and unmonitored despite their importance to the spread of the parasite between salmon farms and to wild salmonids. Alternative methods of identification have been investigated and in a previous study a fluorescence signal was identified. Using filters to target that signal with fluorescence microscopy (excitation/emission wavelengths of 470/525 nm), the salmon louse has a fluorescence intensity 2.4 times greater than non-target animals, which distinguishes it from the zooplankton assemblage and enables rapid enumeration. Here, we present a novel method for the enumeration of planktonic salmon lice larvae, nauplius and copepodid stages, in a mixed zooplankton sample using fluorescence-aided microscopy. Performance of the method was evaluated with a blind trial which found a median accuracy of 81.8% and a mean sample processing time of 31 min. Compared with previously published findings, the novel method provides satisfactory accuracy and enumeration that is more than 20 times faster than traditional light microscopy approaches. Factors influencing the performance of the method are identified and recommendations are made for targeted sampling and automated enumeration

    Play on the proper names of individuals in the Catullan corpus: wordplay, the iambic tradition, and the late Republican culture of public abuse

    Get PDF
    The paper explores the significance of names and naming in Catullus. Catullus’ use of proper names, and in particular his play on the connotations of the names of individuals who are attacked within his poems, has not been fully explored to date, and the paper identifies several examples of such play which have not previously been recognized. The paper examines Catullan wordplay in the context of both the iambic tradition and the public abuse culture of the late Roman Republic

    Understanding communication networks in the emergency department

    Get PDF
    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Emergency departments (EDs) are high pressure health care settings involving complex interactions between staff members in providing and organising patient care. Without good communication and cooperation amongst members of the ED team, quality of care is at risk. This study examined the problem-solving, medication advice-seeking and socialising networks of staff working in an Australian hospital ED.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A social network survey (Response Rate = 94%) was administered to all ED staff (n = 109) including doctors, nurses, allied health professionals, administrative staff and ward assistants. Analysis of the network characteristics was carried out by applying measures of density (the extent participants are concentrated), connectedness (how related they are), isolates (how segregated), degree centrality (who has most connections measured in two ways, in-degree, the number of ties directed to an individual and out-degree, the number of ties directed from an individual), betweenness centrality (who is important or powerful), degree of separation (how many ties lie between people) and reciprocity (how bi-directional are interactions).</p> <p>Results</p> <p>In all three networks, individuals were more closely connected to colleagues from within their respective professional groups. The problem-solving network was the most densely connected network, followed by the medication advice network, and the loosely connected socialising network. ED staff relied on each other for help to solve work-related problems, but some senior doctors, some junior doctors and a senior nurse were important sources of medication advice for their ED colleagues.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Network analyses provide useful ways to assess social structures in clinical settings by allowing us to understand how ED staff relate within their social and professional structures. This can provide insights of potential benefit to ED staff, their leaders, policymakers and researchers.</p

    Closure and the Book of Virgil

    Get PDF
    corecore