4,373 research outputs found
Fire impacts recruitment more than survival of small-mammals in a tropical savanna
The frequency and spatial patterning of fire for optimal biodiversity conservation is often poorly understood by managers, in part due to a lack of understanding of the mechanisms responsible for altering population dynamics of individual species. We investigated changes in the vital rates (survival and recruitment) of four small mammal species (three marsupials and one rodent) in a tropical savanna under four different experimental fire treatments applied at a landscape scale. Apparent survival declined in all fire treatments for only one of four small mammal species (northern brown bandicoot Isoodon macrourus). Recruitment was reduced in three of four species in multiple fire treatments. The suppression of recruitment in the northern brown bandicoot and the brushtail possum Trichosurus vulpecula populations was greatest immediately after the initial fire treatment was applied, compared to remaining treatment applications in successive years, possibly due to an elevated fire intensity as a result of higher initial fuel loads. The results suggest that higher intensity fire impacted recruitment more than survival for small mammals at this site. To assist fire managers to conserve small mammal populations in tropical savannas, we recommend fire regimes that optimise habitat resources for recruitment. This may be achieved by a reduction in fire frequency and managing fuel loads to prevent an increase in fire intensity
Continuity of cannabis use and violent offending over the life course
Although the association between cannabis use and violence has been reported in the literature, the precise nature of this relationship, especially the directionality of the association, is unclear.
Young males from the Cambridge Study of Delinquent Development (n = 411) were followed up between the ages of 8 and 56 years to prospectively investigate the association between cannabis use and violence. A multi-wave (eight assessments, T1âT8) follow-up design was employed that allowed temporal sequencing of the variables of interest and the analysis of violent outcome measures obtained from two sources: (i) criminal records (violent conviction); and (ii) self-reports. A combination of analytic approaches allowing inferences as to the directionality of associations was employed, including multivariate logistic regression analysis, fixed-effects analysis and cross-lagged modelling.
Multivariable logistic regression revealed that compared with never-users, continued exposure to cannabis (use at age 18, 32 and 48 years) was associated with a higher risk of subsequent violent behaviour, as indexed by convictions [odds ratio (OR) 7.1, 95% confidence interval (CI) 2.19â23.59] or self-reports (OR 8.9, 95% CI 2.37â46.21). This effect persisted after controlling for other putative risk factors for violence. In predicting violence, fixed-effects analysis and cross-lagged modelling further indicated that this effect could not be explained by other unobserved time-invariant factors. Furthermore, these analyses uncovered a bi-directional relationship between cannabis use and violence.
Together, these results provide strong indication that cannabis use predicts subsequent violent offending, suggesting a possible causal effect, and provide empirical evidence that may have implications for public policy
Mass tracking for chemical analysis: the causes of ozone formation in southern Ontario during BAQS-Met 2007
A three-level nested regional air pollution model has been used to study the processes leading to high ozone concentrations in the southern Great Lakes region of North America. The highest resolution simulations show that complex interactions between the lake-breeze circulation and the synoptic flow lead to significant enhancements in the photochemical production and transport of ozone at the local scale. Mass tracking of individual model processes show that Lakes Erie and St. Clair frequently act as photochemical ozone production regions, with average mid-day production rates of up to 3 ppbv per hour. Enhanced ozone levels are evident over these two lakes in 23-day-average surface ozone fields. Analysis of other model fields and aircraft measurements suggests that vertical circulation enhances ozone levels at altitudes up to 1500 m over Lake St. Clair, whereas subsidence enhances ozone over Lake Erie in a shallow layer only 250 m deep. Mass tracking of model transport shows that lake-breeze surface convergence zones combined with the synoptic flow can then carry ozone and its precursors hundreds of kilometers from these source areas, in narrow, elongated features. Comparison with surface mesonet ozone observations confirm the presence, magnitude, and timing of these features, which can create local ozone enhancements on the order of 30 ppbv above the regional ozone levels. Sensitivity analyses of model-predicted ozone and HO<sub>x</sub> concentrations show that most of the region is VOC-limited, and that the secondary oxidation pathways of aromatic hydrocarbons have a key role in setting the region's ozone and HO<sub>x</sub> levels
Be-10 age constraints on latest Pleistocene and Holocene cirque glaciation across the western United States
Paleoclimate: A rocky reworking of Holocene glaciology New dating of glacially-deposited rocks substantially revises our understanding of the waxing and waning of ice since the last glacial maximum. Glaciologists have long thought that moraines throughout the western United States represent âneoglacialâ advances about 6,000 years ago. Now, a multi-institution team led by Shaun Marcott at the University of Wisconsin-Madison has found â using cosmogenic isotopes â that these terminal deposits left by advancing glaciers are instead 9,000 to 15,000 years old. The research advances prior work by using absolute, not relative ages, and documents that glaciers retreated after the last glacial maximum ~ 21,000 years ago, fluctuated locally throughout much of the Holocene, and re-advanced during the Little Ice Age of a few hundred years ago. Glacial advances that might have occurred during the neoglacial were wiped away by the more extensive glaciations of the Little Ice Age
Obesity: A Biobehavioral Point of View
Excerpt: If you ask an overweight person, âWhy are you fat?â, you will, almost invariably, get the answer, âBecause 1 eat too much.â You will get this answer in spite of the fact that of thirteen studies, six find no significant differences in the caloric intake of obese versus nonobese subjects, five report that the obese eat significantly less than the nonobese, and only two report that they eat significantly more
Computer Simulation of Final-Stage Sintering: II, Influence of Initial Pore Size
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/65612/1/j.1151-2916.1990.tb06687.x.pd
Deconfinement Transition and Bound States in Frustrated Heisenberg Chains: Regimes of Forced and Spontaneous Dimerization
We use recently developed strong-coupling expansion methods to study the
two-particle spectra for the frustrated alternating Heisenberg model,
consisting of an alternating nearest neighbor antiferromagnetic exchange and a
uniform second neighbor antiferromagnetic exchange. Starting from the limit of
weakly coupled dimers, we develop high order series expansions for the
effective Hamiltonian in the two-particle subspace. In the limit of a strong
applied dimerization, we calculate accurately various properties of singlet and
triplet bound states and quintet antibound states. We also develop series
expansions for bound state energies in various sectors, which can be
extrapolated using standard methods to cases where the external
bond-alternation goes to zero. We study the properties of singlet and triplet
bound states in the latter limit and suggest a crucial role for the bound
states in the unbinding of triplets and deconfinement of spin-half excitations.Comment: 17 figures, revte
Frauenforschung in der Soziologie - quo vadis?
It is widely accepted that the devastating consequences of spinal cord injury are due to the failure of lesioned CNS axons to regenerate. The current study of the spontaneous tissue repair processes following dorsal hemisection of the adult rat spinal cord demonstrates a phase of rapid and substantial nerve fibre inâgrowth into the lesion that was derived largely from both rostral and caudal spinal tissues. The response was characterized by increasing numbers of axons traversing the clearly defined interface between the lesion and the adjacent intact spinal cord, beginning by 5âdays post operation (p.o.). Having penetrated the lesion, axons became associated with a framework of NGFrâpositive nonâneuronal cells (Schwann cells and leptomeningeal cells). Surprisingly few of these axons were derived from CGRPâ or SPâimmunoreactive dorsal root ganglion neurons. At the longest survival time (56âdays p.o.), there was a marked shift in the overall orientation of fibres from a largely rostroâcaudal to a dorsoâventral axis. Attempts to identify which recognition molecules may be important for these reâorganizational processes during attempted tissue repair demonstrated the widespread and intense expression of the cell adhesion molecules (CAM) L1 and NâCAM. Double immunofluorescence suggested that both Schwann cells and leptomeningeal cells contributed to the pattern of CAM expression associated with the cellular framework within the lesion
Long-term exposure to outdoor air pollution and the incidence of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in a national English cohort.
OBJECTIVES: The role of outdoor air pollution in the incidence of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) remains unclear. We investigated this question using a large, nationally representative cohort based on primary care records linked to hospital admissions.
METHODS: A cohort of 812â
063 patients aged 40-89â
years registered with 205 English general practices in 2002 without a COPD diagnosis was followed from 2003 to 2007. First COPD diagnoses recorded either by a general practitioner (GP) or on admission to hospital were identified. Annual average concentrations in 2002 for particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter <10â
”m (PM10) and <2.5â
”m (PM2.5), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), ozone and sulfur dioxide (SO2) at 1â
km(2) resolution were estimated from emission-based dispersion models. Hazard ratios (HRs) per interquartile range change were estimated from Cox models adjusting for age, sex, smoking, body mass index and area-level deprivation. RESULTS: 16â
034 participants (1.92%) received a COPD diagnosis from their GP and 2910 participants (0.35%) were admitted to hospital for COPD. After adjustment, HRs for GP recorded COPD and PM10, PM2.5 and NO2 were close to unity, positive for SO2 (HR=1.07 (95% CI 1.03 to 1.11) per 2.2â
”g/m(3)) and negative for ozone (HR=0.94 (0.89 to 1.00) per 3â
”g/m(3)). For admissions HRs for PM2.5 and NO2 remained positive (HRs=1.05 (0.98 to 1.13) and 1.06 (0.98 to 1.15) per 1.9â
”g/m(3) and 10.7â
”g/m(3), respectively).
CONCLUSIONS: This large population-based cohort study found limited, inconclusive evidence for associations between air pollution and COPD incidence. Further work, utilising improved estimates of air pollution over time and enhanced socioeconomic indicators, is required to clarify the association between air pollution and COPD incidence
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