38 research outputs found

    Farm and Weather Summary, Ag Engineering and Agronomy Farm

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    Includes: Farm Comments Crop Season Comments Weather Comment

    The Wife of the Alcoholic; Sexist Stereotypes in the Alcoholism Literature

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    Current alcoholism literature, alcoholism education, and alcoholism treatment suggests that the wife of the alcoholic is every bit as sick (physically, mentally, and spiritually) as her practicing alcoholic husband. How did we come to this view of the wife of the alcoholic? This paper will review 1) how the wife of the alcoholic has been regarded over the years; 2) how these portraits of the wife of the alcoholic that appeared in the scholarly literature have influenced current thinking and treatment, and 3) how this body of literature and the popular concepts of the wife of the alcoholic that evolved from it, carry sexual biases and stereotyping that can potentially interfere with optimum treatment, full recovery, and effective marital and family functioning

    Ag Engineering/Agronomy Farm and Central Iowa Farms Summary

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    Contains: Ag Engineering and Agronomy Farm Farm and Weather Summary Central Iowa Farms Farm and Weather Summary Project Lis

    Molecular Evolution of Silk Genes in Mesothele and Mygalomorph Spiders, With Implications for the Early Evolution and Functional Divergence of Silk

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    The evolution of adaptively significant gene families is an important subject in the field of evolutionary genetics. For spiders, the gene families encoding silk proteins have received considerable attention due to the high performance capabilities of the fibers they produce. However, silk gene research has largely focused on spiders of the infraorder Araneomorphae, leaving much of the phylogenetic diversity of spiders unsampled for their silk genes. Here, I sample silk genes from spiders of the suborder Mesothelae and infraorder Mygalomorphae, which are distantly related to araneomorph spiders. Phylogenetic analyses of the spidroin genes indicate that numerous duplications occurred in the spidroin gene family after opisthotheles (mygalomorphs plus araneomorphs) split from mesotheles. However, while mesotheles appear to possess a single spidroin gene, they possess numerous copies of genes homologous to Egg Case Proteins, which are currently only known from one araneomorph species. Together these results indicate that the common ancestor of extant spiders possessed a diversity of silk genes. In addition to higher level species sampling of silk genes, I sequence repetitive and carboxy terminal regions of spidroins from all species of the trapdoor spider genus, Aliatypus. Gene tree analyses and tests of selection suggest that contrasting evolutionary forces influenced the different regions of the spidroin gene. I also investigate the expression of silk transcripts from the tarsi and silk glands of tarantulas. Tarantulas exude silk-like secretions from their tarsi, which is hypothesized to increase surface adhesion. I discovered that while known spidroin silk genes are not expressed in the tarsi, novel silk-like genes are expressed in tarantula silk glands and tarsi. Gene families of adaptive significance may also show phylogenetic signal. Here, I sample hemocyanin gene family sequences from a phylogenetically diverse sample of spider species and infer gene trees and species trees. Phylogenetic analyses reveal that despite instances of lineage specific duplication and loss of hemocyanin paralogs, hemocyanins have phylogenetic utility for most spider groups. This dissertation shows the importance of research on gene family evolution, the roles of gene families in adaptation, and the utility of gene families in phylogenetics

    Farm and Weather Summary Ag Engineering and Agronomy Farm

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    Includes: Farm Comments Crop Season Comments Weather Comments</p

    An Electrofishing Survey of the Illinois River, 1959-1974

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    1. The upper Illinois River is warmer than the lower River, as a result of warm municipal and industrial effiuents. 2. The upper river is less turbid, because the bottom is generally rocky, whereas Peoria, La Grange, and Alton Pools contain flocculent muds that have entered the river and are kept in suspension by the river current and by wave action resulting from wind, towboats, and pleasurecraft. 3. Dissolved oxygen levels at the surface and the bottom of the river were virtually the same in the fall of 1974, and dissolved oxygen levels were 77-97 percent of saturation in Alton Pool, 65-122 percent of saturation in La Grange and Peoria Pools, and 47-104 percent of saturation in the upper Pools of Starved Rock, Marseilles, and Dresden. Local areas of super-saturation occurred where plankton blooms appeared to be in progress. In two areas that provided good physical habitat for largemouth bass, Lower Bath Chute, La Grange Pool (mile 107) and Chillicothe Island Chute, Peoria Pool (mile 180), midsummer oxygen levels were at 35 percent saturation or below for 4-5 years out of the 8-year period 1963---1970. Laboratory experiments have shown that oxygen levels below 35 percent saturation reduce the survival of larval largemouth bass and levels below 70 percent retard their growth. 4. The number of fish species taken by electrofishing in the Dresden Pool, Des Plaines River portion of the Illinois Waterway during the period 1959-1974 was consistently low (Tables 29 and 30). Only carp and goldfish and hybrids of these two pollution-tolerant species were commonly taken. 5. The following species showed a trend of increasing abundance in the downstream direction, away from Chicago, with the largest number occurring in Alton Pool: shortnose gar, bowfin, goldeye, mooneye, channel catfish, flathead catfish, and white bass. 6. Goldfish showed a trend of increasing abundance in the upstream direction, toward Chicago. 7. The following species were most abundant in one or both of the two middle pools of the river, La Grange and Peoria Pools, which have the most connecting lake area: gizzard shad, carp, river carpsucker, smallmouth buffalo, bigmouth buffalo, black buffalo, yellow bullhead, green sunfish, bluegill, largemouth bass, white crappie, black crappie, and freshwater drum. 8. Gizzard shad and carp were generally abundant throughout the river. 9. Black bullheads were abundant at one atypical station, Ballard Island Chute, Marseilles Pool (mile 247.8- 248.2), which apparently provides preferred habitat for this species. 10. Gamefish populations declined during the low water years 1962-1964, and recovered following the high water years 1971- 1973. Largemouth bass populations did not recover to 1959- 1962 levels. The recovery appears attributable to improved oxygen levels in the river, and perhaps to increased dilution of toxic materials, and demonstrates how rapidly fish populations respond to improved conditions in the river. 11. The commercial and sport fisheries in the Illinois River have generally declined from levels around the turn of the century. The decline is attributable to a loss of habitat and increasing pollution. Habitat was lost due to leveeing and draining of bottomland areas in the period 1903-1926 and due to sedimentation in the remaining areas. Sedimentation has resulted in undesirable habitat modification, as well as habitat reduction. 12. Northern pike, yellow perch, and walleye (Stizostedion vitreum vitreum) were once abundant in the river but are now rare or limited in their distribution. Yellow perch populations have declined probably as the result of the disappearance of beds of aquatic plants and disappearance of clean sand or pebble substrates perch use for spawning. 13. In the past the bottomland lakes and backwater areas offered havens for fish and fish food organisms, as the river became increasingly polluted. Now dissolved oxygen levels in the river seem to have improved, while the lakes have filled with sediment that apparently exerts an oxygen demand, keeps aquatic plants from growing, and does not support an abundance of food organisms. 14. More and better waste treatment facilities are being constructed by industries and municipalities in the drainage basin of the Illinois River. However, the production of fish and wildlife in the Illinois River and its bottomland lakes is not likely to improve unless sediment pollution is also brought under control. 15. The consequences of future uses of land in the drainage basin and the consequences of future uses of the river must be predicted, so that a wise selection of alternatives can be made. If the river is to be managed in the future for a variety of beneficial uses, then the various state, federal, and private agencies charged with managing land and water within the drainage basin must work in a coordinated fashion, rather than at cross purposes.published or submitted for publicationis peer reviewe

    Farm and Weather Summary, Ag Engineering and Agronomy Farm

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    Includes: Farm Comments Weather Comments</p
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