615 results on '"Belize"'
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2. Belizean Creole: Glossary. Peace Corps Language Handbook Series.
- Author
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School for International Training, Brattleboro, VT. and Dayley, Jon P.
- Abstract
This English-to-Creole and Creole-to-English glossary is part of a four-volume set designed to teach Belizean Creole to Peace Corps volunteers. Common Creole words which do not occur in English and words that occur in both languages but with different meanings are included. The glossary is intended to serve as a guide to pronunciation of common Creole words, to increase the student's vocabulary, and to provide a periodic reference source. (RW)
- Published
- 1979
3. Translation and Adaptation of the Revised Children's Anxiety and Depression Scale: A Qualitative Study in Belize
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Liliana Carvajal-Velez, Katherine Ottman, Jill W. Ahs, Geffrey Nan Li, Juliet Simmons, Bruce Chorpita, Jennifer Harris Requejo, and Brandon A. Kohrt
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Male ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Adolescent ,Depression ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Humans ,Focus Groups ,Anxiety ,Child ,Belize ,Language - Abstract
Adapting data collection instruments using transcultural translation and adaptation processes is essential to ensure that respondents comprehend the items and the original meaning is retained across languages and contexts. This approach is central to UNICEF's efforts to expand the use of standard data collection tools across settings and close the global data gap on adolescent mental health.We conducted transcultural translation and adaptation processes in Belize using the Revised Children's Anxiety and Depression Scale (RCADS). Items from the original scale were translated into Belizean English and Kriol, reviewed by local mental health experts, and discussed in focus groups. Cognitive interviews were conducted with adolescents and parents. The information collected was analyzed with cultural equivalence domains: comprehensibility, acceptability, relevance, completeness, and technical equivalence. Bilingual discussions of findings informed the final item wordings, and the adapted tool was back-translated.Adaptation of terms and specific expressions were done to improve comprehensibility and to ensure the appropriate clinical meaning. For example, the expression 'feeling scared' was perceived to imply immaturity or threaten masculinity and was adapted to 'feeling afraid.' Expressions like "shaky" were modified to "trimble" in Kriol. Statements were reworded as questions to enhance acceptability and comprehensibility.A culturally adapted version of the RCADS was developed for use among adolescents in Belize in Belizean English and Kriol. The transcultural translation and adaptation procedure can be applied for other settings or tools to design contextual adaptations of mental health instruments prior to their validation or use in new settings.
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- 2023
4. Evaluating the Clinical Impact of a Novel Pediatric Emergency Medicine Curriculum on Asthma Outcomes in Belize
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Adeola A, Kosoko, Amelia A, Khoei, Swapnil, Khose, Alicia E, Genisca, and Joy M, Mackey
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Pediatric Emergency Medicine ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Emergency Medicine ,Humans ,Albuterol ,Steroids ,Curriculum ,General Medicine ,Emergencies ,Child ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,Belize ,Asthma - Abstract
Respiratory-related complaints prompt most pediatric visits to Karl Heusner Memorial Hospital Authority's (KHMHA) Emergency Department (ED) in Belize. We developed and taught a novel pediatric respiratory emergencies module for generalist practitioners there. We assessed the curriculum's clinical impact on pediatric asthma emergency management.This study assesses the clinical impact of a pediatric emergency medicine curriculum on management of pediatric asthma emergencies at KHMHA in Belize City, Belize.We conducted a randomized chart review of pediatric (aged 2-16 y) visits for asthma-related diagnosis at the KHMHA ED between 2015 and 2018 to assess the training module's clinical impact. Primary outcomes included time to albuterol and steroids. Secondary outcomes included clinical scoring tool (Pediatric Respiratory Assessment Measure [PRAM]) usage, ED length of stay, usage of chest radiography, return visit within 7 days, and hospital admission rates. Kaplan-Meier survival analysis and Cox proportional hazard regression were used.Two hundred eighty-three pediatric asthma-related diagnoses met our inclusion criteria. The patients treated by trained and untrained physician groups were demographically and clinically similar. The time to albuterol was significantly faster in the trained (intervention) group compared with the untrained (control) physician group when evaluating baseline of the group posttraining (P0.05). However, the time to steroids did not reach statistical significance posttraining (P = 0.93). The PRAM score utilization significantly increased among both control group and intervention group. The untrained physician group was more likely to use chest radiography or admit patients. The trained physician group had higher return visit rates within 7 days and shorter ED length of stay, but this did not reach statistical significance.The curriculum positively impacted clinical outcomes leading to earlier albuterol administration, increased PRAM score use, obtaining less chest radiographs, and decreased admission rates. The timeliness of systemic steroid administration was unaffected.
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- 2022
5. Ticks (Acari: Ixodidae) and Associated Pathogens Collected From Domestic Animals and Vegetation in Stann Creek District, Southeastern Belize, Central America
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Suppaluck Polsomboon Nelson, Brian P Bourke, Razan Badr, John Tarpey, Laura Caicedo-Quiroga, Donovan Leiva, Marie Pott, Alvaro Cruz, Chien-Chung Chao, Nicole L Achee, John P Grieco, Le Jiang, Ju Jiang, Christina M Farris, and Yvonne-Marie Linton
- Subjects
Ixodidae ,General Veterinary ,Ehrlichia ,Rhipicephalus sanguineus ,Belize ,Tick Infestations ,Dogs ,Infectious Diseases ,Amblyomma ,Animals, Domestic ,Insect Science ,Animals ,Humans ,Horse Diseases ,Parasitology ,Dog Diseases ,Horses ,Rickettsia - Abstract
Data on the prevalence and distribution of ticks and tick-borne diseases in Belize are lacking. Ticks (n = 564) collected from dogs, horses, and vegetation in two villages in Stann Creek District in southeastern Belize in 2018, were molecularly identified and screened for tick-borne nonviral human pathogens. The identity of 417 ticks was molecularly confirmed by DNA barcoding as Rhipicephalus sanguineus (Latreille) (66.43%), Amblyomma ovale Koch (15.59%), Dermacentor nitens Neumann (11.51%), Amblyomma sp. ADB0528 (3.6%), and the remainder being small records (2.87%) of Amblyomma coelebs Neumann, Amblyomma imitator Kohls, Amblyomma tapirellum Dunn, Amblyomma auricularium Conil, and Amblyomma maculatum Koch. Individual tick extracts were screened for the presence of Rickettsia spp., Babesia spp., Babesia microti, Borrelia spp., Ehrlichia spp., and Anaplasma spp. using available conventional polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays. Rickettsia parkeri strain Atlantic Rainforest was identified in five specimens of A. ovale, and one other unidentified tick, all collected from dogs. Another unidentified tick—also collected from a dog—tested positive for an undefined but previously detected Ehrlichia sp. With the exception of D. nitens, all eight other tick species identified in this study were collected on dogs, suggesting that dogs could be usefully employed as sentinel animals for tick surveillance in Belize.
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- 2022
6. Health-Related Quality of Life Population Norms for Belize Using EQ-5D-5L
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Henry Bailey, Mathieu F. Janssen, Philip Castillo, Girjanauth Boodraj, Althea La Foucade, and Psychiatry
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Male ,Health related quality of life ,education.field_of_study ,Index (economics) ,Latin Americans ,Visual analogue scale ,Health Status ,Health Policy ,Economics, Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous) ,Population ,Belize ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,EQ-5D ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Quality of Life ,Humans ,Female ,Self Report ,education ,Psychology ,Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics (miscellaneous) ,Ceiling level ,Demography ,Vas score - Abstract
Objectives There has been a growing interest in the use of EQ-5D health outcomes measures in Latin America and the Caribbean. Population norms data provide a benchmark against which clinicians, researchers, and policy makers can compare the health status of patient, treatment, or demographic groups. This study aimed to provide EQ-5D-5L population norms for Belize. Methods The EQ-5D-5L questionnaire was included in a national survey in Belize in 2014. The survey also captured key demographic variables. EQ-5D-5L health states, EQ-5D visual analog scale (EQ VAS) scores, and EQ-5D-5L index values (based on the Trinidad and Tobago value set) were obtained for key demographic groups in Belize. Results A representative sample of 2078 respondents completed the survey. The mean index value, EQ VAS score, and ceiling level for Belize were 0.947, 82.6, and 67.8%, respectively. Similar to other Caribbean countries, Belizeans self-reported relatively high EQ VAS scores and ceiling levels compared with non-Caribbean regions. Men reported generally higher health status than women, health status declined as age rises, and the dimensions with the highest burden were pain/discomfort and mobility. Conclusions This study provides researchers and practitioners in Belize with tools to use EQ-5D-5L. Users can apply the EQ VAS scores and EQ-5D-5L states presented herein as reference values. Until an EQ-5D-5L value set is created for Belize, the Trinidad and Tobago index values can be applied to Belizean-reported EQ-5D-5L states, which can then be compared with the index values presented in this study.
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- 2022
7. Distribution of Triatoma dimidiata sensu lato (Reduviidae: Triatominae) and Risk Factors Associated with Household Invasion in Northern Belize, Central America
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Angela T Caranci, John P Grieco, Nicole L Achee, David F Hoel, Kim Bautista, Russell King, V Ann Stewart, Jittawadee Murphy, Penny Masuoka, and Cara H Olsen
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General Veterinary ,Trypanosoma cruzi ,Central America ,Belize ,Insect Vectors ,Dogs ,Infectious Diseases ,Risk Factors ,Insect Science ,parasitic diseases ,Animals ,Chagas Disease ,Parasitology ,Dog Diseases ,Triatoma ,Triatominae - Abstract
To date, Triatoma dimidiata sensu lato [Reduviidae: Triatominae (Latreille 1811)] remains the sole vector species associated with Chagas disease transmission reported from Belize. Human infection data are limited for Belize and the disease transmission dynamics have not been thoroughly investigated, yet the likelihood of autochthonous transmission is supported by the widespread collection of infected vectors from within local households. Here, we report updated infection rates of the vector population and infestation rates for villages in north and central Belize. Overall, 275 households were enrolled in an ongoing vector surveillance program. Of the 41 insects collected, 25 were PCR positive for T. cruzi, indicating an infection rate as high as 60%. To further characterize the epidemiological risk of human–vector contact, determinants of household invasion were modeled. Local households were surveyed and characterized with respect to over 25 key factors that may be associated with household infestation by T. dimidiata s.l. While final models were not strongly predictive with respect to the risk factors that were surveyed, likely due to the low number of collection observations, the presence of domestic/peri-domestic dogs, nearby light sources, and household structure materials could be the focus of continued risk assessments. In northern Belize, this vector survey lends support to T. dimidiata s.l. inhabiting sylvatic settings as opposed to the classical paradigm of domiciliated vector populations. This designation has strong implications for the local level of human exposure risk which can help guide vector surveillance and control resources.
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- 2022
8. Effects of Risk Factors on Belizean Adolescents’ Academic Behaviors and Grit after Prolonged Absence During the COVID-19 Pandemic
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Mathias Vairez, Frank Gomez, Carolyn Gentle-Genitty, Janeen Quiroz, and Olga Manzanero
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Social Psychology ,Physiology (medical) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Education, Educational Psychology, and Social Work ,School Absenteeism ,Risk Factors ,Academic Behaviors ,Adolescents ,Belize ,COVID-19 ,Grit ,Education - Abstract
This causal-comparative study explored the effects of risk factors—family status, parental marital status, family income, and parent education level—on Belizean adolescents’ academic behaviors and grit (passion and perseverance in goal achievement) following prolonged absence during the COVID-19 pandemic. Data were collected online using a demographic survey, the Grit-S Scale (Duckworth & Quinn, 2009), coupled with eight additional items to measure academic behaviors (attendance, preparedness, attention, note-taking, participation, organization, use of out-of-school time, and homework completion and submission) for success (Farrington et al., 2012) from secondary and tertiary students in Belize. With rare exception, Belizean education took place in person before the pandemic. This changed to remote teaching and learning during the pandemic. Findings showed that adolescents from the defined risk factor of single-parent households experienced greater declines across all eight academic behaviors. Additionally, this effect was more pronounced for adolescents who experienced the loss of a parent from divorce or death of a parent. For grit, there were two key outcomes: (a) adolescents from nuclear and higher income families had slightly higher levels of grit; and (b) adolescents from parents with lower educational attainment had significantly higher levels of grit than their peers. Based on these findings, recommendations include more study of schools that invest in becoming trauma responsive when evaluating engagement and performance during prolonged absences. Future research should assess adolescents’ level of academic behaviors, grit, and other noncognitive factors.
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- 2022
9. Assessment of Cervical Cancer Prevention and Treatment Infrastructure in Belize
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Abha Kulkarni, Jennifer Tsui, Shawna V. Hudson, Taylor Anderson, Jennifer H. Fang, Tiffany Smith, Gregory L Peck, Natalia Largaespada Beer, Joseph S. Hanna, Mark H. Einstein, and Shane S. Neibart
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Cancer Research ,Resource (biology) ,Uterine Cervical Neoplasms ,Cancer Prevention and Control ,Health facility ,Pregnancy ,Environmental health ,medicine ,Humans ,Early Detection of Cancer ,Cervical cancer ,Colposcopy ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Capacity building ,ORIGINAL REPORTS ,medicine.disease ,Belize ,Outreach ,Oncology ,Workforce ,Management system ,Female ,business ,Delivery of Health Care - Abstract
PURPOSE Belize has one of the highest cervical cancer burdens among Latin American and Caribbean countries, despite the implementation of national policies to increase access to prevention and treatment services. This study evaluates the policies, infrastructure, and workforce of the cervical cancer management system in Belize to inform capacity building efforts. METHODS In 2018, health facility assessments were conducted across all six districts of Belize at the national pathology facility and 12 public facilities identified as critical to cervical cancer control. Human and infrastructure resource availability and existing policies related to cervical cancer screening and treatment services were assessed through a structured instrument. RESULTS The public cervical cancer screening workforce in Belize consists of 75 primary care nurses and physicians—one per 1,076 screening-eligible women, with 44% conducting rural outreach. All districts have at least one screening facility, but 50% perform screening services only once per week. Colposcopy and loop electrical excision procedures are available in three and four districts, respectively; radical hysterectomy and chemotherapy are available in two districts; and radiation therapy is unavailable. Of essential pathology equipment, 38.5% were present and functional, 23% were present but nonfunctional, and 38.5% were unavailable. Additionally, 35% of supplies were unavailable at the time of assessment, and 75% were unavailable at least once in the 12 months before assessment. CONCLUSION Public-sector cervical cancer management services differ among districts of Belize, with tertiary service availability concentrated in the largest district. Screening, outreach, and pathology are limited mostly by resource availability. This study characterizes the current capacity of services in Belize and pinpoints health system components for future investment and capacity-building efforts.
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- 2021
10. New light on the use of
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Anabel, Ford, Ann, Williams, and Mattanjah S, de Vries
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Cacao ,Theophylline ,Seeds ,Clay ,Theobromine ,Guatemala ,Belize ,History, Ancient - Abstract
Cacao seeds
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- 2022
11. Cardiac Care in Belize: Building a Local, Sustainable Program from 'Square One'
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Skipper, Eric, Johnson, Theresa, and R, Francis
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cardiology ,Belize ,cardiac surgery - Abstract
Objectives: The authors explore building a sustainable cardiac program in Belize from ground zero. Methods: Leveraging previously proven experience and expertise of Francis Robicsek, MD PhD in Guatemala, the authors outline the steps taken to duplicate the program. Results: A 5-year commitment timeline between the supporting organization and the host medical facility in Belize is the first step toward achieving sustainability. We are already seeing results through advance training and hiring of healthcare providers. Conclusion: “Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime.”(1) Our role is to provide assistance and support, so that we leave competent and skilled medical professionals behind to assess, diagnose and treat current and future generations.
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- 2022
12. Historical series regarding Belize
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Navidad, Angel
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belize ,History ,guatemala ,yucatan ,caribbean ,honduras ,Arts and Humanities ,central-america ,Latin American History ,humanities - Abstract
Privately-funded ongoing work (October 2020 to present) to gather or build various historical data regarding Belize and predecessor and associated states
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- 2022
- Full Text
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13. 'Backing Weakness:' Conceptualizations of Q'Eqchi' Women's Vulnerability in Belize
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James B. Waldram
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Male ,Health (social science) ,Anthropology ,Anthropology, Medical ,Concept Formation ,Humans ,Women's Health ,Female ,Medicine, Traditional ,Belize - Abstract
Q'eqchi' women's health is the product of inherent, acquired, and induced vulnerabilities that inform an idiom of "weakness" characteristic of women compared to men, reflecting both biological difference and gender-specific demands placed upon them within the context of village life. While women are understood to be uniquely vulnerable to sickness - their "weakness" - they demonstrate great strength and vigor to perform culturally prescribed roles, such as "backing" heavy loads. A framework grounded in Indigenous culture and ideology interprets Q'eqchi' understandings of women's health and broader position within society, arguing the need to take seriously Indigenous explanatory frameworks.
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- 2022
14. A qualitative inquiry of food insecurity in Belize
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Elizabeth Onye, Rita DeFour, Lynna Bendali Amor, Andre Joel Lopez, Melissa M. Reznar, and Laurel D. Stevenson
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Adult ,Male ,Public infrastructure ,Secondary education ,Adolescent ,030309 nutrition & dietetics ,Psychological intervention ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Interconnectedness ,Food Supply ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Socioeconomics ,Qualitative Research ,Aged ,0303 health sciences ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Food security ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Middle Aged ,Investment (macroeconomics) ,Belize ,Food insecurity ,Food Insecurity ,Geography ,Income ,Female ,Meaning (linguistics) - Abstract
Objective:To explore and provide contextual meaning around issues surrounding food insecurity, namely factors influencing food access, as one domain of food security.Design:A community-based, qualitative inquiry using semi-structured face-to-face interviews was conducted as part of a larger sequential mixed-methods study.Setting:Cayo District, Belize, May 2019–August 2019.Participants:Thirty English-speaking individuals (eight males, twenty-two females) between the ages of 18–70, with varying family composition residing within the Cayo District.Results:Participants describe a complex interconnectedness between family- and individual-level barriers to food access. Specifically, family composition, income, education and employment influence individuals’ ability to afford and access food for themselves or their families. Participants also cite challenges with transportation and distance to food sources and educational opportunities as barriers to accessing food.Conclusion:These findings provide insight around food security and food access barriers in a middle-income country and provide avenues for further study and potential interventions. Increased and sustained investment in primary and secondary education, including programmes to support enrollment, should be a priority to decreasing food insecurity. Attention to building public infrastructure may also ease burdens around accessing foods.
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- 2021
15. The Development of a Novel International Elective in Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
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Ashti Doobay-Persaud, Leslie Rydberg, and Amy Mathews
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Students, Medical ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Graduate medical education ,MEDLINE ,Pilot Projects ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Global Health ,Resource (project management) ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Global health ,Humans ,Medicine ,Set (psychology) ,Curriculum ,Accreditation ,Rehabilitation ,business.industry ,Internship and Residency ,Middle Aged ,Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine ,Belize ,Education, Medical, Graduate ,Female ,Clinical Competence ,business ,Program Evaluation - Abstract
Interest in global health is rising in graduate medical education. Trainees are increasingly seeking high-quality, ethically sound, and educationally robust opportunities for global medical rotations (Int J Gynecol Obstet. 2014;128(2):148-51). When based on best educational practices, these opportunities can provide a unique learning experience for residents in traditional physical medicine and rehabilitation programs. This article describes the development of an international rotation in physical medicine and rehabilitation including specific competency-based physical medicine and rehabilitation global health learning objectives, predeparture training, rotation structure, and postrotation feedback mechanisms. The aim is to present the development of the program as a resource for both residents and program directors to help create and maximize existing rotations at their own institutions. Learners must complete predeparture requirements that include completion of a musculoskeletal rotation and global health didactics intended to provide foundational knowledge in physiatry and global health. Postrotation requirements include the residency program's standardized evaluation form, resident survey, and self-reflection essay. Experience from a novel 4-wk pilot rotation to Punta Gorda, Belize, is described to exemplify Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education-based learning objectives as well as the benefits of a formalized rotation structure. Using this unique set of learning objectives and proposed rotation requirements, the authors believe that physical medicine and rehabilitation residency programs can develop valuable global health learning experiences.
- Published
- 2020
16. A New Coccidian (Apicomplexa: Eimeriidae) in the Critically Endangered Central American River Turtle (Dermatemys Mawii) in Belize
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Elliott R. Jacobson, Robert J. Ossiboff, Isabelle Paquet-Durand, April L. Childress, Heather Barrett, Jacob Marlin, Chris T. McAllister, and Heather D. S. Walden
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Chromista ,Oocysts ,Biodiversity ,Belize ,Turtles ,Feces ,Eucoccidiida ,Eimeriidae ,Animals ,Parasitology ,Eimeria ,Miozoa ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy - Abstract
As part of a biannual health examination, coprological samples from 3-mo-old Central American river turtles, Dermatemys mawii (Gray, 1847) in a breeding program in Belize, Central America, revealed a previously undescribed coccidian (Apicomplexa) in 17 of 46 (37%) samples. Of 3 positive fecal samples transported to the University of Florida, coccidian oocysts were observed in 1 sample. Sporulated oocysts were measured and described, and using polymerase chain reaction (PCR), an approximately 400-base pair (bp) region of both the small subunit (18S) ribosomal RNA gene and 1,200-bp region of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) gene were amplified in all 3 samples and their products were sequenced. For comparative value, the same PCR reactions and amplifications were performed on a fecal sample containing oocysts of Eimeria mitraria obtained from a red-eared slider, Trachemys scripta elegans. Results indicated a new eimerian in D. mawii, Eimeria grayi n. sp.
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- 2022
17. Barriers and facilitators to past six-month HIV testing among men who have sex with men in Belize
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Caroline K. Harpel, James E. Egan, Erika Castellanos, Cristian J Chandler, Leigh A Bukowski, Jordan M Sang, and Ron Stall
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Sexual Behavior ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Social Stigma ,Shame ,Stigma (botany) ,HIV Infections ,Dermatology ,Logistic regression ,Affect (psychology) ,Health Services Accessibility ,Men who have sex with men ,HIV Testing ,03 medical and health sciences ,Discrimination, Psychological ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health care ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,Medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Homosexuality, Male ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,media_common ,030505 public health ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,virus diseases ,Belize ,Sexual Partners ,Infectious Diseases ,Snowball sampling ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Demography - Abstract
Prevalence of HIV in Belize is high, and men who have sex with men (MSM) are disproportionately impacted by HIV. HIV testing is critical in curbing the epidemic; however, little is known about factors associated with testing among MSM in Belize. Working with a non-governmental organization in a large, urban city within Belize, snowball sampling was applied to recruit Belizean MSM to complete a self-administered survey. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was employed to understand associations with HIV screening behavior. Access to healthcare, HIV knowledge, and reporting having heard of Section 53 of the Criminal Code of Belize (once outlawing same-sex sexual behavior), but not experiencing any negative impact from Section 53 were significantly positively associated with having received an HIV test in the past six months. Healthcare maltreatment (lifetime), depression symptomology, and shame were significantly negatively associated with having received a HIV test in the past six months. Findings suggest that multiple factors associated with stigma and discrimination negatively affect testing strategies among MSM in Belize.
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- 2020
18. The Botfly, A Tropical Menace: A Distinctive Myiasis Caused by Dermatobia hominis
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Rajendra Kapila, Robert A. Schwartz, and Sara D. Ragi
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Impetigo ,Endemic Diseases ,Pharmacology toxicology ,Folliculitis ,Dermatology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Myiasis ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Botfly ,0302 clinical medicine ,Protective Clothing ,parasitic diseases ,Infestation ,Animals ,Humans ,Medicine ,Skin ,Ivermectin ,Antiparasitic Agents ,integumentary system ,biology ,business.industry ,Diptera ,Insect Bites and Stings ,Endemic area ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Belize ,United States ,Dermatobia hominis ,Latin America ,Insect Repellents ,Larva ,Travel-Related Illness ,business - Abstract
Dermatobia hominis, also known as the human botfly, is native to tropical and subtropical Central and South America and seen in travelers from endemic to temperate regions including the United States and Europe. Cutaneous infestation botfly myiasis involves the development of D. hominis larvae in the skin and is common in tropical locations. The distinct appearance of a cutaneous D. hominis infestation facilitates early diagnosis and intervention where cases are common. However, the identification of D. hominis in temperate regions may prove challenging due to its rarity. D. hominis may be misdiagnosed as folliculitis, an epidermal cyst, or an embedded foreign object with secondary impetigo. One should have a heightened suspicion in someone returning from a vacation in an endemic area, such as Belize. Here we describe the presentation, differential diagnosis, and treatment and encourage enhanced preventative measures among tourists when visiting tropical and subtropical regions. Additionally, we propose a novel classification system for assessing the various stages of infestation and suggest that patients reporting travel to Latin America and experiencing pain disproportionate to an insect bite should lead physicians to consider myiasis caused by D. hominis.
- Published
- 2020
19. Transcriptomic plasticity of mesophotic corals among natural populations and transplants of Montastraea cavernosa in the Gulf of Mexico and Belize
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Michael S. Studivan and Joshua D. Voss
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Coral ,Biology ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Acclimatization ,Transcriptome ,03 medical and health sciences ,Genetics ,Animals ,Ecosystem ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Ecological niche ,Montastraea cavernosa ,Gulf of Mexico ,Coral Reefs ,Ecology ,fungi ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,Anthozoa ,biology.organism_classification ,Belize ,030104 developmental biology ,Habitat ,Adaptation - Abstract
While physiological responses to low-light environments have been studied among corals on mesophotic coral ecosystems worldwide (MCEs; 30-150 m), the mechanisms behind acclimatization and adaptation to depth are not well understood for most coral species. Transcriptomic approaches based on RNA sequencing are useful tools for quantifying gene expression plasticity, particularly in slow-growing species such as scleractinian corals, and for identifying potential functional differences among conspecifics. A tag-based RNA-Seq (Tag-Seq) pipeline was applied to quantify transcriptional variation in natural populations of the scleractinian coral Montastraea cavernosa from mesophotic and shallower environments across five sites in Belize and the Gulf of Mexico: Carrie Bow Cay, West and East Flower Garden Banks, Pulley Ridge, and Dry Tortugas. Regional site location was a stronger driver of gene expression patterns than depth. However, mesophotic corals among all sites shared similar regulation of metabolic and cell growth functional pathways that may represent common physiological responses to environmental conditions at depth. Additionally, in a transplant experiment at West and East Flower Garden Banks, colonies transplanted from mesophotic to shallower habitats diverged from the control mesophotic group over time, indicating depth-regulated plasticity of gene expression. When the shallower depth zone experienced a bleaching event, bleaching severity did not differ significantly between transplants and shallow controls, but gene expression patterns indicated variable regulation of stress responses among depth treatments. Coupled observational and experimental studies of gene expression among mesophotic and shallower M. cavernosa provide insights into the ability of this depth-generalist coral species to persist under varying environmental conditions.
- Published
- 2020
20. Making Space for Heritage: Collaboration, Sustainability, and Education in a Creole Community Archaeology Museum in Northern Belize
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Eleanor Harrison-Buck and Sara Clarke-Vivier
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Archeology ,060101 anthropology ,History ,060102 archaeology ,Materials Science (miscellaneous) ,Creole language ,Museum education ,Community archaeology ,descendant communities ,archaeology ,06 humanities and the arts ,Conservation ,Belize ,Social studies ,Afro-Caribbean history ,Cultural heritage ,Oral history ,Deep history ,community museums ,lcsh:Archaeology ,Ethnology ,Creole ,0601 history and archaeology ,lcsh:CC1-960 ,Historical archaeology - Abstract
Working with local partners, we developed an archaeology museum in the Creole community of Crooked Tree in the Maya lowlands of northern Belize. This community museum presents the deep history of human&ndash, environment interaction in the lower Belize River Watershed, which includes a wealth of ancient Maya sites and, as the birthplace of Creole culture, a rich repository of historical archaeology and oral history. The Creole are descendants of Europeans and enslaved Africans brought to Belize&mdash, a former British colony&mdash, for logging in the colonial period. Belizean history in schools focuses heavily on the ancient Maya, which is well documented archaeologically, but Creole history and culture remain largely undocumented and make up only a small component of the social studies curriculum. The development of a community archaeology museum in Crooked Tree aims to address this blind spot. We discuss how cultural sustainability, collaborative partnerships, and the role of education have shaped this heritage-oriented project. Working with local teachers, we produced exhibit content that augments the national social studies curriculum. Archaeology and museum education offer object-based learning geared for school-age children and provide a powerful means of promoting cultural vitality, and a more inclusive consideration of Belizean history and cultural heritage practices and perspectives.
- Published
- 2020
21. Ethnic boundary dynamics in immigrant entrepreneurship: a Barthian perspective
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Michiel Verver, Carel Roessingh, David Passenier, Organization Sciences, Network Institute, Organization & Processes of Organizing in Society (OPOS), and KIN Center for Digital Innovation
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Entrepreneurship ,ethnic boundaries ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Perspective (graphical) ,Immigration ,Ethnic group ,Boundary (topology) ,Development ,Belize ,0506 political science ,mixed embeddedness ,Mennonites ,Fredrik Barth ,Dynamics (music) ,Immigrant entrepreneurship ,0502 economics and business ,050602 political science & public administration ,Economic geography ,Sociology ,Business and International Management ,050203 business & management ,media_common - Abstract
This paper sets out to better understand the role of ethnic boundary dynamics in immigrant entrepreneurship, in particular in terms of intersections at the boundaries between ‘ethnic’ and ‘mainstream’ economies, internal differentiation within ethnic community boundaries, and the socially constructed nature of ethnic boundaries more broadly. To better account for these dynamics, we develop a Barthian perspective on immigrant entrepreneurship, building on and integrating Fredrik Barth’s work on entrepreneurship, ethnic boundaries, and spheres of value. A Barthian perspective shifts the analytic focus from the ethnic group to entrepreneurial activities and, by implication, to the ethnic boundary dynamics that these activities generate. We draw on ethnographic research conducted among immigrant Mennonite entrepreneurs in Belize, and identify three boundary dynamics among the Mennonites: bridging the boundary between Mennonite ethnicity and the wider Belizean society, stretching the boundaries of individual Mennonite communities, and allying across the boundaries between Mennonite communities. In developing a Barthian perspective, the contribution of our paper lies in developing a comprehensive framework for understanding the role of ethnic boundary dynamics in immigrant entrepreneurship, thereby also responding to calls for more micro-processual approaches to understanding the ‘mixed embeddedness’ of immigrant entrepreneurs in their ethnic community and the wider society contexts.
- Published
- 2020
22. Unraveling hierarchical genetic structure in a marine metapopulation: A comparison of three high‐throughput genotyping approaches
- Author
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Jose A. Andrés, Richard J. Harrison, Steven M. Bogdanowicz, Cassidy C. D’Aloia, Amy R. McCune, and Peter M. Buston
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Genotype ,Genotyping Techniques ,Atoll ,Metapopulation ,Biology ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Population genomics ,03 medical and health sciences ,Genetics ,Animals ,Reef ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Isolation by distance ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Coral Reefs ,High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing ,Coral reef ,Belize ,Perciformes ,Genetics, Population ,030104 developmental biology ,Genetic marker ,Evolutionary biology ,Genetic structure ,Microsatellite Repeats - Abstract
Marine metapopulations often exhibit subtle population structure that can be difficult to detect. Given recent advances in high-throughput sequencing, an emerging question is whether various genotyping approaches, in concert with improved sampling designs, will substantially improve our understanding of genetic structure in the sea. To address this question, we explored hierarchical patterns of structure in the coral reef fish Elacatinus lori using a high-resolution approach with respect to both genetic and geographic sampling. Previously, we identified three putative E. lori populations within Belize using traditional genetic markers and sparse geographic sampling: barrier reef and Turneffe Atoll; Glover's Atoll; and Lighthouse Atoll. Here, we systematically sampled individuals at ~10 km intervals throughout these reefs (1,129 individuals from 35 sites) and sequenced all individuals at three sets of markers: 2,418 SNPs; 89 microsatellites; and 57 nonrepetitive nuclear loci. At broad spatial scales, the markers were consistent with each other and with previous findings. At finer spatial scales, there was new evidence of genetic substructure, but our three marker sets differed slightly in their ability to detect these patterns. Specifically, we found subtle structure between the barrier reef and Turneffe Atoll, with SNPs resolving this pattern most effectively. We also documented isolation by distance within the barrier reef. Sensitivity analyses revealed that the number of loci (and alleles) had a strong effect on the detection of structure for all three marker sets, particularly at small spatial scales. Taken together, these results illustrate empirically that high-throughput genotyping data can elucidate subtle genetic structure at previously-undetected scales in a dispersive marine fish.
- Published
- 2020
23. Assessing multidimensional care coverage for pre‐eclampsia in the era of universal health coverage: A pre–post evaluation of the Salud Mesoamérica Initiative
- Author
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Maximillian G. Thom, Diego Ríos-Zertuche, Casey K. Johanns, Ali H. Mokdad, Rebecca M. Cogen, Bernardo Hernández, and Aruna M Kamath
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Mesoamerica ,Post evaluation ,Psychological intervention ,Nicaragua ,Disease ,Odds ,Young Adult ,Pre-Eclampsia ,Pregnancy ,Universal Health Insurance ,Poverty Areas ,Humans ,Medicine ,Eclampsia ,Baseline (configuration management) ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,Clinical Article ,business.industry ,Medical record ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Central America ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Belize ,Pre‐eclampsia ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,Obstetrics ,Honduras ,Controlled Before-After Studies ,Family medicine ,Clinical Articles ,Quality of health care ,Female ,Maternal health ,business ,Delivery of Health Care - Abstract
Objective To compare a multidimensional care package for pre‐eclampsia/eclampsia in Central American health facilities, before and after implementation of the Salud Mesoamérica Initiative. Methods An evaluation study was conducted at 67 basic‐ and comprehensive‐level health facilities serving the poorest areas in Honduras, Nicaragua, and Belize. Cases of severe pre‐eclampsia or eclampsia were randomly sampled and relevant quality of care data extracted from medical records at baseline (n=111) from January 1, 2011, to March 31, 2013, and at second‐phase follow‐up (n=249) from June 1, 2015, to September 30, 2017. The primary outcome was evidence of the delivery of multidimensional care for the management of pre‐eclampsia/eclampsia. Results The care of 360 women with severe pre‐eclampsia or eclampsia was analyzed. Odds of multidimensional care for pre‐eclampsia management (P=0.271) increased (although not significantly) in the second‐phase follow‐up compared to baseline. Multidimensional care was significantly associated with training (P, Multidimensional care for pre‐eclampsia management increased across all facility types, participating countries, and severity of disease under the Salud Mesoamérica Initiative model in Central America.
- Published
- 2020
24. Genomic Basis of Convergent Island Phenotypes in Boa Constrictors
- Author
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Andrew B. Corbin, Blair W. Perry, Scott M. Boback, Juan M. Daza, Richard Adams, Chad E. Montgomery, Melissa J. Van Kleeck, Daren C. Card, Warren Booth, Kristopher Row, Drew R. Schield, Todd A. Castoe, and Giulia I M Pasquesi
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Boa constrictor genome annotation ,whole-genome resequencing ,selection ,Morphology (biology) ,Biology ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Genome ,Evolution, Molecular ,03 medical and health sciences ,Genetic drift ,Molecular evolution ,Convergent evolution ,Genetics ,Animals ,convergent evolution ,Selection, Genetic ,Gene ,Phylogeny ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Selection (genetic algorithm) ,030304 developmental biology ,Islands ,0303 health sciences ,Genetic Drift ,Genetic Variation ,snakes ,Belize ,Phenotype ,Boidae ,Genetics, Population ,Honduras ,Evolutionary biology ,insular populations ,Research Article - Abstract
Convergent evolution is often documented in organisms inhabiting isolated environments with distinct ecological conditions and similar selective regimes. Several Central America islands harbor dwarf Boa populations that are characterized by distinct differences in growth, mass, and craniofacial morphology, which are linked to the shared arboreal and feast-famine ecology of these island populations. Using high-density RADseq data, we inferred three dwarf island populations with independent origins and demonstrate that selection, along with genetic drift, has produced both divergent and convergent molecular evolution across island populations. Leveraging whole-genome resequencing data for 20 individuals and a newly annotated Boa genome, we identify four genes with evidence of phenotypically relevant protein-coding variation that differentiate island and mainland populations. The known roles of these genes involved in body growth (PTPRS, DMGDH, and ARSB), circulating fat and cholesterol levels (MYLIP), and craniofacial development (DMGDH and ARSB) in mammals link patterns of molecular evolution with the unique phenotypes of these island forms. Our results provide an important genome-wide example for quantifying expectations of selection and convergence in closely related populations. We also find evidence at several genomic loci that selection may be a prominent force of evolutionary change—even for small island populations for which drift is predicted to dominate. Overall, while phenotypically convergent island populations show relatively few loci under strong selection, infrequent patterns of molecular convergence are still apparent and implicate genes with strong connections to convergent phenotypes.
- Published
- 2019
25. Evaluating multilinear and machine learning regression methods for Satellite-derived Bathymetry mapping using ICESat-2 and Sentinel-2 data on Google Earth Engine
- Author
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Pertiwi, Avi Putri, Thomas, Nathan, Carpenter, Stephen, Lee, Chengfa Benjamin, and Traganos, Dimosthenis
- Subjects
Machine learning regression ,Lidar ,Bathymetry ,Sentinel-2 ,Belize ,Optical ,ICESat-2 - Published
- 2021
26. Designation of the neotype of Triatoma dimidiata (Latreille, 1811) (Hemiptera, Reduviidae, Triatominae), with full integrated redescription including mitogenome and nuclear ITS-2 sequences
- Author
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Carolina Dale and Silvia Justi
- Subjects
Costa Rica ,Chagas disease ,Insecta ,Arthropoda ,Panama ,Reduvoidea ,Meccus ,Andes ,Nicaragua ,Colombia ,Heteroptera ,Hemiptera ,Systematics ,Peru ,El Salvador ,Latreille ,Animalia ,Meccus dimidiatus ,Reduviidae ,Cimicomorpha ,Invertebrata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy ,Amazon Basin ,Hexapoda ,Central America ,South America ,Guatemala ,Belize ,Biota ,Honduras ,QL1-991 ,Central America and the Caribbean ,Triatomini ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Ecuador ,Americas ,Triatominae ,Zoology ,vector ,Research Article - Abstract
The taxonomic status of Triatoma dimidiata (Latreille, 1811) is, by far, the most discussed within Triatominae. Molecular studies have recovered at least three independently evolving lineages in T. dimidiata across its range. The original description of T. dimidiata (as Reduvius dimidiatus) included few taxonomic characters, and no types were assigned. To define and describe the cryptic diversity within T. dimidiata sensu lato (s.l.), a neotype must be designated. For this purpose, all 199 specimens identified as T. dimidiata from the collections of the Smithsonian Institution – National Museum of Natural History and the American Museum of Natural History, ranging from Peru to Mexico, were studied. Only one specimen (from Tumbes, Peru) matched the combination of characters as listed in the original description, and it is herein formally designated as the neotype for T. dimidiata. The neotype is morphologically described and DNA sequences of its whole mitochondrial genome and the nuclear second internal transcribed spacer region (ITS2), commonly used in triatomine molecular systematics studies, are presented and compared to other publicly available sequences of T. dimidiata s.l. in GenBank. Our results suggest that T. dimidiata sensu stricto (s.s.) is somewhat rare and, therefore, unlikely to serve as a major vector of Chagas disease.
- Published
- 2021
27. Patterns of Consumption Across a Caribbean Seascape: Roles of Habitat and Consumer Species Composition Through Time
- Author
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Carmen J. Ritter, Leah M. Harper, Jonathan S. Lefcheck, Valerie J. Paul, Ross Whippo, Scott Jones, Matthew B. Ogburn, and J. Emmett Duffy
- Subjects
seagrass ,Science ,Ocean Engineering ,QH1-199.5 ,Aquatic Science ,Oceanography ,Predation ,Ecosystem ,Marine ecosystem ,Reef ,Water Science and Technology ,Seascape ,mangrove ,Global and Planetary Change ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,herbivory ,Ecology ,General. Including nature conservation, geographical distribution ,Coral reef ,biology.organism_classification ,Belize ,Seagrass ,Habitat ,coral reef ,predation - Abstract
Herbivores, omnivores, and predators transfer energy and structure the communities of many coastal marine ecosystems, and the intensity with which they consume prey and contribute to ecosystem functioning varies substantially among habitats over short time periods. Whether generalities across habitats might emerge for longer time series and using standard methods remains largely untested. Here, we deployed standardized assays of consumption using dried squid (“squidpops”) and five common macrophytes (“weedpops”) to quantify consumption across coral fore reef and patch reefs, mangroves, seagrass meadows, and bare sand from 2015 to 2019 around Carrie Bow Cay, Belize. We also used video in 2017 to identify the species responsible for consumption. We found that both squid- and weedpop consumption were consistently highest on patch and fore reef habitats, moderate in mangroves, and lowest in seagrass and sand across all years of the survey. Videos showed that the majority of consumption on the reefs in 2017 could be attributed to < 5 fish species, and the identity of the dominant consumers differed among habitats. This study validates a key but implicit assumption in marine ecology that relative patterns in consumption across habitats are consistent through space and time in tropical nearshore environments, and reveals that high consumption rates may be the consequence of one or few species in each location.
- Published
- 2021
28. Oral susceptibility to ivermectin is over fifty times greater in a wild population of Anopheles albimanus mosquitoes from Belize than the STECLA laboratory reference strain of this mosquito
- Author
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Staci M. Dreyer, Kelsey J. Morin, Marla Magaña, Marie Pott, Donovan Leiva, Nicole L. Achee, John P. Grieco, and Jefferson A. Vaughan
- Subjects
Infectious Diseases ,Ivermectin ,Anopheles ,Animals ,Humans ,Parasitology ,Mosquito Vectors ,Laboratories ,Belize ,Malaria - Abstract
Background The STECLA strain of Anopheles albimanus has been in continuous colony for many years and is the reference strain on which genomic studies for the species are based. Recently, the STECLA strain was demonstrated to be much less susceptible to ivermectin ingested in a blood meal (4-day LC50 of 1468 ng/ml) than all other Anopheles species tested to-date (LC50 values range from 7 to 56 ng/ml). The ability of An. albimanus to survive ingestion of ivermectin at concentrations far beyond that typically found in the blood of ivermectin-treated people or livestock (i.e., 30–70 ng/ml) could invalidate the use of ivermectin as a malaria vector control strategy in areas where An. albimanus is a primary vector. Methods To investigate this, host-seeking An. albimanus were captured in northern Belize and used in membrane feeding bioassays of ivermectin, employing the same methods as described earlier with the STECLA strain. Results Field-collected An. albimanus in Belize were 55 times more susceptible to ingested ivermectin than were the STECLA reference strain. Oral susceptibility to ivermectin in wild An. albimanus from Belize (4-day LC50 of 26 ng/ml) was equivalent to that of other Anopheles species tested. Conclusions Contrary to initial assessments using a highly inbred strain of mosquito, laboratory studies using a field population indicate that ivermectin treatment of livestock could reduce An. albimanus populations in areas of Central America and the Caribbean where malaria transmission may occur. Toxicity screening of ivermectin and other systemic parasiticides for malaria control should examine wild populations of the vector species being targeted.
- Published
- 2021
29. Nursing students’ experiences of service-learning at community and hospital pharmacies in Belize: Pedagogical implications for nursing pharmacology
- Author
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Danladi Chiroma Husaini, David D. Mphuthi, Jane A. Chiroma, Yusuf Abubakar, and Adeniyi O. Adeleye
- Subjects
Pharmacies ,Multidisciplinary ,Humans ,Students, Nursing ,Education, Nursing, Baccalaureate ,Belize ,Hospitals - Abstract
Objectives Many students seem to find pharmacology learning very challenging due to the complexity and variety of drugs they have to study. The number of drugs the students have to learn, the duration of time to learn the medications, and the evolving nature of diseases demanded learning beyond the classroom walls. This study explored and described nursing students’ experiences in community and hospital-based pharmacy practice sites during their service-learning and its implications for pharmacology pedagogical practices. Methods Kolb’s learning theory provided the framework to explore nursing students’ 48-hour service-learning experiences at community/hospital-based pharmacies in Belize and its implications for pharmacology pedagogy. The study utilized two qualitative approaches, reflective journals and focus group interviews, to collect data from 46 second-year nursing students. NVivo software and coding schemes were employed to analyze the data from the interviews and reflective journals. Results Students reported learning medications, integrating classroom pharmacological knowledge at pharmacy practice sites, acquiring and enhancing communication skills, interpreting prescriptions, dispensing medications, drug calculations, taking inventory, doing vital signs, and patient education. In addition, students reported experiencing inter-professional relationships as healthcare team members. Anxiety was a major challenge experienced by many students at the beginning of the service-learning experience. Conclusions This study highlights the importance of experiential learning of pharmacology amongst second year nursing students, offering the opportunity to inform and support pharmacotherapeutics educators in designing strategies for more effective teaching of medications to nursing students. It also supports the addition of pharmacy placements to the nursing curriculum’ as it shows that nursing students can learn medications, skills, and teamwork from experiential pharmacy site posting. Combining classroom instruction with pharmacy experiential service learning might be an effective complement for teaching nursing pharmacology.
- Published
- 2022
30. Variable tropical moisture and food availability underlie mixed winter space-use strategies in a migratory songbird
- Author
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W. Gregory Shriver, Michele R. Dudash, Peter P. Marra, Thomas B. Ryder, and Calandra Q. Stanley
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Range (biology) ,Population ,stable isotopes ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,non-breeding ecology ,Songbirds ,Abundance (ecology) ,wintering grounds ,Dry season ,Animals ,Humans ,education ,Ecosystem ,Research Articles ,facultative movements ,General Environmental Science ,Facultative ,education.field_of_study ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,biology ,Ecology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,General Medicine ,tracking ,biology.organism_classification ,Arid ,Belize ,Geography ,Habitat ,Wood thrush ,movement ecology ,Animal Migration ,Seasons ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences - Abstract
Identifying environmental correlates driving space-use strategies can be critical for predicting population dynamics; however, such information can be difficult to attain for small mobile species such as migratory songbirds. We combined radio-telemetry and high-resolution GPS tracking to examine space-use strategies under different moisture gradients for wood thrush (Hylocichla mustelina). We explored the role moisture plays in driving food abundance and, in turn, space-use strategies at a wintering site in Belize across 3 years. Individuals occupying drier habitats experienced lower food abundance and poorer body condition. Using data from our radio-tracked study population and GPS tracking from across five breeding populations, we detected low rates of overwinter site persistence across the wood thrush wintering range. Contrary to expectations, individuals in wetter habitats were more likely to engage in permanent mid-winter relocations, up to 148 km. We suggest facultative movements are instead a condition-dependent strategy that enables wintering wood thrush to locate alternative habitat as food availability declines throughout the dry season. Increased aridity is predicted across the wintering range of wood thrush, and future research should delve deeper into understanding how moisture impacts within and between season space-use dynamics and its ultimate impact on the population dynamics of this declining species.
- Published
- 2021
31. Fishing for Success: A review of best practices and benefits offered by cooperatives
- Author
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La Ferr, Allegra
- Subjects
FIP ,Fisheries Improvement Project ,Benefits and Services ,Cooperatives ,Belize ,Benefits ,Fisheries Cooperatives - Abstract
While there has been much research on cooperatives, research focused on the benefits and services that cooperatives provide their members, and how those benefits help strengthen cooperative success, has been sparse. This research aimed to address this gap and identify common types of benefits and services utilized by cooperatives around the world. Findings were generated to inform members of a Fisheries Improvement Project (FIP+) within the Belize spiny lobster fishery. Using a mix of informal interviews and a literature review of cooperative benefits, a pattern finding analysis was conducted. It was found that benefits fell into three main categories: social, economic, and environmental. A total of 32 benefit categories were identified and described. The categories showed varying levels of complexity. Many benefits occurred across sectors, while other benefits appeared to be more common within one or two sectors. The analysis also highlighted the importance of certain enabling conditions as necessary steps to implementing a robust and successful benefits program. Cooperatives are a uniquely positioned business model to address a rapidly changing environment. The variety of benefits found in this research highlight the creativity and adaptability of cooperatives around the world. Future research on cooperative benefits could be an important step in increasing adaptability, but also resiliency in the face of a changing world.
- Published
- 2021
32. Molecular ecology of Triatoma dimidiata in southern Belize reveals risk for human infection and the local differentiation of Trypanosoma cruzi parasites
- Author
-
Eric Dumonteil, Roy Polonio, Claudia Herrera, and Jaime López-Domínguez
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,Chagas disease ,Swine ,Trypanosoma cruzi ,030106 microbiology ,Blood meal ,Zoology ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 ,Molecular ecology ,Parasite diversity ,03 medical and health sciences ,Mice ,0302 clinical medicine ,Dogs ,biology.animal ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Parasite hosting ,Animals ,Humans ,Chagas Disease ,Parasites ,Hematophagous ,Transmission network ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Triatoma dimidiata ,Triatoma ,biology ,Transmission (medicine) ,Deer ,General Medicine ,Kinkajou ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Belize ,Insect Vectors ,Rats ,Infectious Diseases ,Vector (epidemiology) ,Cattle ,Female ,Microbiome - Abstract
Objective In Belize, the main vector for Trypanosoma cruzi, the agent of Chagas disease, is Triatoma dimidiata, but transmission cycles and the risk for human infection are unclear. Therefore, the aim of this study was to identify T. dimidiata blood feeding sources and its parasite and microbial diversity, in order to reconstruct T. cruzi parasite transmission ecology in southern Belize. Methods A metabarcoding approach based on deep sequencing of markers was used for bug taxonomy, blood meal sources, T. cruzi genotypes, and microbiota composition. Bugs were collected in 13 villages of Toledo district. Results Bugs fed on at least 13 species, from domestic hosts such as humans, dogs, cows, and pigs, to synanthropic species such as mice, rats, and opossums, and sylvatic species such as deer, peccary, and kinkajou, in agreement with an opportunistic feeding behavior. Nonetheless, most feeding focused on a few species, including humans. Infection with T. cruzi was detected in 24 of 39 bugs (62%), and the analysis of 242 T. cruzi mini-exon sequences (average 10 ± 5 haplotypes per bug) indicated the presence of TcI and TcIV parasite discrete typing units (DTUs). However, for both DTUs, sequences from Belize mostly clustered apart from sequences from North and South America, suggesting the local differentiation of parasites. T. dimidiata also harbored a diverse bacterial microbiota, with ontogenic changes suggesting microbiota maturation during nymphal development. Conclusions Together, these results indicate a significant risk for T. cruzi infection in humans. They also highlight the need to better characterize the diversity of T. cruzi strains in the region and its impact on disease epidemiology.
- Published
- 2021
33. Nearshore coral growth declining on the Mesoamerican Barrier Reef System
- Author
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Isaac T. Westfield, Justin B. Ries, Hannah E. Aichelman, Travis A. Courtney, Karl D. Castillo, John P. Rippe, and Justin H. Baumann
- Subjects
Coral bleaching ,Coral ,Effects of global warming on oceans ,Climate change ,Animals ,Environmental Chemistry ,Ecosystem ,Reef ,General Environmental Science ,Global and Planetary Change ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ecology ,biology ,Coral Reefs ,fungi ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,Coral reef ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,Anthozoa ,biology.organism_classification ,Belize ,Caribbean Region ,population characteristics ,Environmental science ,geographic locations ,Siderastrea siderea - Abstract
Anthropogenic global change and local stressors are impacting coral growth and survival worldwide, altering the structure and function of coral reef ecosystems. Here, we show that skeletal extension rates of nearshore colonies of two abundant and widespread Caribbean corals (Siderastrea siderea, Pseudodiploria strigosa) declined across the Belize Mesoamerican Barrier Reef System (MBRS) over the past century, while offshore coral conspecifics exhibited relatively stable extension rates over the same temporal interval. This decline has caused nearshore coral extension rates to converge with those of their historically slower growing offshore coral counterparts. For both species, individual mass coral bleaching events were correlated with low rates of skeletal extension within specific reef environments, but no single bleaching event was correlated with low skeletal extension rates across all reef environments. We postulate that the decline in skeletal extension rates for nearshore corals is driven primarily by the combined effects of long-term ocean warming and increasing exposure to higher levels of land-based anthropogenic stressors, with acute thermally induced bleaching events playing a lesser role. If these declining trends in skeletal growth of nearshore S. siderea and P. strigosa continue into the future, the structure and function of these critical nearshore MBRS coral reef systems is likely to be severely impaired.
- Published
- 2019
34. Contextualising ethnic minority entrepreneurship beyond the west
- Author
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Carel Roessingh, David Passenier, and Michiel Verver
- Subjects
Value (ethics) ,Entrepreneurship ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Ethnic minority entrepreneurship ,Immigration ,Ethnic group ,Context (language use) ,Mennonites ,Originality ,0502 economics and business ,050602 political science & public administration ,Upper class ,Sociology ,Business and International Management ,media_common ,Chinese ,Ethnocentrism ,05 social sciences ,Context ,Gender studies ,SDG 10 - Reduced Inequalities ,Belize ,0506 political science ,Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous) ,Cambodia ,050203 business & management - Abstract
PurposeLiterature on immigrant and ethnic minority entrepreneurship almost exclusively focusses on the west, while neglecting other world regions. This neglect is problematic not only because international migration is on the rise outside the west, but also because it reveals an implicit ethnocentrism and creates particular presumptions about the nature of ethnic minority entrepreneurship that may not be as universally valid as is often presumed. The purpose of this paper is to examine ethnic minority entrepreneurship in non-western contexts to critically assess two of these presumptions, namely that it occurs in the economic margins and within clear ethnic community boundaries.Design/methodology/approachThe authors draw on academic literature (including the authors’ own) to develop two case descriptions of ethnic minority entrepreneurship outside the west: the Mennonites in Belize and the Chinese in Cambodia. For each case, the authors describe the historic entrepreneurial trajectory, i.e. the historical emergence of entrepreneurship in light of relevant community and society contexts.FindingsThe two cases reveal that, in contrast to characterisations of ethnic minority entrepreneurship in the west, the Mennonites in Belize and the Chinese in Cambodia have come to comprise the economic upper class, and their business activities are not confined to ethnic community boundaries.Originality/valueThe paper is the first to elaborate the importance of studying ethnic minority entrepreneurship outside the west, both as an aim in itself and as a catalyst to work towards a more neutral framework.
- Published
- 2019
35. Top predators induce habitat shifts in prey within marine protected areas
- Author
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Bradley J. Peterson, Ellen K. Pikitch, Mark E. Bond, Elizabeth A. Babcock, Robert M. Cerrato, Michael R. Heithaus, R. D. Grubbs, Jasmine Valentin-Albanese, and Demian D. Chapman
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Marine reserve ,Reef shark ,Marine habitats ,Biology ,Belize ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Predation ,Fishery ,Predatory Behavior ,Stingray ,Sharks ,Animals ,Marine protected area ,Trophic cascade ,Ecosystem ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Apex predator - Abstract
Emerging conservation efforts for the world's large predators may, if successful, restore natural predator-prey interactions. Marine reserves, where large predators tend to be relatively common, offer an experimental manipulation to investigate interactions between large-bodied marine predators and their prey. We hypothesized that southern stingrays-large, long-lived and highly interactive mesopredators-would invest in anti-predator behavior in marine reserves where predatory large sharks, the primary predator of stingrays, are more abundant. Specifically, we predicted southern stingrays in marine reserves would reduce the use of deep forereef habitats in the favor of shallow flats where the risk of shark encounters is lower. Baited remote underwater video was used to survey stingrays and reef sharks in flats and forereef habitats of two reserves and two fished sites in Belize. The interaction between "protection status" and "habitat" was the most important factor determining stingray presence. As predicted, southern stingrays spent more time interacting with baited remote underwater videos in the safer flats habitats, were more likely to have predator-inflicted damage inside reserves, and were less abundant in marine reserves but only in the forereef habitat. These results are consistent with a predation-sensitive habitat shift rather than southern stingray populations being reduced by direct predation from reef sharks. Our study provides evidence that roving predators can induce pronounced habitat shifts in prey that rely on crypsis and refuging, rather than active escape, in high-visibility, heterogeneous marine habitats. Given documented impacts of stingrays on benthic communities it is possible restoration of reef shark populations with reserves could induce reef ecosystem changes through behavior-mediated trophic cascades.
- Published
- 2019
36. Holocene tropical reef accretion and lagoon sedimentation: A quantitative approach to the influence of sea‐level rise, climate and subsidence ( <scp>B</scp> elize, <scp>M</scp> aldives, <scp>F</scp> rench <scp>P</scp> olynesia)
- Author
-
Eberhard Gischler and J. Harold Hudson
- Subjects
geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Holocene ,Stratigraphy ,lcsh:QE1-996.5 ,French Polynesia ,Paleontology ,Geology ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,Oceanography ,Belize ,lagoon ,lcsh:Geology ,Sea level rise ,Maldives ,reef ,Reef ,Accretion (coastal management) - Abstract
Accretion rates of Holocene tropical coral reefs in three areas in the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans have been quantified in 79 dated core sections in 34 reef cores from Belize, the Maldives and French Polynesia. Holocene vertical reef accretion rate averages 5.05 m/kyr and has decreased during the past 10 kyr. Accretion rates in branched and massive coral facies are statistically similar. Reef accretion rate is positively correlated with the rate of sea‐level rise, that is the degree of creation of accommodation space, and with climate as expressed in a Holocene sea surface temperature anomaly. Accommodation space is also created by subsidence, but at a rate one to two orders of magnitude lower than that created by glacio‐eustasy (0.04 to 0.16 m/kyr). Lagoonal background sedimentation in adjacent reef lagoons averages 0.89 m/kyr as measured in 72 dated core sections in 28 cores. Lagoonal carbonate sedimentation on top of underlying mangrove peat usually starts after a considerable hiatus of ca 3 kyr on average. The lagoonal background sedimentation rate increased during the Holocene, probably due to deepening. The differences between vertical reef accretion and lagoonal background sedimentation rates are a major factor in the production of the widely known saucer shapes typical of tropical reefs and carbonate platforms, that is the creation of unfilled accommodation space. Reef core recovery, used as a proxy for reef consolidation, and core depth exhibit a statistically negative correlation based on data from 326 core barrels. Recovery and marine cement abundance (average volume 8.6%) also decrease from windward to leeward core positions. These observations are presumably a result of both a decrease in the rate of sea‐level rise that is the increase in time available for submarine cementation during the Holocene and the amount of flushing of reef interstices by marine waters.
- Published
- 2019
37. Hispidorhynchus styracurae n. sp. (Trypanorhyncha: Eutetrarhynchidae) From the Chupare Stingray, Styracura schmardae (Werner), from the Caribbean Sea, Including New Records of Oncomegas wageneri (Linton, 1890)
- Author
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Bjoern C. Schaeffner
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Potamotrygonidae ,Eutetrarhynchidae ,Tentacle ,Panama ,Zoology ,Biology ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Fish Diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Genus ,Stingray ,Animals ,Skates, Fish ,Atlantic Ocean ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Gulf of Mexico ,030108 mycology & parasitology ,Cestode Infections ,Louisiana ,biology.organism_classification ,Belize ,Trypanorhyncha ,Intestines ,Caribbean Region ,Massachusetts ,Microscopy, Electron, Scanning ,Cestoda ,Key (lock) ,Parasitology ,Brazil - Abstract
Species of the eutetrarhynchid genus Hispidorhynchus Schaeffner and Beveridge, 2012 possess an uncinate macrohook on the bothrial surface of the basal swelling of each tentacle. This unique feature of the oncotaxy is only shared with the closely related genus Oncomegas Dollfus, 1929 . A new species of Hispidorhynchus is described from specimens infecting Styracura schmardae (Werner, 1904) (Potamotrygonidae) from the western Caribbean Sea off the coast of Belize and Panama. Hispidorhynchus styracurae n. sp. differs from its 3 congeners in the possession of smaller and narrower bulbs, fewer principle hooks in the metabasal armature, size of the macrohook, and different scolex proportions. Scanning electron microscopy reveals new information on the microthrix morphology of the genus. A diagnostic key for the differentiation of species of Hispidorhynchus is provided. In addition, new host and locality records are reported for Oncomegas wageneri ( Linton, 1890 ) Dollfus, 1929 , collected from Hypanus guttatus (Bloch and Schneider, 1801) (Dasyatidae) off the coast of Maceió, Alagoas (Brazil). This considerably expands the geographical distribution of this species in the western Atlantic Ocean.
- Published
- 2018
38. Long‐term monitoring of ocelot densities in Belize
- Author
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Marcella J. Kelly, Christopher B. Satter, Miranda L. Davis, Emma E. Sanchez, Claudia Wultsch, Ben C. Augustine, Bart J. Harmsen, Rebecca J. Foster, and Fish and Wildlife Conservation
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Ecology ,camera-trapping ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Belize ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Fishery ,Geography ,Long term monitoring ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,ocelots ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Ocelots (Leopardus pardalis) are listed as least concern on the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red list of Threatened Species, yet we lack knowledge on basic demographic parameters across much of the ocelot's geographic range, including population density. We used camera‐trapping methodology and spatially explicit capture‐recapture (SECR) models with sex‐specific detection function parameters to estimate ocelot densities across 7 field sites over 1 to 12 years (from data collected during 2002–2015) in Belize, Central America. Ocelot densities in the broadleaf rainforest sites ranged between 7.2 and 22.7 ocelots/100 km2, whereas density in the pine (Pinus spp.) forest site was 0.9 ocelots/100 km2. Applying an inverse‐variance weighted average over all years for each broadleaf site increased precision and resulted in average density ranging from 8.5 to 13.0 ocelots/100 km2. Males often had larger movement parameter estimates and higher detection probabilities at their activity centers than females. In most years, the sex ratio was not significantly different from 50:50, but the pooled sex ratio estimated using an inverse weighted average over all years indicated a female bias in 1 site, and a male bias in another. We did not detect any population trends as density estimates remained relatively constant over time; however, the power to detect such trends was generally low. Our SECR density estimates were lower but more precise than previous estimates and indicated population stability for ocelots in Belize.
- Published
- 2018
39. Salt and marine products in the Classic Maya economy from use-wear study of stone tools
- Author
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Kazuo Aoyama and Heather McKillop
- Subjects
010506 paleontology ,Meat ,Social Sciences ,Civilization ,Sodium Chloride ,01 natural sciences ,marketplace trade ,Asian People ,Animals ,Humans ,Maya ,0601 history and archaeology ,Sodium Chloride, Dietary ,History, Ancient ,Minority Groups ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Multidisciplinary ,060102 archaeology ,Fishes ,Salting ,Woodworking ,06 humanities and the arts ,Belize ,salting fish ,Geography ,Archaeology ,Seafood ,Economy ,stone tool use-wear ,Anthropology ,%22">Fish ,Classic Maya ,Salted fish ,salt archaeology - Abstract
Significance The Classic Maya (AD 300–900) technology of producing salt by boiling brine in pots over fires in wooden buildings at the Paynes Creek Salt Works, Belize, is consistent with this common and productive method elsewhere in the world in antiquity, historic, and modern times. We report the surprising results of a use-wear study of the edges of chert stone tools that indicates most were used for cutting fish or meat or scraping hides. Like the ancient Roman, Asian, and other civilizations, the Classic Maya evidently produced salt and salted fish—storable commodities for marketplace trade., Microscopic study of the edges of Late to Terminal Classic Maya (AD 600–900) chert stone tools from the Paynes Creek Salt Works, Belize, indicates most tools were used for cutting fish or meat or working hide, which was unexpected, given the virtual absence of fish or other animal remains at this large salt-production complex. Use-wear study shows that a minority of stone tools have edge-wear from woodworking. Our study suggests that salting fish was a significant activity at the salt works, which corresponds to Roman, Chinese, and other East Asian civilizations, where salt and salted fish were critical components of food storage, trade, and state finance. Based on analogy with modern Maya salt producers at Sacapulas, Guatemala, we provide estimates of the amounts of salt and salted fish produced at the Paynes Creek Salt Works and the implications for the Classic Maya economy. Salt cakes and salted fish were preserved commodities that could be stored and traded in the marketplace.
- Published
- 2018
40. Traditional medicines used by Q’eqchi’ Maya to treat diabetic symptoms and their antiglycation potential
- Author
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Ammar Saleem, Rui Liu, Eric C. H. Chen, J. T. Arnason, Jonathan Ferrier, A. Carter Ramirez, Michael J. Balick, Victor Cal, and Todd Pesek
- Subjects
Glycation End Products, Advanced ,0106 biological sciences ,Bignoniaceae ,Type 2 diabetes ,01 natural sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Verbascoside ,Diabetes mellitus ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Humans ,Hypoglycemic Agents ,Bioassay ,IC50 ,Pharmacology ,Plants, Medicinal ,Traditional medicine ,biology ,15. Life on land ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Belize ,0104 chemical sciences ,010404 medicinal & biomolecular chemistry ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Phytochemical ,chemistry ,Tynanthus guatemalensis ,Medicine, Traditional ,Plant Preparations ,Phytotherapy ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Ethnopharmacological relevance Because of the recent increase in type 2 diabetes and the need for complementary treatments in remote communities in many parts of the world, we undertook a study of treatments for diabetic symptoms used by traditional Q’eqchi’ Maya healers of Belize. We used quantitative ethnobotany to rank culturally important taxa and subsequent pharmacological and phytochemical studies to assess bioactivity. Materials and methods Antidiabetic plants identified in field interviews with traditional healers were ranked by syndromic importance value (SIV) based on 15 symptoms of diabetes. Species ranked with high SIV were tested in an assay relevant to many diabetes complications, the advanced glycation endproduct (AGE) inhibition assay. Active principles were identified by phytochemical analysis and bioassay. Results We collected over 70 plant species having a promising SIV score. The plants represented a broad range of neotropical taxa. Selected Q’eqchi’ antidiabetic plants with high SIV were collected in bulk and tested in the advanced glycation endproduct (AGE) inhibition assay. All plant extracts showed AGE inhibition and the half maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) ranged from 40.8 to 733 µg/mL, while the most active species was Tynanthus guatemalensis Donn (Bignoniaceae). A linear regression showed a significant relationship between 1/ IC50 and SIV. Phytochemical analysis revealed the presence of verbascoside, as a major component and active principle of the T guatemalensis which had an IC50 = 5.1 µg/mL, comparable to the positive control quercetin. Conclusion The results reveal a rich botanical tradition of antidiabetic symptom treatments among the Q’eqchi’. Study of highly ranked plants revealed their activity in AGE inhibition correlated with SIV. T. guatemalensis was identified as a promising species for further evaluation and local use.
- Published
- 2018
41. A baseline analysis of marine debris on southern islands of Belize
- Author
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James P. Donlevy, Michael K. Steinberg, and Jayla M. Blanke
- Subjects
Waste Products ,Baseline (sea) ,Fishing ,Aquatic Science ,Oceanography ,Pollution ,Debris ,Belize ,Bathing Beaches ,Fishery ,Geography ,Abundance (ecology) ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Marine debris ,Litter ,Plastic pollution ,Transect ,Plastics ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
Marine debris is a global issue with acute impacts. Using beach transect surveys, this study investigates debris prevalence on 7 islands in the Caribbean country of Belize. 1754 items were cataloged based on object size, form, material, condition, and economic use. Most of the litter was plastics (68.1%). Styrofoam was the second highest in abundance (9.46%), followed by foam/rubber items (8.04%), glass (3.82%), metal (2.57%), and aluminum (1.94%). Most litter was associated with an urban source (74.8%), while 4.2% and 2.1% were linked to industrial and fishing activities respectively. This study provides a novel baseline for future studies in the scarcely studied region, especially as Belize's economy continues in the conscious shift away from single-use plastic and styrofoam products.
- Published
- 2021
42. Fostering Inter-Professional Education through Service Learning: The Belize Experience
- Author
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Mechelle Collins, Dale Coffin, and Amiya Waldman-Levi
- Subjects
Adult ,030506 rehabilitation ,Students, Health Occupations ,Internationality ,Interprofessional Relations ,education ,Service-learning ,Pilot Projects ,Experiential learning ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,Professional Role ,Occupational Therapy ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Physical Therapy Modalities ,Medical education ,05 social sciences ,Professional development ,General Medicine ,Problem-Based Learning ,Interprofessional education ,Belize ,Health equity ,Female ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Service-learning and interprofessional education are forms of experiential learning that instill confidence in students. This pilot study used a post-service learning survey to explore the benefits of interprofessional education in a service-learning experience with students. Findings indicated that this service-learning experience contributed to the development of cultural awareness, and professional skills, as well as increased team attitudes and perceptions related to the respective roles of occupational and physical therapy students. The following report describes students' perspectives and satisfaction concerning professional development, interprofessional education, and cultural awareness utilizing quantitative and qualitative descriptors.
- Published
- 2021
43. Macroalgae reveal nitrogen enrichment and elevated N:P ratios on the Belize Barrier Reef
- Author
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Alexander Tewfik, Brian E. Lapointe, and Myles Phillips
- Subjects
geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ecology ,Coral Reefs ,Nitrogen ,Phosphorus ,Coral ,chemistry.chemical_element ,δ15N ,Coral reef ,Aquatic Science ,Oceanography ,Anthozoa ,Seaweed ,Pollution ,Belize ,Nutrient ,chemistry ,Nutrient pollution ,Environmental science ,Animals ,Humans ,Eutrophication ,Reef - Abstract
Macroalgal blooms are increasing on the Belize Barrier Reef (BBR) as scleractinian coral cover declines. Although some have attributed this to reduced grazing, the role of land-based nutrient pollution has not been assessed. Nutrient enrichment was quantified through macroalgal tissue analysis from Belize City to the offshore fore reef and at several central BBR lagoon sites. These recent data were compared to baseline data from the 1980s. Significant nearshore-to-offshore gradients of %N, %P and δ13C in macroalgae all indicated land-based sources of these nutrients. Macroalgal δ15N values were generally enriched in nearshore waters where values matched those reported for human sewage. Notably, the N:P ratios of recent macroalgae measurements were elevated at all sites, more than two-fold higher than values from the 1980s (~30: 1 to 70:1). These results support the hypothesis that nitrogen enrichment from land-based sources has increased phosphorus limitation driving macroalgal blooms and coral stress on the BBR.
- Published
- 2021
44. Coral reef health in the Gulf of Honduras in relation to fluvial runoff, hurricanes, and fishing pressure
- Author
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Deeptha Thattai, Ana Giró, Melanie McField, and Björn Kjerfve
- Subjects
geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Coral Reefs ,Cyclonic Storms ,Fishing ,Ocean current ,Fluvial ,Barrier reef ,Coral reef ,Aquatic Science ,Oceanography ,Anthozoa ,Pollution ,Belize ,Honduras ,Environmental science ,Animals ,Surface runoff ,Reef ,Channel (geography) - Abstract
The Gulf of Honduras includes extensive coral reefs in Belize and Guatemala, classified into four biogeographic zones, which are differentially affected by runoff, hurricanes, and fishing. Runoff mostly impacts the coastal and adjacent channel reefs. The Belize Barrier Reef (BBR) experiences less runoff impact due to the prevailing cyclonic ocean circulation. Hurricane waves powerfully impact the BBR, only occasionally the lee-side of Glover's Reef, and rarely the coastal and channel reefs. Fishing pressure is most intense on the coastal and channel reefs, comparatively modest on the BBR, and low at Glover's Reef. The effects of the three local stressors were evaluated using observations from 24 sites in the Gulf of Honduras. Data were analyzed using the Reef Health Index (RHI), with the highest RHI (4.3) for two Glover's Reef sites, medium RHI (2.6) for 10 sites on the barrier reef, and lowest RHI (2.1) for 8 coastal reef sites.
- Published
- 2021
45. Bird rookery nutrient over-enrichment as a potential accelerant of mangrove cay decline in Belize
- Author
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L T, Simpson, S W J, Canty, J R, Cissell, M K, Steinberg, J A, Cherry, and I C, Feller
- Subjects
Birds ,Wetlands ,Animals ,Nutrients ,Belize ,Ecosystem - Abstract
Coastal eutrophication is an issue of serious global concern and although nutrient subsidies can enhance primary productivity of coastal wetlands, they can be detrimental to their long-term maintenance. By supplying nutrients to coastal ecosystems at levels comparable to intensive agriculture practices, roosting colonial waterbirds provide a natural experimental design to examine the impacts of anthropogenic nutrient enrichment in these systems. We tested the hypothesis that long-term nutrient enrichment from bird guano deposition is linked to declines in island size, which may subsequently decrease the stability and resilience of mangrove cays in Belize. We combined remote sensing analysis with field- and lab-based measurements of forest structure, sediment nutrients, and porewater nutrients on three pairs of rookery and control cays in northern, central, and southern Belize. Our results indicate that rookery cays are disappearing approximately 13 times faster than cays without seasonal or resident seabird populations. Rookery cays were associated with a significantly higher concentration of nitrogen (N) in mangrove leaves and greater aboveground biomass, suggesting that eutrophication from bird guano contributes to increased aboveground productivity. Sediments of rookery cays also had lower percentages of soil organic matter and total N and carbon (C) than control islands, which suggests that eutrophication accelerates organic matter decomposition resulting in lower total C stocks on rookery cays. Our results indicate that coastal eutrophication can reduce ecosystem stability by contributing to accelerated cay loss, with potential consequences for mangrove resilience to environmental variability under contemporary and future climatic scenarios.
- Published
- 2021
46. Domestication via the commensal pathway in a fish-invertebrate mutualism
- Author
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Danielle L. Dixson, Jordan M. Casey, Rohan M. Brooker, Andrea Manica, William E. Feeney, Tiffany L. Sih, Zara-Louise Cowan, Brooker, Rohan M [0000-0001-8739-6914], Casey, Jordan M [0000-0002-2434-7207], Dixson, Danielle L [0000-0003-1493-1482], Manica, Andrea [0000-0003-1895-450X], Feeney, William E [0000-0002-7475-4724], Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, Brooker, Rohan M. [0000-0001-8739-6914], Casey, Jordan M. [0000-0002-2434-7207], Dixson, Danielle L. [0000-0003-1493-1482], and Feeney, William E. [0000-0002-7475-4724]
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Behavioural ecology ,Science ,Niche ,Biodiversity ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Evolutionary ecology ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Article ,Domestication ,03 medical and health sciences ,Microalgae ,Animals ,Community ecology ,Damselfish ,Symbiosis ,Ecosystem ,Mutualism (biology) ,Marine biology ,Multidisciplinary ,Community ,biology ,Geography ,Ecology ,Coral Reefs ,Stegastes ,Fishes ,General Chemistry ,biology.organism_classification ,704/829/826 ,Belize ,Invertebrates ,631/158/856 ,030104 developmental biology ,631/158/857 ,631/158/853 - Abstract
Domesticator-domesticate relationships are specialized mutualisms where one species provides multigenerational support to another in exchange for a resource or service, and through which both partners gain an advantage over individuals outside the relationship. While this ecological innovation has profoundly reshaped the world’s landscapes and biodiversity, the ecological circumstances that facilitate domestication remain uncertain. Here, we show that longfin damselfish (Stegastes diencaeus) aggressively defend algae farms on which they feed, and this protective refuge selects a domesticator-domesticate relationship with planktonic mysid shrimps (Mysidium integrum). Mysids passively excrete nutrients onto farms, which is associated with enriched algal composition, and damselfish that host mysids exhibit better body condition compared to those without. Our results suggest that the refuge damselfish create as a byproduct of algal tending and the mutual habituation that damselfish and mysids exhibit towards one another were instrumental in subsequent mysid domestication. These results are consistent with domestication via the commensal pathway, by which many common examples of animal domestication are hypothesized to have evolved., It has been hypothesized that domestication can occur through the ‘commensal pathway’ in which the domesticate takes advantage of a niche created as a byproduct by the domesticator. Here, Brooker et al. provide evidence for a commensal domestication process between longfin damselfish and mysid shrimps.
- Published
- 2020
47. Functional diversity of microbial ecologies estimated from ancient human coprolites and dental calculus
- Author
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Cara Monroe, Brett A. Houk, David Jacobson, Cynthia Robin, Cecil M. Lewis, Anna C. Novotny, Justin R. Lund, Elisabetta Marini, and Tanvi P. Honap
- Subjects
DNA, Bacterial ,keystone ,Coprolite ,coprolites ,microbiome ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Functional diversity ,Feces ,Calculus ,medicine ,Maya ,Humans ,Microbiome ,DNA, Ancient ,Mexico ,resilience ,Calculus (medicine) ,History, Ancient ,Bacteria ,Microbiota ,dental calculus ,Human microbiome ,High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing ,Articles ,medicine.disease ,Belize ,History, Medieval ,Geography ,Taxon ,Archaeology ,Italy ,networks ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Ancient maya ,Research Article - Abstract
Human microbiome studies are increasingly incorporating macroecological approaches, such as community assembly, network analysis and functional redundancy to more fully characterize the microbiome. Such analyses have not been applied to ancient human microbiomes, preventing insights into human microbiome evolution. We address this issue by analysing published ancient microbiome datasets: coprolites from Rio Zape ( n = 7; 700 CE Mexico) and historic dental calculus ( n = 44; 1770–1855 CE, UK), as well as two novel dental calculus datasets: Maya ( n = 7; 170 BCE-885 CE, Belize) and Nuragic Sardinians ( n = 11; 1400–850 BCE, Italy). Periodontitis-associated bacteria ( Treponema denticola , Fusobacterium nucleatum and Eubacterium saphenum ) were identified as keystone taxa in the dental calculus datasets. Coprolite keystone taxa included known short-chain fatty acid producers ( Eubacterium biforme, Phascolarctobacterium succinatutens ) and potentially disease-associated bacteria ( Escherichia , Brachyspira) . Overlap in ecological profiles between ancient and modern microbiomes was indicated by similarity in functional response diversity profiles between contemporary hunter–gatherers and ancient coprolites, as well as parallels between ancient Maya, historic UK, and modern Spanish dental calculus; however, the ancient Nuragic dental calculus shows a distinct ecological structure. We detected key ecological signatures from ancient microbiome data, paving the way to expand understanding of human microbiome evolution. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Insights into health and disease from ancient biomolecules’.
- Published
- 2020
48. Nitrate Levels in Rural Drinking Water in Belize
- Author
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Crystal Cardinez, Kelcia Miranda, Denise Mossiah, Andrea Enriquez, Danladi Chiroma Husaini, and Theslyn Arzu
- Subjects
Consumption (economics) ,Pollution ,business.industry ,Research ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Contamination ,Belize ,lcsh:TD1-1066 ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,contamination ,Nitrate ,chemistry ,nitrate ,Environmental protection ,Agriculture ,drinking water quality ,Environmental science ,lcsh:Environmental technology. Sanitary engineering ,business ,media_common - Abstract
Background. Health issues have been associated with the consumption of high levels of nitrates in drinking water. Rural agricultural communities in Belize play a large role in the economic growth of the country. These communities obtain drinking water directly from the ground and may be susceptible to nitrate consumption and at risk of developing diseases associated with nitrates. Objectives. The present study examined nitrate levels in Belize's rural water supply with the aim of assessing its suitability for human and livestock consumption. The study also provides baseline data for monitoring the concentration of nitrates to prevent public health hazards in Belize. Methods. Forty-three (43) water samples from reservoirs, wells, vats, and standpipes were collected from 40 villages in Belize and analyzed for nitrates using the cadmium reduction method. Nitrates were detected with an Orion® AquaMate® 8000 UV-Vis spectrophotometer at 520 nm. The Belize Coastal Zone Management Authority and Institute laboratory analyzed all water samples for nitrates. Results. Except for four water samples from four different sites, all analyzed water samples were found to contain nitrate levels below 10 mg/L. Nitrate levels above 10 mg/L were seen in a few samples in the northern part of the country, probably due to agricultural activities in these areas. Conclusions. Belize's rural drinking water contains low levels of nitrates, except for a few villages where the levels exceeded the acceptable limit of 10 mg/L. Higher levels of nitrates detected in a few villages need regular evaluation and monitoring to avoid public health issues as well as prevent harm to livestock. Competing Interests. The authors declare no competing financial interests.
- Published
- 2020
49. DENTAL DISEASES AND OTHER ORAL PATHOLOGIES OF CAPTIVE JAGUARS (
- Author
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Lindsey A, Schneider, Isabel A, Jimenez, Esther E V, Crouch, Gerald E, Duhamel, Nadine, Fiani, George V, Kollias, and Santiago, Peralta
- Subjects
Male ,Tooth Diseases ,Animals ,Panthera ,Animals, Zoo ,Female ,Mouth Diseases ,Belize - Abstract
Dental and oral diseases are prevalent in many mammalian species including wild felids. Determining the dental and oral health status of captive animal populations can help establish preventive and therapeutic strategies, leading to improved welfare and conservation efforts. The aim of this study was to assess the prevalence of periodontal disease, endodontic disease, tooth resorption, and other clinically relevant dental and maxillofacial abnormalities in a population of captive jaguars (
- Published
- 2020
50. Generating indicator species for bird monitoring within the humid forests of northeast Central America
- Author
-
David I, King, Matthew, Jeffery, and Brett A, Bailey
- Subjects
Birds ,Animals ,Humans ,Central America ,Biodiversity ,Forests ,Belize ,Ecosystem ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
The use of indicator species can simplify bird monitoring by reducing the level of specialized skills needed, which increases the potential pool of participants and reduces training costs and complexity. To facilitate monitoring in the humid forests of northeast Central America, we conducted point count surveys for birds across gradients of disturbance in the Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary, Belize, and analyzed the association of bird species with remotely sensed metrics of forest condition and anthropogenic disturbance using indicator species analysis. Twenty species exhibited significant associations with one or more of these metrics. We propose six species as indicators for anthropogenic disturbance based on our criteria of being associated with anthropogenically disturbed sites, or anthropogenically disturbed and riparian sites with no explicit mention in the literature of an obligate association with riparian habitats, or association of remotely sensed metrics that appeared to reflect disturbance: yellow-olive flycatcher, red-legged honeycreeper, dusky antbird, blue ground dove, buff-throated saltator, and brown jay. We propose the keel-billed motmot as an indicator of undisturbed forest based on its association with forested sites in our analyses. Green shrike vireo, collard trogon, rufous-tailed jacamar, and rufous piha were associated with a specific elevational range but not associated with disturbance, so upward shifts in elevation that might indicate response to climate change would not be confounded with habitat disturbance or degradation. This exercise yielded a much-reduced list of monitoring targets, which will greatly reduce the cost and complexity of forest bird monitoring in the region, as well as reducing barriers to participation.
- Published
- 2020
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