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2. News editorial.
- Author
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Zhu, Zhichang
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The article offers information on several conventions related to systems research and behavioral science, including the 51st Annual Meeting of the International Society for the Systems Sciences to be held at Tokyo Institute of Technology in Japan from August 5 to 10, 2007, the 5th IIGSS Workshop to be held at Huazhong University of Science and Technology in China from June 14 to 17, and the ISOneWorld2007 Conference to be held in Las Vegas, Nevada from April 11 to 13.
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- 2007
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3. Optimizing Resident Training: Results and Recommendations of the 2009 Council of Residency Directors Consensus Conference.
- Author
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Stahmer, Sarah and Kuhn, Gloria
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CLINICAL competence ,OUTCOME-based education ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,CURRICULUM ,EMERGENCY medicine ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,HOSPITAL medical staff ,INTERNSHIP programs ,MEDICAL education ,MEDICAL societies ,STUDY & teaching of medicine ,NATIONAL competency-based educational tests ,EDUCATION ,SOCIETIES ,STANDARDS - Abstract
This paper reports the results of a consensus conference of the Council of Emergency Medicine Residency Directors (CORD) to discuss the experiential training component of residency education in the emergency department (ED) and to make recommendations on structuring clinical training. Self-selected emergency medicine (EM) educators discussed experiential training focusing on three topic areas: 1) methods to optimize training in the clinical setting, 2) identification of goals and objectives by training year, and 3) determination of measurable behaviors demonstrating achievement of goals and objectives by residents. Topic areas were organized into the following questions: 1) what is the optimal number and evolution of ED shifts for EM residents during their residency training, 2) what clinical skills are expected of a resident at each level of training, and 3) what objective measures should be used to provide evidence of resident competency? Participants attended a lecture on the goals of the conference, the questions to be answered, and the role and implementation of deliberate practice into experiential training. Attendees were divided into three groups, each discussing one question. Each group had two discussion leaders. All discussions were digitally recorded for accuracy. After discussion all groups reconvened and reported summaries of discussions and recommendations to ensure group agreement. There were 59 participants representing 42 training programs. Educators agree that essential features of designing the ED clinical experience include the need to: 1) structure and tailor the clinical experience to optimize learning, 2) establish expectations for clinical performance based on year of training, and 3) provide feedback that is explicit to year-specific performance expectations. ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE 2010; 17:S78-S86 © 2010 by the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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4. Estimates of Elk Summer Range Nutritional Carrying Capacity Constrained by Probabilities of Habitat Selection.
- Author
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Beck, Jeffrey L., Peek, James M., and Strand, Eva K.
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ELK ,HABITAT selection ,HABITATS ,PROBABILITY theory ,ANIMAL populations ,ANIMAL population density ,ANIMAL diversity ,WILDLIFE management - Abstract
We used habitat-selection data from a reintroduced population of elk (Cervus elaphus) in northeastern Nevada, USA, to develop a resource- selection function to adjust nutritional carrying capacity estimates. Constrained estimates provide population levels that minimize overuse of key foraging communities. We estimated economic nutritional carrying capacity (I
NCC ) for 236-kg lactating cow elk in autumn 1999 and 2000 to reflect expected animal performance under maintenance (2,550 kcal/kg DM) and good (2,750 kcal/kg DM) levels of standing digestible energy. We used our resource-selection function to redistribute INCC densities (RSFD) for aspen (Populus tremuloides), conifer, cud-leaf mountain mahogany (Cercocarpus Iedifolius), sagebrush (Artemisia spp.)-herb, and snowbrush ceanothus (Ceanothus velutinus) cover types across the summer range and then adjusted original `INCC estimates according to these RSFD when expected densities exceeded original INCC estimates. Maintenance performance INCC estimates were 2,533 cow elk (95% Cl: 1,327–3,739) in 1999 and 1,655 (95% Cl: 886–2,424) in 2000. Good performance INCC estimates were 2,264 cow elk (95% Cl: 1,150–3,378) in 1999 and 1,100 (95% Cl: 384–1,816) in 2000. The best habitat model provided evidence that forage availability and distance to water influenced habitat selection. Adjustments in INCC for 1999 and 2000 and at both performance levels corresponded to decreases of 18–35% in original INCC estimates. Decreases were attributed to more cow elk predicted by RSFD to be in aspen, conifer, and sagebrush-herb cover types than predicted by INCC . Each year, RSFD predicted that fewer elk would use mahogany and snowbrush cover types than original INCC models. The adjusted carrying capacity estimates provided population levels that should avoid appreciable alteration of aspen, conifer, and sagebrush-herb communities while ensuring nutritious resources during lean periods. Our paper provides a critical refinement for nutritional carrying capacity models through incorporating prediction of animal selection of nutritional resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2006
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5. Externalities of residential property flipping.
- Author
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Li, Lingxiao, Yavas, Abdullah, and Zhu, Bing
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RESIDENTIAL real estate ,EXTERNALITIES ,HOME prices ,REAL estate sales ,PRICES - Abstract
This study investigates whether flipping activities impose an externality on the transaction prices of the neighboring nonflipped properties. Using a data set of residential property transactions in Clark County, Nevada for the period 2003–2013, we find that flippers impose a significant positive impact on the price of neighboring nonflipped properties in an up market, but a significant negative effect in a down market. This procyclical impact of flipping activity contributes to the volatility of housing prices, hence magnifying boom and bust cycles and increasing the likelihood of a mortgage crisis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. High and Dry: Billion‐Year Trends in the Aridity of River‐Forming Climates on Mars.
- Author
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Kite, Edwin S. and Noblet, Axel
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MARTIAN surface ,MARS (Planet) ,DISTRIBUTED databases ,WATER table ,GREENHOUSE effect - Abstract
Mars' wet‐to‐dry transition is a major environmental catastrophe, yet the spatial pattern, tempo, and cause of drying are poorly constrained. We built a globally distributed database of constraints on Mars late‐stage paleolake size relative to catchment area (aridity index (AI)), and found evidence for climate zonation as Mars was drying out. Aridity increased over time in southern midlatitude highlands, where lakes became proportionally as small as in modern Nevada. Meanwhile, intermittently wetter climates persisted in equatorial and northern‐midlatitude lowlands. This is consistent with a change in Mars' greenhouse effect that left highlands too cold for liquid water except during a brief melt season, or alternatively with a fall in Mars' groundwater table. The data are consistent with a switch of unknown cause in the dependence of AI on elevation, from high‐and‐wet early on, to high‐and‐dry later. These results sharpen our view of Mars' climate as surface conditions became increasingly stressing for life. Plain Language Summary: Mars' surface was habitable in the past but is sterile today. Mars had multiple lake‐forming eras as the planet dried out, but so far, there has been no globally distributed survey of the size of late‐stage lakes, and the evaporation/precipitation ratio (aridity index (AI)) of the climates that formed them. This is key input/test data for models of Mars' past climate and climate evolution. We built a globally distributed database of AI constraints for late‐stage river‐forming climates on Mars. On average, late‐stage lake‐forming climates had a higher aridity than early‐stage river‐forming climates. Drying‐out was spatially heterogenous, with a "high‐and‐dry" pattern. This apparently contrasts with a "high‐and‐wet" pattern seen for early‐stage river‐forming climates. The reasons for this apparent switch are unknown. Key Points: Aridity on Mars increased over time, but intermittently wetter climates persisted in lowlandsConsistent with a change in Mars' greenhouse effect that left highlands too cold for liquid water except during a brief melt seasonData are consistent with switch, of unknown cause, in dependence of aridity index on elevation: high‐and‐wet early on, high‐and‐dry later [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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7. Afterslip From the 2020 M 6.5 Monte Cristo Range, Nevada Earthquake.
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Sadeghi Chorsi, Taha, Braunmiller, Jochen, Deng, Fanghui, and Dixon, Timothy H.
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EARTHQUAKE aftershocks ,EARTHQUAKES ,EARTHQUAKE magnitude ,DEFORMATION of surfaces ,MODEL airplanes ,TIME series analysis - Abstract
We investigate postseismic deformation following the 15 May 2020, Mw 6.5 Monte Cristo Range, Nevada earthquake using geodetic and aftershock data. Seven months of Sentinel 1‐A/B SAR images were used to model deformation as afterslip on two subparallel fault planes outlined by aftershocks. Postseismic deformation fits exponential and logarithmic decay models equally well. For exponential decay, the average decay time is ∼38 days. On the western plane, where most coseismic slip was observed, afterslip was minor, occurred at shallower depths than coseismic slip, and is anticorrelated with aftershock distribution. On the eastern plane, afterslip is significant, exceeds coseismic moment release, occurred at and below coseismic slip, and is correlated with aftershock distribution. On both segments, geodetic moment exceeds seismic moment, suggesting most afterslip occurred aseismically. Aseismic creep does not make up for observed coseismic shallow slip deficit, perhaps related to fault immaturity. Plain Language Summary: Monitoring surface deformation and slip at depth after an earthquake can be used to investigate changes in the local stress field caused by earthquakes and infer frictional and other conditions on earthquake‐causing faults. We used InSAR satellite data and ground‐based seismic data to study afterslip associated with a moderate magnitude earthquake in Nevada that occurred on 15 May 2020. Most energy after the mainshock was released aseismically rather than as aftershocks. The large (∼1.4 m) coseismic slip that occurred at a depth of about 8–10 km never propagated to the surface, either during or after the earthquake. Geologic estimates of motion on this fault would therefore underestimate the motion at depth, perhaps leading to underestimation of the fault's long‐term slip rate. Key Points: InSAR time series reveal that the average characteristic relaxation time for postseismic motion is ∼38 days for the Monte Cristo Range earthquakeWhile aseismic afterslip exceeded seismic afterslip, combined afterslip did not compensate for the shallow coseismic slip deficitFault immaturity might explain the shallow slip deficit and the relatively low amount of afterslip compared to coseismic slip [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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8. Non‐native grazers affect physiological and demographic responses of greater sage‐grouse.
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Behnke, Tessa, Street, Phillip, Davies, Scott, Ouyang, Jenny Q., and Sedinger, James S.
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ENVIRONMENTAL degradation ,SAGE grouse ,PHYSIOLOGICAL stress ,WILD horses ,VITAL statistics ,DROUGHTS ,CORTICOSTERONE ,ECOSYSTEM services - Abstract
Non‐native ungulate grazing has negatively impacted native species across the globe, leading to massive loss of biodiversity and ecosystem services. Despite their pervasiveness, interactions between non‐native grazers and native species are not fully understood. We often observe declines in demography or survival of these native species, but lack understanding about the mechanisms underlying these declines. Physiological stress represents one mechanism of (mal)adaptation, but data are sparse. We investigated glucocorticoid levels in a native avian herbivore exposed to different intensities of non‐native grazing in the cold desert Great Basin ecosystem, USA. We measured corticosterone, a glucocorticoid in feathers for a large sample (n = 280) of female greater sage‐grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus) from three study areas in Northern Nevada and Southern Oregon with different grazing regimes of livestock and feral horses. We found that greater feral horse density was associated with higher corticosterone levels, and this effect was exacerbated by drought conditions. Livestock grazing produced similar results; however, there was more model uncertainty about the livestock effect. Subsequent nesting success was lower with increased feather corticosterone, but corticosterone levels were not predictive of other vital rates. Our results indicate a physiological response by sage‐grouse to grazing pressure from non‐native grazers. We found substantial among‐individual variation in the strength of the response. These adverse effects were intensified during unfavorable weather events, highlighting the need to reevaluate management strategies in the face of climate change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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9. Clustering Analysis Methods for GNSS Observations: A Data‐Driven Approach to Identifying California's Major Faults.
- Author
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Granat, Robert, Donnellan, Andrea, Heflin, Michael, Lyzenga, Gregory, Glasscoe, Margaret, Parker, Jay, Pierce, Marlon, Wang, Jun, Rundle, John, and Ludwig, Lisa G.
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GLOBAL Positioning System ,EARTHQUAKE hazard analysis ,FEATURE selection ,CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) ,GEOLOGIC faults ,SHEAR zones ,COLOR codes - Abstract
We present a data‐driven approach to clustering or grouping Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) stations according to observed velocities, displacements or other selected characteristics. Clustering GNSS stations provides useful scientific information, and is a necessary initial step in other analysis, such as detecting aseismic transient signals (Granat et al., 2013, https://doi.org/10.1785/0220130039). Desired features of the data can be selected for clustering, including some subset of displacement or velocity components, uncertainty estimates, station location, and other relevant information. Based on those selections, the clustering procedure autonomously groups the GNSS stations according to a selected clustering method. We have implemented this approach as a Python application, allowing us to draw upon the full range of open source clustering methods available in Python's scikit‐learn package (Pedregosa et al., 2011, https://doi.org/10.5555/1953048.2078195). The application returns the stations labeled by group as a table and color coded KML file and is designed to work with the GNSS information available from GeoGateway (Donnellan et al., 2021, https://doi.org/10.1007/s12145-020-00561-7; Heflin et al., 2020, https://doi.org/10.1029/2019ea000644) but is easily extensible. We demonstrate the methodology on California and western Nevada. The results show partitions that follow faults or geologic boundaries, including for recent large earthquakes and post‐seismic motion. The San Andreas fault system is most prominent, reflecting Pacific‐North American plate boundary motion. Deformation reflected as class boundaries is distributed north and south of the central California creeping section. For most models a cluster boundary connects the southernmost San Andreas fault with the Eastern California Shear Zone (ECSZ) rather than continuing through the San Gorgonio Pass. Key Points: Unsupervised clustering methods provide a data‐driven way of analyzing and partitioning Global Navigation Satellite System observations of crustal deformationDeformation is distributed across the San Andreas fault system but is localized at the creeping section in central CaliforniaThe Southern San Andreas fault connects with the Eastern California Shear Zone rather than the rest of the San Andreas fault system [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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10. Aftershock Triggering and Spatial Aftershock Zones in Fluid‐Driven Settings: Discriminating Induced Seismicity From Natural Swarms.
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Karimi, Kamran and Davidsen, Jörn
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EARTHQUAKE aftershocks ,INDUCED seismicity ,EARTHQUAKE hazard analysis ,FLUID injection ,EARTHQUAKE prediction ,PALEOSEISMOLOGY ,EARTHQUAKE magnitude ,SPATIAL behavior - Abstract
Aftershock cascades play an important role in forecasting seismicity in natural and human‐made situations. While their behavior including the spatial aftershock zone has been the focus of many studies in tectonic settings, this is not the case when fluid flows are involved. Using high‐quality seismic catalogs, we probe aftershocks dynamics in five settings influenced by fluids: (a) induced seismicity in Oklahoma and Kansas, (b) natural swarms in California and Nevada, and (c) suspected swarms in the Yuha Desert (California). All settings exhibit significant aftershock behavior highlighting the importance of event‐event triggering processes. The spatial aftershock zones scale with mainshock magnitude as expected based on the rupture length. While (a) and (b) show a rapid decay beyond their rupture length, (c) exhibits long‐range behavior suggesting that fluid migration might not be the dominant mechanism. We also find that the scaling of aftershock productivity with mainshock magnitude together with the Gutenberg‐Richter b‐value might allow to distinguish between natural swarms and induced seismicity. Plain Language Summary: While it is known that fluid injection operations can induce seismic activity, it has remained unclear how this activity compares to their natural counterpart, seismic swarms driven by natural fluid flows. The latter are typically characterized by the absence of a dominant event within the seismic sequence, while exhibiting other characteristics consistent with tectonic sequences including aftershock triggering. Our analysis of high‐quality seismic catalogs for both types of fluid‐driven seismicity shows that both exhibit a significant amount of aftershocks arising from "secondary" processes (i.e. stress‐based event‐event triggering as an indirect consequence of fluid injections) leading to spatially localized aftershocks zones. Yet, the trade‐off between the seismic productivity relation, which refers to the average increase in the number of aftershocks with the magnitude of their trigger, and the distribution of earthquake magnitudes controls the relative role of small compared to large triggers and we find that aftershock triggering is much more dominated by smaller events in the induced setting. Both findings are of direct importance for earthquake forecasting and seismic hazard assessment. Key Points: Significant event‐event triggering is present in both natural swarms and induced seismicityBoth fluid‐driven settings are characterized by narrow aftershock zonesAftershock triggering is dominated by smaller triggers in induced seismicity but much less so for natural swarms [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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11. Dissonance in the discourse of the duration of diabetes: A mixed methods study of patient perceptions and clinical practice.
- Author
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Ledford, Christy J. W., Fulleborn, Stephanie T., Jackson, Jeremy T., Rogers, Tyler, and Samar, Haroon
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DIABETES complications ,TREATMENT of diabetes ,DISCLOSURE ,GLYCEMIC control ,RESEARCH methodology ,CROSS-sectional method ,PHYSICIANS' attitudes ,INTERVIEWING ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,ATTITUDES toward illness ,DISEASE duration ,COMMUNICATION ,WEIGHT loss ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,JUDGMENT sampling ,THEMATIC analysis ,ADVERSE health care events ,GOAL (Psychology) ,PREDIABETIC state - Abstract
Background: Remission of diabetes can be rewarding for patients and physicians, but there is limited study of how patients perceive the timeline of a disease along the continuum of glycaemic control. Objective: To explore how patients perceive the timeline of diabetes along the continuum of glycaemic control and their goals of care and to identify whether family physicians communicate the principles of regression and remission of diabetes. Design: Mixed methods approach of qualitative semi‐structured interviews with purposive sampling followed by cross‐sectional survey of physicians. Participants: Thirty‐three patients living with prediabetes (preDM) or type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) at medical centres in Georgia and Nevada; and 387 family physicians providing primary care within the same health system. Results: Patients described two timelines of diabetes: as a lifelong condition or as a condition that can be cured. Patients who perceived a lifelong condition described five treatment goals: reducing glucose‐related laboratory values, losing weight, reducing medication, preventing treatment intensification and avoiding complications. For patients who perceived diabetes as a disease with an end, the goal of care was to achieve normoglycaemia. In response to patient vignettes that described potential cases of remission and regression, 38.2% of physician respondents would still communicate that a patient has preDM and 94.6% would tell the patient that he still had diabetes. Conclusions: Most physicians here exhibited reluctance to communicate remission or regression in patient care. Yet, patients describe two different potential timelines, including a subset who expect their diabetes can be 'cured'. Physicians should incorporate shared decision making to create a shared mental model of diabetes and its potential outcomes with patients. Patient or Public Contribution: In this mixed methods study, as patients participated in the qualitative phase of this study, we asked patients to tell us what additional questions we should ask in subsequent interviews. Data from this qualitative phase informed the design and interpretation of the quantitative phase with physician participants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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12. Recovery of meteorites using an autonomous drone and machine learning.
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Citron, Robert I., Jenniskens, Peter, Watkins, Christopher, Sinha, Sravanthi, Shah, Amar, Raissi, Chedy, Devillepoix, Hadrien, Albers, Jim, and Zolensky, Michael
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METEORITES ,MACHINE learning ,CONVOLUTIONAL neural networks ,ASTEROIDS ,ALTITUDES - Abstract
The recovery of freshly fallen meteorites from tracked and triangulated meteors is critical to determining their source asteroid families. Even though our ability to locate meteorite falls continues to improve, the recovery of meteorites remains a challenge due to large search areas with terrain and vegetation obscuration. To improve the efficiency of meteorite recovery, we have tested the hypothesis that meteorites can be located using machine learning techniques and an autonomous drone. To locate meteorites autonomously, a quadcopter drone first conducts a grid survey acquiring top‐down images of the strewn field from a low altitude. The drone‐acquired images are then analyzed using a machine learning classifier to identify meteorite candidates for follow‐up examination. Here, we describe a proof‐of‐concept meteorite classifier that deploys off‐line a combination of different convolution neural networks to recognize meteorites from images taken by drones in the field. The system was implemented in a conceptual drone setup and tested in the suspected strewn field of a recent meteorite fall near Walker Lake, Nevada. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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13. How specialized is a soil specialist? Early life history responses of a rare Eriogonum to site‐level variation in volcanic soils.
- Author
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McClinton, Jamey D., Parchman, Thomas L., Torrence, Kathleen L., Verburg, Paul S., and Leger, Elizabeth A.
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VOLCANIC soils ,LIFE history theory ,SOILS ,SOIL conservation ,COPPER in soils ,RARE plants - Abstract
PREMISE: Understanding edaphic specialization is crucial for conserving rare plants that may need relocation due to habitat loss. Focusing on Eriogonum crosbyae, a rare soil specialist in the Great Basin of the United States, we asked how site‐level variation among volcanic soil outcrops affected plant growth and population distribution. METHODS: We measured emergence, survival, size, and biomass allocation of E. crosbyae seedlings planted in soils collected from 42 outcrops of actual and potential habitat. We also measured phenotypic variation in the wild, documented abiotic and biotic components of E. crosbyae habitat, re‐surveyed Nevada populations, and evaluated occupancy changes over time. RESULTS: Plants responded plastically to edaphic variation, growing larger and allocating relatively more to aboveground tissues in soils with greater nutrient availability and growing smaller in soils higher in copper in the field and the greenhouse. However, the chemical and physical soil properties we measured did not predict site occupancy, nor was plant phenotype in the greenhouse different when plants were grown in soils from sites with different occupation status. We observed occupation status reversals at five locations. CONCLUSIONS: Eriogonum crosbyae performed well in soils formed on hydrothermally altered rocks that are inhospitable to many other plants. Extirpation/colonization events observed were consistent with metapopulation dynamics, which may partially explain the patchy distribution of E. crosbyae among outcrops of potential habitat. While soil properties did not predict site occupancy, early life stages showed sensitivity to soil variation, indicating that seedling dynamics may be important to consider for the conservation of this soil specialist. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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14. Projected Changes in Reference Evapotranspiration in California and Nevada: Implications for Drought and Wildland Fire Danger.
- Author
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McEvoy, Daniel J., Pierce, David W., Kalansky, Julie F., Cayan, Daniel R., and Abatzoglou, John T.
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DROUGHT management ,FIRE management ,WILDFIRES ,ATMOSPHERIC temperature ,EFFECT of human beings on climate change ,FOREST fires ,DROUGHTS ,FOREST degradation - Abstract
Recent high impact wildfires and droughts in California and Nevada have been linked to extremes in the Evaporative Demand Drought Index (EDDI) and Standardized Precipitation Evapotranspiration Index (SPEI), respectively. Both indices are dependent on reference evapotranspiration (ET0). Future changes in ET0 for California and Nevada are examined, calculated from global climate model simulations downscaled by Localized Constructed Analogs (LOCA). ET0 increases of 13–18% at seasonal timescales are projected by late century (2070–2099), with greatest relative increases in winter and spring. Seasonal ET0 increases are most strongly driven by warmer temperatures, with increasing specific humidity having a smaller, but noteworthy, counter tendency. Extreme (95th percentile) EDDI values on the 2‐week timescale have coincided with recent large wildfires in the area. Two‐week EDDI extremes are projected to increase by 6–10 times during summer and 4–6 times during autumn by the end of the century. On multiyear timescales, the occurrence of extreme droughts based on 3‐year SPEI below the historical fifth percentile, similar to that experienced during the 2012–2016 drought across the region, is projected to increase 3–15 times by late century. Positive trends in extreme multiyear droughts will further increase seasonal fire potential through degraded forests and increased fuel loads and flammability. Understanding how these drought metrics change on various climate timescales at the local level can provide fundamental information to support the development of long‐term adaptation strategies for wildland fire and water resource management. Plain Language Summary: Since the start of the 21st century, California and Nevada have observed extreme wildland fires and droughts that have caused devastating impacts to ecosystems and society. A common feature of these events has been very high atmospheric evaporative demand—the "thirst" of the atmosphere—which has largely been driven by increased air temperatures caused by anthropogenic climate change. This study examines projected changes in evaporative demand, which of the input variables are causing those changes and how the frequency of extreme wildfire potential and multiyear droughts will change. Evaporative demand is found to increase during all seasons, and increased temperatures drive most of that change. The likelihood of extreme wildfire potential based on 2‐week periods of elevated evaporative demand during summer and autumn increases substantially. A climatic water balance based on precipitation and evaporative demand indicates extreme 3‐year droughts that hold potential to deplete regional‐scale water supply also become much more likely. Future adaptation planning efforts for wildfire management agencies, forest management, and water resource managers should account for a greater likelihood of more extreme events. Key Points: All climate models show increasing reference evapotranspiration (ET0) through the end of the centuryIncreased air temperature has the greatest contribution to projected ET0 increasesExtreme ET0‐based wildfire potential and 3‐year droughts based on precipitation minus ET0 become much more frequent in the future [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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15. Wellness for the Future: Cultural and Systems‐based Challenges and Solutions.
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Sikora, Rosanna D., Manfredi, Rita A., Chung, Arlene, Kaplan, Jay A., Tyo, Carissa J., Akhtar, Saadia, and Bird, Stephen B.
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PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout ,COMMITTEES ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,CONSENSUS (Social sciences) ,CORPORATE culture ,EMERGENCY medicine ,EMERGENCY physicians ,HEALTH ,JOB satisfaction ,MATHEMATICAL models ,PSYCHOLOGY ,RESEARCH ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,WELL-being - Abstract
The goal of the 2019 Society for Academic Emergency Medicine Consensus Conference was to explore the current cultural and systemic issues in emergency medicine that impact the individual well‐being of every emergency physician and to make recommendations for future study. Burnout is epidemic in emergency medicine. Physician wellness is required to enhance patient clinical outcomes as well as to ensure professional satisfaction and longevity. For conference preparation, a consensus steering committee was created, and a decision was made to use the groundbreaking model of the National Academy of Medicine's "Factors Affecting Clinician Well‐Being and Resilience" to further identify areas of needed study. On May 14, 2019, the Wellness Consensus Conference was attended by over 50 faculty physicians from across the United States. These attendees discussed key concepts and prior research presented by content experts. Groups of participants engaged in crowdsourcing techniques to consolidate ideas derived from those discussions. These consensus concepts were recorded and are presented within this article. A repetitive theme noted at the conference was the overwhelming effect of the system and organization factors on individual physician well‐being. The concept of ongoing assessment of professional fulfillment over the life span of the emergency physician was felt to be crucial in guiding wellness and resilience interventions in a timely manner. Examining ways to enable physicians to flourish rather than experience burnout are strong future directions for study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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16. A Multifaceted Intervention to Improve Patient Knowledge and Safe Use of Opioids: Results of the ED EMC2 Randomized Controlled Trial.
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McCarthy, Danielle M., Curtis, Laura M., Courtney, D. Mark, Cameron, Kenzie A., Lank, Patrick M., Kim, Howard S., Opsasnick, Lauren A., Lyden, Abbie E., Gravenor, Stephanie J., Russell, Andrea M., Eifler, Morgan R., Hur, Scott I., Rowland, Megan E., Walton, Surrey M., Montague, Enid, Kim, Kwang‐Youn A., Wolf, Michael S., and Meisel, Zachary F.
- Subjects
ACADEMIC medical centers ,ACETAMINOPHEN ,CODEINE ,COMMUNICATION ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,DRUG utilization ,PATIENT aftercare ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MEDICAL appointments ,METROPOLITAN areas ,NARCOTICS ,PATIENT education ,TEXT messages ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,HEALTH literacy ,ELECTRONIC health records ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
Objectives: Despite increased focus on opioid prescribing, little is known about the influence of prescription opioid medication information given to patients in the emergency department (ED). The study objective was to evaluate the effect of an Electronic Medication Complete Communication (EMC2) Opioid Strategy on patients' safe use of opioids and knowledge about opioids. Methods: This was a three‐arm prospective, randomized controlled pragmatic trial with randomization occurring at the physician level. Consecutive discharged patients at an urban academic ED (>88,000 visits) with new hydrocodone‐acetaminophen prescriptions received one of three care pathways: 1) usual care, 2) EMC2 intervention, or 3) EMC2 + short message service (SMS) text messaging. The ED EMC2 intervention triggered two patient‐facing educational tools (MedSheet, literacy‐appropriate prescription wording [Take‐Wait‐Stop]) and three provider‐facing reminders to counsel (directed to ED physician, dispensing pharmacist, follow‐up physician). Patients in the EMC2 + SMS arm additionally received one text message/day for 1 week. Follow‐up at 1 to 2 weeks assessed "demonstrated safe use" (primary outcome). Secondary outcomes including patient knowledge and actual safe use (via medication diaries) were assessed 2 to 4 days and 1 month following enrollment. Results: Among the 652 enrolled, 343 completed follow‐up (57% women; mean ± SD age = 42 ± 14.0 years). Demonstrated safe opioid use occurred more often in the EMC2 group (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] = 2.46, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.19 to 5.06), but not the EMC2 + SMS group (aOR = 1.87, 95% CI = 0.90 to 3.90) compared with usual care. Neither intervention arm improved medication safe use as measured by medication diary data. Medication knowledge, measured by a 10‐point composite knowledge score, was greater in the EMC2 + SMS group (β = 0.57, 95% CI = 0.09 to 1.06) than usual care. Conclusions: The study found that the EMC2 tools improved demonstrated safe dosing, but these benefits did not translate into actual use based on medication dairies. The text‐messaging intervention did result in improved patient knowledge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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17. Experimental harvest regulations reveal that water availability during spring, not harvest, affects change in a waterfowl population.
- Author
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Sedinger, Benjamin S., Riecke, Thomas V., Nicolai, Christopher A., Woolstenhulme, Russell, Henry, William G., and Stewart, Kelley M.
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WATER supply ,CONSERVATION biology ,DEMOGRAPHIC change ,HABITAT destruction ,VITAL statistics ,BIRD populations - Abstract
Population change is regulated by vital rates that are influenced by environmental conditions, demographic stochasticity, and, increasingly, anthropogenic effects. Habitat destruction and climate change threaten the future of many wildlife populations, and there are additional concerns regarding the effects of harvest rates on demographic components of harvested organisms. Further, many population managers strictly manage harvest of wild organisms to mediate population trends of these populations. The goal of our study was to decouple harvest and environmental variability in a closely monitored population of wild ducks in North America, where we experimentally regulated harvest independently of environmental variation over a period of 4 years. We used 9 years of capture–mark–recapture data to estimate breeding population size during the spring for a population of wood ducks in Nevada. We then assessed the effect of one environmental variable and harvest pressure on annual changes in the breeding population size. Climatic conditions influencing water availability were strongly positively related to population growth rates of wood ducks in our study system. In contrast, harvest regulations and harvest rates did not affect population growth rates. We suggest efforts to conserve waterfowl should focus on the effects of habitat loss in breeding areas and climate change, which will likely affect precipitation regimes in the future. We demonstrate the utility of capture–mark–recapture methods to estimate abundance of species which are difficult to survey and test the impacts of anthropogenic harvest and climate on populations. Finally, our results continue to add to the importance of experimentation in applied conservation biology, where we believe that continued experiments on nonthreatened species will be critically important as researchers attempt to understand how to quantify and mitigate direct anthropogenic impacts in a changing world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. SAEM Annual Meeting Abstracts.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,EMERGENCY medicine ,HOSPITAL emergency services - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Meteorites found on Misfits Flat dry lake, Nevada.
- Author
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Harlan, Scott, Jenniskens, Peter, Zolensky, Michael E., Yin, Qing‐Zhu, Verosub, Kenneth L., Rowland, Douglas J., Sanborn, Matthew, Huyskens, Magdalena, Creager, Emily R., and Jull, A. J. Timothy
- Subjects
METEORITES ,LAKES ,CHONDRITES ,METEOROIDS ,SMALL solar system bodies - Abstract
Meteorites have been found on the small Misfits Flat dry lakebed near Stagecoach, Nevada (119.382W, +39.348N). Since the first find on Sept. 22, 2013, a total of 58 stones of weathering stage W2/3 with a combined mass of 339 g have been collected in 19 visits to the area. This small (3.3 x 3.6 km) lakebed is now a newly designated dense collection area (DCA). Most meteorites were found in a small 350 x 180 m area along the north shore and most are fragments of several broken individual stones. Three of these fragments were classified as an LL4/5 of shock stage S2, now named Misfits Flat 001, one of which (stone MF33) fell 8.1 ± 1.3 ka ago based on the
14 C terrestrial age, assuming it came from a 20-80 cm diameter meteoroid. In addition, a small darkly crusted meteorite MF34, now named Misfits Flat 002, was found 820 m WSW from the main mass. This meteorite is classified as an LL5 ordinary chondrite with shock stage S4/5. The meteorite is saturated in14 C at 63 dpm kg-1 , suggesting it originated from the center of a 0.5 m diameter meteoroid, or deep inside a ~1.0 m meteoroid, less than 300 yr ago. Accounts exist of a fireball seen at 13:15 UT on March 2, 1895, that are consistent with the find location of Misfits Flat 002. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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- View/download PDF
20. Emergency Department Performance Measures Updates: Proceedings of the 2014 Emergency Department Benchmarking Alliance Consensus Summit.
- Author
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Wiler, Jennifer L., Welch, Shari, Pines, Jesse, Schuur, Jeremiah, Jouriles, Nick, Stone‐Griffith, Suzanne, and Zink, Brian
- Subjects
BENCHMARKING (Management) ,COMMUNICATION ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,EMERGENCY medicine ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,MEDICAL care ,POLICY sciences - Abstract
Objectives The objective was to review and update key definitions and metrics for emergency department ( ED) performance and operations. Methods Forty-five emergency medicine leaders convened for the Third Performance Measures and Benchmarking Summit held in Las Vegas, February 21-22, 2014. Prior to arrival, attendees were assigned to workgroups to review, revise, and update the definitions and vocabulary being used to communicate about ED performance and operations. They were provided with the prior definitions of those consensus summits that were published in 2006 and 2010. Other published definitions from key stakeholders in emergency medicine and health care were also reviewed and circulated. At the summit, key terminology and metrics were discussed and debated. Workgroups communicated online, via teleconference, and finally in a face-to-face meeting to reach consensus regarding their recommendations. Recommendations were then posted and open to a 30-day comment period. Participants then reanalyzed the recommendations, and modifications were made based on consensus. Results A comprehensive dictionary of ED terminology related to ED performance and operation was developed. This article includes definitions of operating characteristics and internal and external factors relevant to the stratification and categorization of EDs. Time stamps, time intervals, and measures of utilization were defined. Definitions of processes and staffing measures are also presented. Definitions were harmonized with performance measures put forth by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services ( CMS) for consistency. Conclusions Standardized definitions are necessary to improve the comparability of EDs nationally for operations research and practice. More importantly, clear precise definitions describing ED operations are needed for incentive-based pay-for-performance models like those developed by CMS. This document provides a common language for front-line practitioners, managers, health policymakers, and researchers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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21. Fossil grebes from the Truckee Formation ( Miocene) of Nevada and a new phylogenetic analysis of Podicipediformes ( Aves).
- Author
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Ksepka, Daniel T., Balanoff, Amy M., Bell, Michael A., Houseman, Michel D., and Angielczyk, Kenneth
- Subjects
GREBES ,FOSSILS ,MIOCENE paleontology ,BIRD phylogeny ,DIVERS (Birds) ,DIATOMACEOUS earth - Abstract
Podicipediformes is a cosmopolitan clade of foot-propelled diving birds that, despite inhabiting marine and lacustrine environments, have a poor fossil record. In this contribution, we describe three new grebe fossils from the diatomite beds of the Late Miocene Truckee Formation (10.2 ± 0.2 Ma) of Nevada ( USA). Two postcranial skeletons and an associated set of wing elements indicate that at least two distinct grebe species occupied the large, shallow Lake Truckee during the Miocene. Phylogenetic analysis of morphological data supports a basal divergence between a clade uniting the dabchicks ( Tachybaptus, Limnodytes, Poliocephalus) and a clade uniting Podilymbus, Rollandia, Podiceps and Aechmophorus. Missing data, combined with a paucity of informative skeletal characters, make it difficult to place the Truckee grebes within either of these major clades. Given the weak projection of the cnemial crests compared with extant grebes, it also remains plausible that these specimens represent stem lineage grebes. Although more material is needed to resolve the phylogenetic position of the Truckee grebes, our analysis offers insight into the tempo of grebe evolution by placing the Miocene taxon Thiornis sociata within the dabchick clade. Thiornis sociata provides a minimum age calibration of 8.7 Ma for the basal divergence among dabchicks. Based on the recovery of a nonmonophyletic Tachybaptus and placement of the Western Hemisphere ' Tachybaptus' dominicus as the basal member of the otherwise exclusively Eastern Hemisphere dabchick clade, we resurrect the genus Limnodytes for this extant species ( Limnodytes dominicus). Our results also nest the large, long-necked Aechmophorus grebes within the genus Podiceps, as the sister taxon to Podiceps major. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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22. Temporal dynamics of fine roots under long-term exposure to elevated CO2 in the Mojave Desert.
- Author
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Sonderegger, Derek L., Ogle, Kiona, Evans, R. Dave, Ferguson, Scot, and Nowak, Robert S.
- Subjects
DESERTS ,INERTIA (Mechanics) ,MINIRHIZOTRONS ,SOIL moisture measurement ,BAYESIAN analysis - Abstract
Deserts are considered 'below-ground dominated', yet little is known about the impact of rising CO
2 in combination with natural weather cycles on long-term dynamics of root biomass. This study quantifies the temporal dynamics of fine-root production, loss and standing crop in an intact desert ecosystem exposed to 10 yr of elevated CO2 ., We used monthly minirhizotron observations from 4 yr (2003-2007) for two dominant shrub species and along community transects at the Nevada Desert free-air CO2 enrichment Facility. Data were synthesized within a Bayesian framework that included effects of CO2 concentration, cover type, phenological period, antecedent soil water and biological inertia (i.e. the influence of prior root production and loss)., Elevated CO2 treatment interacted with antecedent soil moisture and had significantly greater effects on fine-root dynamics during certain phenological periods. With respect to biological inertia, plants under elevated CO2 tended to initiate fine-root growth sooner and sustain growth longer, with the net effect of increasing the magnitude of production and mortality cycles., Elevated CO2 interacts with past environmental (e.g. antecedent soil water) and biological (e.g. biological inertia) factors to affect fine-root dynamics, and such interactions are expected to be important for predicting future soil carbon pools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2013
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23. Middle-School Mathematics Teachers' Beliefs in NCTM's Vision.
- Author
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Perrin, John Robert
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MATHEMATICS teachers ,QUANTITATIVE research ,MATHEMATICS education (Elementary) ,SCHOOL districts - Abstract
This study examined the extent to which seventh- and eighth-grade mathematics teachers are aware of National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM) standards documents, Curriculum and Evaluation Standards for School Mathematics and Principles and Standards for School Mathematics and agree with NCTM's vision of school mathematics as expressed in these documents. Quantitative data were collected through the Mathematics Standards Belief Survey (MSBS), a survey specifically designed to measure teachers' overall belief in NCTM's vision as well as in certain philosophical tenets of NCTM. Of the 82 seventh- and eighth-grade mathematics teachers in the identified school district of Nevada, 73 (89.0%) participated in this study. The data revealed that, among seventh- and eighth-grade mathematics teachers, secondary-certified teachers had significantly higher MSBS scores than elementary-certified teachers. A number of other findings were made, including significant differences among mean belief scores in the philosophical tenets of NCTM. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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24. Translocation as a conservation tool for Agassiz's desert tortoises: Survivorship, reproduction, and movements.
- Author
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Nussear, K. E., Tracy, C. R., Medica, P. A., Wilson, D. S., Marlow, R. W., and Corn, P. S.
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DESERT tortoise ,REPRODUCTION ,HABITATS ,PLANTS - Abstract
We translocated 120 Agassiz's desert tortoises to 5 sites in Nevada and Utah to evaluate the effects of translocation on tortoise survivorship, reproduction, and habitat use. Translocation sites included several elevations, and extended to sites with vegetation assemblages not typically associated with desert tortoises in order to explore the possibility of moving animals to upper elevation areas. We measured survivorship, reproduction, and movements of translocated and resident animals at each site. Survivorship was not significantly different between translocated and resident animals within and among sites, and survivorship was greater overall during non-drought years. The number of eggs produced by tortoises was similar for translocated and resident females, but differed among sites. Animals translocated to atypical habitat generally moved until they reached vegetation communities more typical of desert tortoise habitat. Even within typical tortoise habitat, tortoises tended to move greater distances in the first year after translocation than did residents, but their movements in the second or third year after translocation were indistinguishable from those of resident tortoises. Our data show that tortoises translocated into typical Mojave desert scrub habitats perform well; however, the large first-year movements of translocated tortoises have important management implications. Projects that employ translocations must consider how much area will be needed to contain translocated tortoises and whether roads need fencing to prevent the loss of animals. © 2012 The Wildlife Society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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- View/download PDF
25. The roles of competition and environmental heterogeneity in the maintenance of behavioral variation and covariation.
- Author
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Dochtermann, Ned A., Jenkins, Stephen H., Swartz, Maryke J., and Hargett, Allison C.
- Subjects
COMPETITION (Biology) ,PHENOTYPES ,MERRIAM'S kangaroo rat ,ANIMAL aggression ,ANIMAL behavior - Abstract
Many models of selection predict that populations will lose variation in traits that affect fitness. Nonetheless, phenotypic variation is commonly observed in natural populations. We tested the influences of competition and spatial heterogeneity on behavioral variation within and among populations of Merriam's kangaroo rats (Dipodomys merriami) and tested for the differential expression of trait correlations. We found that populations of D. merriami exhibited more aggression at sites with more competition. Contrary to theoretical predictions and empirical results in other systems, the sites with the greatest spatial heterogeneity and highest levels of competition did not exhibit the most behavioral variation among individuals. However, the greatest within-individual behavioral variability in boldness (response to cues of predator presence) was exhibited where spatial heterogeneity was highest. Aggression and boldness of D. merriami were highly repeatable, that is, individuals behaved in a consistent manner over time, and the two behaviors were also highly correlated. Interestingly, the strength of this correlation was greatest where the competitive community was least diverse. These findings add to increasing evidence that natural populations of animals exhibit patterns of behavioral covariance, or personality structure, and suggest that competitive variation may act to erode personality structure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Home Range and Habitat Selection of Spotted Owls in the Central Sierra Nevada.
- Author
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Williams, Perry J., Gutiérrez, R.J., and Whitmore, Sheila A.
- Subjects
CALIFORNIA spotted owl ,RADIO telemetry ,STATISTICAL sampling ,RESOURCE allocation - Abstract
We studied home range and habitat selection of radio-marked adult California spotted owls (Strix occidentalis occidentalis) randomly selected from among the breeding population of owls in the central Sierra Nevada, California from June to October 2006. The most parsimonious home-range estimate for our data was 555 ha (SE = 100 ha). Home-range size was positively correlated with the number of vegetation patches in the home range (habitat heterogeneity). We used resource selection ratios to examine selection of vegetation types by owls within our study area. Owl home ranges contained a high proportion of mature conifer forest, relative to its availability, although the confidence interval for this estimate overlapped one. We also used resource selection functions (RSF) to examine owl foraging habitat selection. Relative probability of selection of foraging habitat was correlated with vegetation classes, patch size, and their interaction. Owls showed highest selection rates for large patches (>10 ha) of pole-sized coniferous forest. Our results suggested that spotted owls in the central Sierra Nevada used habitat that contained a high proportion of mature conifer forest at the home-range scale, but at a finer scale (foraging site selection) owls used other vegetation classes interspersed among mature forest patches, consistent with our hypothesis that spotted owls may use other forest types besides old growth and mature forests when foraging. Our study provides an unbiased estimate of habitat use by spotted owls in the central Sierra Nevada. Our results suggest that forest managers continue to protect remaining mature and old-growth forests in the central Sierra Nevada because owl home ranges contain high proportions of these habitats. However, our results also showed that owls used younger stands as foraging habitat so that landscape heterogeneity, with respect to cover types, may be an important consideration for management but we did not attempt to relate our findings to fitness of owls. Thus management for some level of landscape heterogeneity for the benefit of owls should proceed with caution or under an adaptive management framework. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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- View/download PDF
27. Revision of the genus Acrochordiceras Hyatt, 1877 (Ammonoidea, Middle Triassic): morphology, biometry, biostratigraphy and intra-specific variability.
- Author
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MONNET, CLAUDE, BUCHER, HUGO, WASMER, MARTIN, and GUEX, JEAN
- Subjects
AMMONOIDEA ,TRIASSIC stratigraphic geology ,MORPHOLOGY ,BIOMETRY ,BIOSTRATIGRAPHY - Abstract
The family Acrochordiceratidae Arthaber, 1911 ranges in age from latest Spathian to the middle/late Anisian boundary, and it represents a major component of ammonoid faunas during that time. The middle Anisian genus Acrochordiceras Hyatt, 1877 is the most widespread taxon of the family and occurs abundantly worldwide within the low paleolatitude belt. However, there is a profusion of species names available for Acrochordiceras. This excessive diversity at the species level essentially results from the fact that sufficiently large samples were not available, thus leading to a typological approach to its taxonomy. Based on new extensive collections obtained from the Anisian (Middle Triassic) Fossil Hill Member (Star Peak Group, north-west Nevada) for which a high resolution biostratigraphic frame is available, the taxonomy and biostratigraphy of the genus Acrochordiceras Hyatt, 1877 is herein revised with respect to its intra-specific variation. Morphological and biometric studies ( c. 550 bedrock-controlled specimens were measured) show that only one species occurs in each stratigraphic level. Continuous ranges of intra-specific variation of studied specimens enable us to synonymize Haydenites Diener, 1907, Silesiacrochordiceras Diener, 1916 and Epacrochordiceras Spath, 1934 with Acrochordiceras Hyatt, 1877. Three stratigraphically successive species are herein recognized in the low paleolatitude middle Anisian faunas from Nevada: A. hatschekii (Diener, 1907), A. hyatti Meek, 1877 and A. carolinae Mojsisovics, 1882. Moreover, an assessment of intra-specific variation of the adult size range does not support recognition of a dimorphic pair ( Acrochordiceras and Epacrochordiceras) as previously suggested by other workers ( Epacrochordiceras is the compressed and weakly ornamented end-member variant of Acrochordiceras). The successive middle Anisian species of Acrochordiceras form an anagenetic lineage characterized by increasing involution, adult size and intra-specific variation. This taxonomic revision based on new bedrock-controlled collections is thus an important prerequisite before studying the evolution of the group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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- View/download PDF
28. Habitat Use by Saw-Whet Owls in the Sierra Nevada.
- Author
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Grose, Julie E. and Morrison, Michael L.
- Subjects
HABITATS ,NORTHERN saw-whet owl ,FOREST management ,GEOGRAPHIC information systems ,STATISTICAL sampling ,PROBABILITY theory ,LOGISTIC regression analysis - Abstract
Northern saw-whet owls (Aegolius acadicus) are secondary cavity-nesters and their dependence on snags has potential repercussions on forest management practices. Descriptive studies exist regarding habitat characteristics around saw-whet nest and roost areas, yet few studies have examined associations within larger areas or relative to snag characteristics (e.g., density). We conducted owl broadcast surveys and snag sampling during the spring and summer of 2006 and 2007 in the Lake Tahoe Basin of the central Sierra Nevada; we measured additional habitat variables from Geographic Information System layers. We modeled detection and occupancy probabilities for saw-whets using sampling and site covariates at survey sites. In addition, we used stepwise logistic regression to compare habitat characteristics at owl use sites and nonuse sites at 2 spatial scales. Detection probability was low in 2006 and decreased throughout the survey period; detection probability was slightly higher in 2007 and unaffected by day of survey. Probability of occupancy was affected by elevation and dominant tree species in 2007. Similarly, stepwise logistic regression indicated saw-whet occurrence was negatively correlated with the percentage of area dominated by white fir (Abies concolor) at both the macrohabitat (approx. 260 ha) and microhabitat (approx. 20 ha) scales and was positively correlated with the percentage of area containing open canopy at the microhabitat scale. We did not find correlations between saw-whet occurrence and snag characteristics. Current restoration projects in areas of the Sierra Nevada aim to decrease relative abundance of white fir and the number of snags in forest stands. We recommend continued monitoring of saw-whets to understand potential effects of these restoration activities. Our estimates of saw-whet occupancy and detection probabilities can be used by forest managers to determine necessary survey effort for reliable results when developing monitoring protocols. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Assessing ecosystem threats from global and regional change: hierarchical modeling of risk to sagebrush ecosystems from climate change, land use and invasive species in Nevada, USA.
- Author
-
Bradley, Bethany A.
- Subjects
BIOTIC communities ,SAGEBRUSH ,CLIMATE change ,LAND use ,INTRODUCED species - Abstract
Global change poses significant challenges for ecosystem conservation. At regional scales, climate change may lead to extensive shifts in species distributions and widespread extirpations or extinctions. At landscape scales, land use and invasive species disrupt ecosystem function and reduce species richness. However, a lack of spatially explicit models of risk to ecosystems makes it difficult for science to inform conservation planning and land management. Here, I model risk to sagebrush ( Artemisia spp.) ecosystems in the state of Nevada, USA from climate change, land use/land cover change, and species invasion. Risk from climate change is based on an ensemble of 10 atmosphere-ocean general circulation model (AOGCM) projections applied to two bioclimatic envelope models (Mahalanobis distance and Maxent). Risk from land use is based on the distribution of roads, agriculture, and powerlines, and on the spatial relationships between land use and probability of cheatgrass Bromus tectorum invasion in Nevada. Risk from land cover change is based on probability and extent of pinyon-juniper ( Pinus monophylla; Juniperus spp.) woodland expansion. Climate change is most likely to negatively impact sagebrush ecosystems at the edges of its current range, particularly in southern Nevada, southern Utah, and eastern Washington. Risk from land use and woodland expansion is pervasive throughout Nevada, while cheatgrass invasion is most problematic in the northern part of the state. Cumulatively, these changes pose major challenges for conservation of sagebrush and sagebrush obligate species. This type of comprehensive assessment of ecosystem risk provides managers with spatially explicit tools important for conservation planning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Recruitment limitation of forest communities in a degraded Mediterranean landscape.
- Author
-
Mendoza, Irene, Gómez-Aparicio, Lorena, Zamora, Regino, and Matías, Luis
- Subjects
WOODY plants ,LANDSCAPES ,REFORESTATION ,PINE ,SEEDLINGS ,CLIMATE change ,BIOTIC communities - Abstract
Question: How does habitat degradation affect recruitment limitation and its components (seed limitation versus establishment limitation) of woody plant communities in a Mediterranean landscape? Location: 1600-1900 m a.s.l. in the Sierra Nevada National Park, southern Spain. The landscape is a mosaic composed of native forest and two degraded landscape units: reforestation stands and shrubland. Methods: We evaluated fruit production, seed rain, seedling emergence and seedling survival in two consecutive years with contrasting rainfall patterns. Seed and seedling data were used to calculate values of seed and establishment limitation. Results: In general, the woody community was both severely seed- and establishment-limited. Species were less seed-limited in the landscape units with higher adult density (i.e. shrub species in shrubland, Pinus spp. in reforestation stands). In contrast, degradation did not exacerbate establishment limitation, which was severe in all landscape units. This general pattern was modulated by the biogeographical distribution, dispersal type, and life form of the species. Boreo-alpine species were more limited in establishment than species with a typical Mediterranean distribution. Zoochorous species were less seed-limited in the landscape units preferred by dispersers (i.e. native forest). Tree species were more establishment-limited than shrub species, irrespective of the landscape unit. Seed limitation, and especially establishment limitation, varied among years, with establishment being almost nil in the very dry year. Conclusion: In the case of Mediterranean landscapes, when degradation from human impact involves a reduction in the adult abundance of the woody plant community (trees and shrubs), seed limitation increases, although establishment limitation is generally high in all landscape units, especially for boreo-alpine species. Conservation and restoration strategies should take into account our results showing that tree species were unable to recruit in an extremely dry year, because more aridity is expected under a climatic change scenario in Mediterranean ecosystems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The Gambling Act 2005: Regulatory Containment and Market Control.
- Author
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Light, Roy
- Subjects
GAMBLING laws ,LEGISLATIVE bills ,LEGISLATION ,INTERNET gambling ,GAMBLING industry - Abstract
The Act marks a fundamental shift from legislative to market control of gambling. While plans for Las Vegas style casinos and internet gambling sites in Britain have suffered setbacks, restrictions on the availability, advertising and stimulation of demand for gambling, enshrined in the Gaming Act 1968, have been abandoned. In their place, a new regulatory body, the Gambling Commission, has been established to take primary responsibility for ensuring that three licensing objectives are promoted. These objectives are the prevention of crime and disorder, the conduct of gambling in a fair and open way and the protection of children and the vulnerable. The Commission has been given strong and wide ranging powers to regulate gambling, but can the safeguards proposed meet the challenge presented by a gambling industry released from restraints? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The effect of different pine hosts on the sampling of Rhizopogon spore banks in five Eastern Sierra Nevada forests.
- Author
-
Rusca, T. A., Kennedy, P. G., and Bruns, T. D.
- Subjects
PINE ,FORESTS & forestry - Abstract
• Our primary goal was to determine whether detection of Rhizopogon internal transcribed spacer (ITS) groups is affected by the pine species used in seedling bioassays. Our secondary goal was to investigate composition of Rhizopogon spore banks in the Eastern Sierra Nevada of California, a previously unsampled region. • We used seedlings of Pinus contorta, Pinus jeffreyi, Pinus lambertiana, and Pinus muricata as bioassay plants and identified the Rhizopogon retrieved by internal transcribed spacer (ITS) sequence analysis. • We found that each of the pine species retrieved all of the abundant Rhizopogon ITS groups, but there were significant differences among pines in the richness of Rhizopogon ITS groups recovered. Pinus muricata recovered all ITS groups found in this study and was significantly better than P. lambertiana. Rhizopogon communities from the five sampled sites contained six to eight ITS groups per site, with two unique sequence groups and a higher abundance of the Rhizopogon ellenae and Rhizopogon arctostaphyli groups than at previously sampled sites. • These results show high cross-receptivity between Rhizopogon and pine species, and regional patterns in spore bank composition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Patterns of spatial autocorrelation of assemblages of birds, floristics, physiognomy, and primary productivity in the central Great Basin, USA.
- Author
-
Fleishman, Erica and Mac Nally, Ralph
- Subjects
AUTOCORRELATION (Statistics) ,HABITATS ,PRIMARY productivity (Biology) ,BIOLOGICAL productivity ,ECOLOGY - Abstract
We fitted spatial autocorrelation functions to distance-based data for assemblages of birds and for three attributes of birds’ habitats at 140 locations, separated by up to 65 km, in the Great Basin (Nevada, USA). The three habitat characteristics were taxonomic composition of the vegetation, physical structure of the vegetation, and a measure of primary productivity, the normalized difference vegetation index, estimated from satellite imagery. We found that a spherical model was the best fit to data for avifaunal composition, vegetation composition, and primary productivity, but the distance at which spatial correlation effectively was zero differed substantially among data sets ( c. 30 km for birds, 20 km for vegetation composition, and 60 km for primary productivity). A power-law function was the best fit to data for vegetation structure, indicating that the structure of vegetation differed by similar amounts irrespective of distance between locations (up to the maximum distance measured). Our results suggested that the spatial structure of bird assemblages is more similar to vegetation composition than to either vegetation structure or primary productivity, but is autocorrelated over larger distances. We believe that the greater mobility of birds compared with plants may be responsible for this difference. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Spatial and temporal variations in species occurrence rate affect the accuracy of occurrence models.
- Author
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Bulluck, Lesley, Fleishman, Erica, Betrus, Chris, and Blair, Rob
- Subjects
SPECIES ,SPATIAL variation ,BIOLOGICAL variation ,LAND use ,ECOLOGY ,BIOGEOGRAPHY - Abstract
Aim Predictive models of species occurrence have potential for prioritizing areas for competing land uses. Before widespread application, however, it is necessary to evaluate performance using independent data and effective accuracy measures. The objectives of this study were to (1) compare the effects of species occurrence rate on model accuracy, (2) assess the effects of spatial and temporal variation in occurrence rate on model accuracy, and (3) determine if the number of predictor variables affected model accuracy. Location We predicted the distributions of breeding birds in three adjacent mountain ranges in the Great Basin (Nevada, USA). Methods For each of 18 species, we developed separate models using five different data sets — one set for each of 2 years (to address the effects of temporal variation), and one set for each of three possible pairs of mountain ranges (to address the effects of spatial variation). We evaluated each model with an independent data set using four accuracy measures: discrimination ability [area under a receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC)], correct classification rate (CCR), proportion of presences correctly classified (sensitivity), and proportion of absences correctly classified (specificity). Results Discrimination ability was not affected by occurrence rate, whereas the other three accuracy measures were significantly affected. CCR, sensitivity and specificity were affected by species occurrence rate in the evaluation data sets to a greater extent than in the model-building data sets. Discrimination ability was the only accuracy measure affected by the number of variables in a model. Main conclusions Temporal variation in species occurrence appeared to have a greater impact than did spatial variation. When temporal variation in species distributions is great, the relative costs of omission and commission errors should be assessed and long-term census data should be examined before using predictive models of occurrence in a management setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. PROTASPIDES OF UPPER CAMBRIAN APHELASPIS (PTYCHOPARIIDA, TRILOBITA) AND RELATED SPECIES WITH THEIR TAXONOMIC IMPLICATIONS.
- Author
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Dong-Chan Lee and Chatterton, Brian D. E.
- Subjects
ONTOGENY ,PTYCHOPARIIDA ,TRILOBITES ,EMBRYOLOGY - Abstract
The ontogeny of Aphelaspis brachyphasis is illustrated and described on the basis of newly discovered silicified material from the McGill section, Nevada, USA. Protaspides of three other Aphelaspis species are redescribed. Of ptychopariide species for which protaspides have been documented, the protaspides of those previously considered to be closely related to Aphelaspis are illustrated herein. Protaspides of Aphelaspis are most similar to those of Olenus, supporting previous taxonomic suggestions that the Aphelaspidinae is closely related to the Olenidae and may be assigned to the Olenacea. The protaspides of Housia share few similarities with those of Aphelaspis, contradicting the hypothesis that these genera are placed together within the Pterocephaliidae. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Climatic influences on fire regimes in the northern Sierra Nevada mountains, Lake Tahoe Basin, Nevada, USA.
- Author
-
Taylor, A. H. and Beaty, R. M.
- Subjects
JEFFREY pine ,PINACEAE ,ENDANGERED ecosystems ,OCEAN-atmosphere interaction ,FOREST fire research - Abstract
The goal of this study was to understand better the role of interannual and interdecadal climatic variation on local pre-EuroAmerican settlement fire regimes in fire-prone Jeffrey pine (Pinus jeffreyiGrev.&Balf.) dominated forests in the northern Sierra Nevada Mountains.Our study was conducted in a 6000-ha area of contiguous mixed Jeffrey pine-white fir (Abies concolorGordon&Glend.) forest on the western slope of the Carson Range on the eastern shore of Lake Tahoe, Nevada.Pre-EuroAmerican settlement fire regimes (i.e. frequency, return interval, extent, season) were reconstructed in eight contiguous watersheds for a 200-year period (1650–1850) from fire scars preserved in the annual growth rings of nineteenth century cut stumps and recently dead pre-settlement Jeffrey pine trees. Superposed epoch analysis (SEA) and correlation analysis were used to examine relationships between tree ring-based reconstructions of the Palmer Drought Severity Index (PDSI), Southern Oscillation Index (SOI), Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) and pre-EuroAmerican fire regimes in order to assess the influence of drought and equatorial and north Pacific teleconnections on fire occurrence and fire extent.For the entire period of record (1650–1850), wet conditions were characteristic of years without fires. In contrast, fire years were associated with drought. Drought intensity also influenced fire extent and the most widespread fires occurred in the driest years. Years with widespread fires were also preceded by wet conditions 3 years before the fire. Widespread fires were also associated with phase changes of the PDO, with the most widespread burns occurring when the phase changed from warm (positive) to cold (negative) conditions. Annual SOI and fire frequency or extent were not associated in our study. At decadal time scales, burning was more widespread during decades that were dryer and characterized by La Niña and negative PDO conditions. Interannual and interdecadal fire–climate relationships were not stable over time. From 1700 to 1775 there was no interannual relationship between drought, PDO, and fire frequency or extent. However, from 1775 to 1850, widespread fires were associated with dry years preceded by wet years. This period also had the strongest association between fire extent and the PDO. In contrast, fire–climate associations at interdecadal time scales were stronger in the earlier period than in the later period. The change from strong interdecadal to strong interannual climate influence was associated with a breakdown in decadal scale constructive relationships between PDO and SOI.Climate strongly influenced pre-settlement pine forest fire regimes in northern Sierra Nevada. Both interannual and interdecadal climatic variation regulated conditions conducive to fire activity, and longer term changes in fire frequency and extent correspond with climate-mediated changes observed in both the northern and southern hemispheres. The sensitivity of fire regimes to shifts in modes of climatic variability suggests that climate was a key regulator of pine forest ecosystem structure and dynamics before EuroAmerican settlement. An understanding of pre-EuroAmerican fire–climate relationships may provide useful insights into how fire activity in contemporary forests may respond to future climatic variation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Local ecology and geographic ranges of plants in the Bishop Creek watershed of the eastern Sierra Nevada, California, USA.
- Author
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Kimball, Sarah, Wilson, Paul, and Crowther, Jack
- Subjects
MOUNTAIN plants ,ECOLOGICAL niche ,PHYTOGEOGRAPHY ,CLIMATE & biogeography - Abstract
Aim The physiological requirements and tolerances of a species partially determine both its habitat preferences within a community and its broader geographic range. Therefore, we predicted that local ecology should be correlated with geographic distribution. We tested for a correlation between local ecology and range size, and we attempted to account for this correlation by the climate of the range. Location Bishop Creek Watershed, on the eastern side of the Sierra Nevada, California. Methods We recorded all plant species growing in each of 263 plots in the montane to alpine zones of the watershed. The local habitat preferences of 282 species were described in terms of wetness, elevation, soil, and amount of shade. The size and centre of the geographic range for each species were determined from regional floras. Results Wetness preference within the watershed was significantly correlated with range size. Specifically, plants of wet sites had larger ranges that extend to the north, whereas plants of dry sites tended to have smaller ranges centred to the east. The correlation between local wetness preference and range size was entirely explained by the location of the range centre of the species. Main conclusions A possible reason for the large ranges of mesophilic plants in our study area is that mesic habitats are continuous throughout the western Cordillera, while dry alpine habitats are isolated by valleys to the east. The correspondence between local ecology and geographic distributions implies evolutionary stasis in the niches of these plant species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Patterns of ant species richness along elevational gradients in an arid ecosystem.
- Author
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Sanders, Nathan J., Moss, Jarrod, and Wagner, Diane
- Subjects
ANTS ,ARID regions ,ALTITUDES - Abstract
ABSTRACT Aim In this study, we examine patterns of local and regional ant species richness along three elevational gradients in an arid ecosystem. In addition, we test the hypothesis that changes in ant species richness with elevation are related to elevation-dependent changes in climate and available area. Location Spring Mountains, Nevada, U.S.A. Methods We used pitfall traps placed at each 100-m elevational band in three canyons in the Spring Mountains. We compiled climate data from 68 nearby weather stations. We used multiple regression analysis to examine the effects of annual precipitation, average July precipitation, and maximum and minimum July temperature on ant species richness at each elevational band. Results We found that patterns of local ant species richness differed among the three gradients we sampled. Ant species richness increased linearly with elevation along two transects and peaked at mid-elevation along a third transect. This suggests that patterns of species richness based on data from single transects may not generalize to larger spatial scales. Cluster analysis of community similarity revealed a high-elevation species assemblage largely distinct from that of lower elevations. Major changes in the identity of ant species present along elevational gradients tended to coincide with changes in the dominant vegetation. Regional species richness, defined here as the total number of unique species within an elevational band in all three gradients combined, tended to increase with increasing elevation. Available area decreased with increasing elevation. Area was therefore correlated negatively with ant species richness and did not explain elevational patterns of ant species richness in the Spring Mountains. Mean July maximum and minimum temperature, July precipitation and annual precipitation combined to explain 80% of the variation in ant species richness. Main conclusions Our results suggest that in arid ecosystems, species richness for some... [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. EDITORIAL.
- Author
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Cooper, Cary L.
- Subjects
PERIODICALS ,PUBLISHING ,ORGANIZATIONAL behavior ,CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
The article presents an introduction about the "Journal of Organizational Behavior.” The journal has seen a steady increase in the number of subscriptions and high quality manuscripts that are submitted. The journal is now available on a bi-monthly basis, with one additional special issue a year. The special issue for 1993 will be edited by editor Yitzhak Fried and will be entitled "Industrial Relations and Work Stress." There are several important new developments in the journal in the year 1993. First, after ten years of devoted service to the journal, management professional Tim Hall will leave the post of Associate Editor. Management professional Denise Rousseau has agreed to take on the role of the Associate Editor. In terms of editorial changes, given the increase in submitted manuscripts, the journal has invited academician Jeff Edwards to act as another Consulting Editor. In future issues, from time to time, distinguished organizational behavior (OB) scholars will be invited to provide think pieces for the journal. These contributions will provide new theory or research on problems of significance in the OB field.
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- 1993
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40. Dances with Horses: Lessons from the Environmental Fringe.
- Author
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Symanski, Richard
- Subjects
- NEVADA, UNITED States, UNITED States. Bureau of Land Management
- Abstract
Copyright of Conservation Biology is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. CONVENTION ACTIVITIES.
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READING conferences ,CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
Presents schedule for activities that will be held during the 36th Annual International Reading Association (IRA) Convention, which will be held in Las Vegas, Nevada from May 6-10, 1991. Activities that will be held on May 6; Activities that will be held on May 7; Activities that will be held on May 8; Activities that will be held on May 9; Activities that will be held on May 10.
- Published
- 1991
42. 1991 LAS VEGAS CONVENTION PROGRAM OUTLINE.
- Subjects
READING conferences ,CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
Presents an outline of the 36th Annual International Reading Association Convention Program, which will be held in Las Vegas, Nevada on May 6-10, 1991. Cosponsored meeting; Exhibitions; Award presentations.
- Published
- 1991
43. A Method for Capturing Pygmy Rabbits in Summer.
- Author
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Larrucea, Eveline S. and Brussard, Peter F.
- Subjects
PYGMY rabbit ,SAGEBRUSH ,HABITATS ,ENDANGERED species ,SUMMER - Abstract
Degradation of sagebrush habitat and a lack of information on current status motivated a petition to list the pygmy rabbit (Brachylagus idahoensis) as threatened or endangered under the Endangered Species Act. The petition brought on renewed interest in obtaining data on pygmy rabbits; however, pygmy rabbits are notoriously difficult to capture, especially in summer. We tested box-trap, net, noose-pole, and fabric-fence methods to capture pygmy rabbits in 4 areas of northern Nevada and eastern California, USA. We captured 25 different pygmy rabbits in 30 captures from April 2005 to July 2006. The combination of camouflaged box traps baited with canned green beans was 35% more successful and required less effort per captured rabbit than any other method. Noose-pole methods also were successful. These techniques provide an efficient method of capturing pygmy rabbits in summer when many remote field sites are most accessible. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. A rapid flood risk assessment method for response operations and nonsubject‐matter‐expert community planning.
- Author
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Longenecker, Herbert E., Graeden, Ellie, Kluskiewicz, Dan, Zuzak, Casey, Rozelle, Jesse, and Aziz, Ajmal L.
- Subjects
EMERGENCY management ,FLOOD risk ,TSUNAMI hazard zones ,WATER ,REMOTE sensing ,HYDROLOGIC models - Abstract
Flood risk planning and emergency response at community levels rely on fast access to accurate inundation models that identify geographic areas, assets, and populations that may be flooded. However, limited flood modelling resources are available to support these events and activities. We present a computationally‐efficient flood model for facilitating rapid risk analysis across a wide range of scenarios and decision support to operational, crisis action, local flood‐fight, and community planning efforts. Our flood depth regression method converts publicly‐available river stage heights to flood depths, then downscales the depths from gage locations onto high resolution National Hydrography Dataset flowlines and estimates areas and depths of flooding by subtraction of the National Elevation Dataset from modelled water surface elevations. We demonstrate proof‐of‐principle analyses for historic 2009 Red River of the North flooding in the United States, achieving comprehensive mainstem flood estimation for the length of the river and depth accuracy of 1.4 ft (0.4 m) compared to gage observations, remote sensing, and higher‐resolution hydrologic models. We also demonstrate the utility of the method to inform planning and response decisions in preparation for flooding in a companion scenario for Yerington, Nevada, and call for further research and operationalization of riverine inundation mapping techniques. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. A 21st century Pangea? The emergence of a new international forum for Biogeographers.
- Author
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Whittaker, Robert J. and Sax, Dov F.
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BIOGEOGRAPHY ,CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
Reports on the inaugural meeting of a biogeographers' society International Biogeography Society (IBS) held in Mesquite, Nevada on January 04, 2003. Importance of biogeography; Aim of IBS; Topics discussed in the meeting.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. (1846) Proposal to reject the name Dodecatheon meadia var. puberulum (Primulaceae).
- Author
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Reveal, James L. and Gandhi, Kanchi N.
- Subjects
DODECATHEON ,PRIMULACEAE ,HORTICULTURAL literature ,MOUNTAINS - Abstract
The article discusses the research proposal which aims to conserve Dodecatheon jeffreyi against D. jeffreyanum (Primulaceae). The genera is believed to be widely scattered in the mountainous regions of Sierra Nevada and other places in the North America. In conjuntion with what precedes, these species are claimed to have been cultivated in the horticultural literature in most mountainous areas in the area mentioned.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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