37 results on '"Allen, RB"'
Search Results
2. Solar Radiation Determines Site Occupancy of Coexisting Tropical and Temperate Deer Species Introduced to New Zealand Forests
- Author
-
Crowther, MS, Allen, RB, Forsyth, DM, Allen, RKJ, Affeld, K, MacKenzie, DI, Crowther, MS, Allen, RB, Forsyth, DM, Allen, RKJ, Affeld, K, and MacKenzie, DI
- Abstract
Assemblages of introduced taxa provide an opportunity to understand how abiotic and biotic factors shape habitat use by coexisting species. We tested hypotheses about habitat selection by two deer species recently introduced to New Zealand's temperate rainforests. We hypothesised that, due to different thermoregulatory abilities, rusa deer (Cervus timorensis; a tropical species) would prefer warmer locations in winter than red deer (Cervus elaphus scoticus; a temperate species). Since adult male rusa deer are aggressive in winter (the rut), we also hypothesised that rusa deer and red deer would not use the same winter locations. Finally, we hypothesised that in summer both species would prefer locations with fertile soils that supported more plant species preferred as food. We used a 250 × 250 m grid of 25 remote cameras to collect images in a 100-ha montane study area over two winters and summers. Plant composition, solar radiation, and soil fertility were also determined for each camera location. Multiseason occupancy models revealed that direct solar radiation was the best predictor of occupancy and detection probabilities for rusa deer in winter. Multistate, multiseason occupancy models provided strong evidence that the detection probability of adult male rusa deer was greater in winter and when other rusa deer were present at a location. Red deer mostly vacated the study area in winter. For the one season that had sufficient camera images of both species (summer 2011) to allow two-species occupancy models to be fitted, the detection probability of rusa deer also increased with solar radiation. Detection probability also varied with plant composition for both deer species. We conclude that habitat use by coexisting tropical and temperate deer species in New Zealand likely depends on the interplay between the thermoregulatory and behavioural traits of the deer and the abiotic and biotic features of the habitat.
- Published
- 2015
3. Trends in bird counts 1978-2020 in a New Zealand Nothofagus forest with variable control of mammalian predators
- Author
-
Rossignaud, Laureline, Kelly, D, Spurr, EB, Flaspohler, DJ, Allen, RB, and Brockerhoff, EG
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Solar radiation determines site occupancy of coexisting tropical and temperate deer species introduced to New Zealand forests
- Author
-
Allen, RB, Forsyth, DM, Allen, RKJ, Affeld, K, MacKenzie, DI, and Crowther, MS
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Tree survival and growth responses in the aftermath of a strong earthquake
- Author
-
Susan K. Wiser, Jennifer M. Hurst, Robert B. Allen, Darryl I. MacKenzie, Peter J. Bellingham, David A. Coomes, Elise A. Arnst, Allen, RB [0000-0002-0118-3086], Bellingham, PJ [0000-0001-9646-4819], Coomes, DA [0000-0002-8261-2582], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
- Subjects
Nothofagus ,Distance decay ,disturbance ,Fuscospora ,landslides ,Disturbance (geology) ,Ecology ,biology ,Landslide ,Plant Science ,biology.organism_classification ,mortality ,Tree (data structure) ,Geography ,landscape heterogeneity ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,New Zealand - Abstract
© 2019 The Authors. Journal of Ecology © 2019 British Ecological Society The infrequent and unpredictable nature of earthquakes means that their landslide-generated impacts on forests are rarely investigated. In montane forests, landslides are the main cause of tree death and injury during earthquakes. Landslides range from soil movements that uproot and bury trees over extensive areas to rock falls that strike individual trees. We examined unexplored relationships between tree survival and distance from an epicentre, soil-available phosphorus (P) as an indicator of soil development and tree diameter. We expected decreased tree growth in damaged forests because of tree injury. We used a plot network, established in 1974 and resurveyed regularly ever since, to quantify survival and growth responses 6–30 km from the epicentre of a 1994 earthquake in New Zealand's Southern Alps. Our Bayesian analysis used 8,518 trees from 250 plots that representatively sampled a naturally monospecific Nothofagus forest. As the time-scales over which responses could emerge were unknown, we compared relationships for a pre-earthquake period with 0–5 years post-earthquake, and with 5+ years post-earthquake. Not all plots were affected by the earthquake. We found that 0–5 years post-earthquake survival increased logarithmically with distance from the epicentre with lowered survival up to 20 km from the epicentre. Survival was low on plots with high soil-available P. An inverted U-shaped relationship between survival and diameter pre-earthquake was not found 0–5 years post-earthquake. This was because of surprisingly high survival by large trees. The earthquake most often suppressed 0–5 years post-earthquake growth up to 15 km from the epicentre, but this was only apparent after accounting for more general growth differences among periods. The positive relationship between growth and soil-available P pre-earthquake and 5+ years post-earthquake reflected enhanced growth on young soils. This contrasted with a negative effect of soil-available P on growth 0–5 years post-earthquake. Synthesis. Soil-available P, tree diameter and distance from the epicentre independently determined how tree survival and growth responded to an earthquake. The impacts on survival and growth largely occurred 0–5 years post-earthquake and suggests a level of resilience in mountain beech forests.
- Published
- 2020
6. Tree species richness and turnover throughout New Zealand forests
- Author
-
Bellingham, PJ, Stewart, GH, and Allen, RB
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Participatory Journalism, Blurred Boundaries: Introducing Theoretical IS Frameworks to Re-Orient Research Practices
- Author
-
Nora Martin, Allen, RB, Hunter, J, and Zeng, ML
- Subjects
Computer science ,business.industry ,Media studies ,Citizen journalism ,Media relations ,Information science ,Digital media ,World Wide Web ,Artificial Intelligence & Image Processing ,Journalism ,Social media ,Technical Journalism ,business ,Storytelling - Abstract
Social media now plays a pivotal role in how broadcast media engages with their audiences. This paper contemplates the nature of our digital media culture, the diversity of actors involved and how the role of the journalist has evolved. The methodology includes examining the findings of a pilot research study investigating journalists' information practices in the digital realm. Two theoretical frameworks from the discipline of Information Science are introduced to re-orient research practices. The findings reveal digital journalism facilitates richer and more expansive storytelling, with connectivity between experts, journalists and the public. The author posits that the citizen-informant is reconceptualised in the news milieu.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. A Growth-Survival Trade-Off Along an Elevation Gradient Is Altered by Earthquake Disturbance in a Monodominant Southern Beech Forest.
- Author
-
Allen RB, MacKenzie DI, Wiser SK, Bellingham PJ, Burrows LE, and Coomes DA
- Abstract
Tree growth-survival relationships link two demographic processes that individually dictate the composition, structure and functioning of forest ecosystems. While these relationships vary intra-specifically, it remains unclear how this reflects environmental variation and disturbance. We examined the influence of a 700-m elevation gradient and an Mw = 6.7 earthquake on intra-specific variability in growth-survival relationships. We expected that survival models that incorporated recent growth would be better supported than those only using other factors known to influence tree survival. We used a permanent plot network that representatively sampled a monodominant Nothofagus forest in New Zealand's Southern Alps in 1974 and that was remeasured seven times through to 2009. The relationships were assessed using pre-earthquake growth and survival, pre-earthquake growth and post-earthquake survival (0-5 years post-earthquake), and post-earthquake growth and survival (5+ years post-earthquake). Survival was related to growth of 4504 trees on 216 plots using Bayesian modelling. We hypothesised there would be a positive, logistic relationship between growth and survival. Pre-earthquake, we found a positive, logarithmic growth-survival relationship at all elevations. At higher elevations, trees grew more slowly but had higher survival than trees at lower elevations, supporting our hypothesised demographic trade-off with elevation. The earthquake altered growth-survival relationships from those found pre-earthquake and 0-5 years post-earthquake survival held little relationship with growth. A strong, logarithmic growth-survival relationship developed 5+ years post-earthquake because of enhanced survival of fast-growing trees yet low survival of slow-growing trees. Synthesis . Our findings demonstrate a trend in growth-survival relationships along an elevation gradient. If we assume a gradual climate warming is the equivalent of a forest stand shifting to a lower elevation, then data from our pre-earthquake period suggest that tree growth-survival relationships at any elevation could adjust to faster growth and lower survival. We also show how these novel growth-survival relationships could be altered by periodic disturbance., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (© 2024 The Author(s). Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Forest demography and biomass accumulation rates are associated with transient mean tree size vs. density scaling relations.
- Author
-
Yu K, Chen HYH, Gessler A, Pugh TAM, Searle EB, Allen RB, Pretzsch H, Ciais P, Phillips OL, Brienen RJW, Chu C, Xie S, and Ballantyne AP
- Abstract
Linking individual and stand-level dynamics during forest development reveals a scaling relationship between mean tree size and tree density in forest stands, which integrates forest structure and function. However, the nature of this so-called scaling law and its variation across broad spatial scales remain unquantified, and its linkage with forest demographic processes and carbon dynamics remains elusive. In this study, we develop a theoretical framework and compile a broad-scale dataset of long-term sample forest stands ( n = 1,433) from largely undisturbed forests to examine the association of temporal mean tree size vs. density scaling trajectories (slopes) with biomass accumulation rates and the sensitivity of scaling slopes to environmental and demographic drivers. The results empirically demonstrate a large variation of scaling slopes, ranging from -4 to -0.2, across forest stands in tropical, temperate, and boreal forest biomes. Steeper scaling slopes are associated with higher rates of biomass accumulation, resulting from a lower offset of forest growth by biomass loss from mortality. In North America, scaling slopes are positively correlated with forest stand age and rainfall seasonality, thus suggesting a higher rate of biomass accumulation in younger forests with lower rainfall seasonality. These results demonstrate the strong association of the transient mean tree size vs. density scaling trajectories with forest demography and biomass accumulation rates, thus highlighting the potential of leveraging forest structure properties to predict forest demography, carbon fluxes, and dynamics at broad spatial scales., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of National Academy of Sciences.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Impact of student-run clinic participation on empathy and interprofessional skills development in medical and pharmacy students.
- Author
-
Kodweis KR, Allen RB, Deschamp EI, Bihl AT, LeVine DAM, and Hall EA
- Abstract
Background: Students participating in student-run clinics (SRCs) have opportunities to develop and practice beneficial skill sets, including empathy and interprofessional collaboration., Objectives: This study aimed to assess whether participation in an underserved SRC impacts the development of empathy and interprofessional skills in pharmacy and medical students., Methods: This study assessed empathy and interprofessional skills development through a self-assessment survey. The survey included the Interpersonal Reactivity Index (IRI) to assess empathy, the Attitudes Towards Health Care Teams/Team Skills Scale (ATHCTS/TSS) to assess interprofessional team dynamics, and a free-text response section. Participants were grouped based on whether they participated in the SRC (intervention group) or did not participate in the SRC (control group). A subgroup analysis was performed based on the participants' discipline (medicine vs. pharmacy). To compare differences in IRI, ATHCTS, and TSS scores between study groups, independent samples t -tests were performed. A thematic analysis was used for qualitative data., Results: There were no statistically significant differences between intervention and control groups in IRI, ATHCTS, or TSS scores. Subgroup analyses showed no significant differences in scores of student pharmacists or medical students. For both disciplines, the thematic analysis revealed the most common positive themes identified were "real-world patient interaction and care," "impact on practice/career development." Alternatively, it revealed the highest reported negative themes identified as "time management and operational difficulties" and "concerns about the quality of/access to care"., Conclusions: This study demonstrates that involvement in an SRC neither improves nor hinders a learner's development of empathy and interprofessional team skills. Qualitatively, students reported that participation in an SRC benefited their learning and helped develop their skills, like empathy and team dynamics, in an interprofessional setting. Future research with longitudinal monitoring or alternative assessment tools is recommended., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Long-term exclusion of invasive ungulates alters tree recruitment and functional traits but not total forest carbon.
- Author
-
Allen K, Bellingham PJ, Richardson SJ, Allen RB, Burrows LE, Carswell FE, Husheer SW, St John MG, and Peltzer DA
- Subjects
- Animals, Ecosystem, Carbon, Forests, Trees, Deer
- Abstract
Forests are major carbon (C) sinks, but their ability to sequester C and thus mitigate climate change, varies with the environment, disturbance regime, and biotic interactions. Herbivory by invasive, nonnative ungulates can have profound ecosystem effects, yet its consequences for forest C stocks remain poorly understood. We determined the impact of invasive ungulates on C pools, both above- and belowground (to 30 cm), and on forest structure and diversity using 26 paired long-term (>20 years) ungulate exclosures and adjacent unfenced control plots located in native temperate rainforests across New Zealand, spanning 36-41° S. Total ecosystem C was similar between ungulate exclosure (299.93 ± 25.94 Mg C ha
-1 ) and unfenced control (324.60 ± 38.39 Mg C ha-1 ) plots. Most (60%) variation in total ecosystem C was explained by the biomass of the largest tree (mean diameter at breast height [dbh]: 88 cm) within each plot. Ungulate exclusion increased the abundance and diversity of saplings and small trees (dbh ≥2.5, <10 cm) compared with unfenced controls, but these accounted for ~5% of total ecosystem C, demonstrating that a few, large trees dominate the total forest ecosystem C but are unaffected by invasive ungulates at a timescale of 20-50 years. However, changes in understory C pools, species composition, and functional diversity did occur following long-term ungulate exclusion. Our findings suggest that, although the removal of invasive herbivores may not affect total forest C at the decadal scale, major shifts in the diversity and composition of regenerating species will have longer term consequences for ecosystem processes and forest C., (© 2023 The Authors. Ecological Applications published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of The Ecological Society of America.)- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Avian influenza virus prevalence in marine birds is dependent on ocean temperatures.
- Author
-
Hall JS, Dusek RJ, Nashold SW, TeSlaa JL, Allen RB, and Grear DA
- Subjects
- Animals, Birds, Ducks, Maine, Oceans and Seas, Prevalence, Temperature, Influenza A virus, Influenza in Birds epidemiology
- Abstract
Waterfowl and shorebirds are the primary hosts of influenza A virus (IAV), however, in most surveillance efforts, large populations of birds are not routinely examined; specifically marine ducks and other birds that reside predominately on or near the ocean. We conducted a long-term study sampling sea ducks and gulls in coastal Maine for IAV and found a virus prevalence (1.7%) much lower than is typically found in freshwater duck populations. We found wide year-to-year variation in virus detection in sea ducks and that the ocean water temperature was an important factor affecting IAV prevalence. In particular, the ocean temperature that occurred 11 d prior to collecting virus positive samples was important while water temperature measured concurrently with host sampling had no explanatory power for viral detection. We also experimentally showed that IAV is relatively unstable in sea water at temperatures typically found during our sampling. This represents the first report of virus prevalence and actual environmental data that help explain the variation in marine IAV transmission dynamics., (© 2019 by the Ecological Society of America.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Tree seedlings respond to both light and soil nutrients in a Patagonian evergreen-deciduous forest.
- Author
-
Promis A and Allen RB
- Subjects
- Argentina, Forests, Light, Soil, Trees growth & development
- Abstract
Seedlings of co-occurring species vary in their response to resource availability and this has implications for the conservation and management of forests. Differential shade-tolerance is thought to influence seedling performance in mixed Nothofagus betuloides-Nothofagus pumilio forests of Patagonia. However, these species also vary in their soil nutrient requirements. To determine the effects of light and soil nutrient resources on small seedlings we examined responses to an experimental reduction in canopy tree root competition through root trenching and restricting soil nutrient depletion through the addition of fertilizer. To understand the effect of light these treatments were undertaken in small canopy gaps and nearby beneath undisturbed canopy with lower light levels. Seedling diameter growth was greater for N. pumilio and height growth was greater for N. betuloides. Overall, diameter and height growth were greater in canopy gaps than beneath undisturbed canopy. Such growths were also greater with fertilizer and root trenching treatments, even beneath undisturbed canopy. Seedling survival was lower under such treatments, potentially reflecting thinning facilitated by resource induced growth. Finally, above-ground biomass did not vary among species although the less shade tolerant N. pumilio had higher below-ground biomass and root to shoot biomass ratio than the more shade tolerant N. betuloides. Above- and below-ground biomass were higher in canopy gaps so that the root to shoot biomass ratio was similar to that beneath undisturbed canopy. Above-ground biomass was also higher with fertilizer and root trenching treatments and that lowered the root to shoot biomass ratio. Restricting soil nutrient depletion allowed seedlings of both species to focus their responses above-ground. Our results support a view that soil nutrient resources, as well as the more commonly studied light resources, are important to seedlings of Nothofagus species occurring on infertile soils.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Priority effects are interactively regulated by top-down and bottom-up forces: evidence from wood decomposer communities.
- Author
-
Leopold DR, Wilkie JP, Dickie IA, Allen RB, Buchanan PK, and Fukami T
- Subjects
- Animals, Biota, Fungi, Arthropods, Wood
- Abstract
Both top-down (grazing) and bottom-up (resource availability) forces can determine the strength of priority effects, or the effects of species arrival history on the structure and function of ecological communities, but their combined influences remain unresolved. To test for such influences, we assembled experimental communities of wood-decomposing fungi using a factorial manipulation of fungivore (Folsomia candida) presence, nitrogen availability, and fungal assembly history. We found interactive effects of all three factors on fungal species composition and wood decomposition 1 year after the fungi were introduced. The strength of priority effects on community structure was affected primarily by nitrogen availability, whereas the strength of priority effects on decomposition rate was interactively regulated by nitrogen and fungivores. These results demonstrate that top-down and bottom-up forces jointly determine how strongly assembly history affects community structure and function., (© 2017 John Wiley & Sons Ltd/CNRS.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Asymmetric competition causes multimodal size distributions in spatially structured populations.
- Author
-
Velázquez J, Allen RB, Coomes DA, and Eichhorn MP
- Subjects
- New Zealand, Time Factors, Trees classification, Computer Simulation, Forests, Models, Biological, Trees physiology
- Abstract
Plant sizes within populations often exhibit multimodal distributions, even when all individuals are the same age and have experienced identical conditions. To establish the causes of this, we created an individual-based model simulating the growth of trees in a spatially explicit framework, which was parametrized using data from a long-term study of forest stands in New Zealand. First, we demonstrate that asymmetric resource competition is a necessary condition for the formation of multimodal size distributions within cohorts. By contrast, the legacy of small-scale clustering during recruitment is transient and quickly overwhelmed by density-dependent mortality. Complex multi-layered size distributions are generated when established individuals are restricted in the spatial domain within which they can capture resources. The number of modes reveals the effective number of direct competitors, while the separation and spread of modes are influenced by distances among established individuals. Asymmetric competition within local neighbourhoods can therefore generate a range of complex size distributions within even-aged cohorts., (© 2016 The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Avian Influenza Ecology in North Atlantic Sea Ducks: Not All Ducks Are Created Equal.
- Author
-
Hall JS, Russell RE, Franson JC, Soos C, Dusek RJ, Allen RB, Nashold SW, TeSlaa JL, Jónsson JE, Ballard JR, Harms NJ, and Brown JD
- Subjects
- Animals, Atlantic Ocean, Ducks virology, Ecology, Influenza in Birds epidemiology
- Abstract
Wild waterfowl are primary reservoirs of avian influenza viruses (AIV). However the role of sea ducks in the ecology of avian influenza, and how that role differs from freshwater ducks, has not been examined. We obtained and analyzed sera from North Atlantic sea ducks and determined the seroprevalence in those populations. We also tested swab samples from North Atlantic sea ducks for the presence of AIV. We found relatively high serological prevalence (61%) in these sea duck populations but low virus prevalence (0.3%). Using these data we estimated that an antibody half-life of 141 weeks (3.2 years) would be required to attain these prevalences. These findings are much different than what is known in freshwater waterfowl and have implications for surveillance efforts, AIV in marine environments, and the roles of sea ducks and other long-lived waterfowl in avian influenza ecology.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Solar Radiation Determines Site Occupancy of Coexisting Tropical and Temperate Deer Species Introduced to New Zealand Forests.
- Author
-
Allen RB, Forsyth DM, Allen RK, Affeld K, and MacKenzie DI
- Subjects
- Animals, New Zealand, Tropical Climate, Deer, Forests, Species Specificity, Sunlight
- Abstract
Assemblages of introduced taxa provide an opportunity to understand how abiotic and biotic factors shape habitat use by coexisting species. We tested hypotheses about habitat selection by two deer species recently introduced to New Zealand's temperate rainforests. We hypothesised that, due to different thermoregulatory abilities, rusa deer (Cervus timorensis; a tropical species) would prefer warmer locations in winter than red deer (Cervus elaphus scoticus; a temperate species). Since adult male rusa deer are aggressive in winter (the rut), we also hypothesised that rusa deer and red deer would not use the same winter locations. Finally, we hypothesised that in summer both species would prefer locations with fertile soils that supported more plant species preferred as food. We used a 250 × 250 m grid of 25 remote cameras to collect images in a 100-ha montane study area over two winters and summers. Plant composition, solar radiation, and soil fertility were also determined for each camera location. Multiseason occupancy models revealed that direct solar radiation was the best predictor of occupancy and detection probabilities for rusa deer in winter. Multistate, multiseason occupancy models provided strong evidence that the detection probability of adult male rusa deer was greater in winter and when other rusa deer were present at a location. Red deer mostly vacated the study area in winter. For the one season that had sufficient camera images of both species (summer 2011) to allow two-species occupancy models to be fitted, the detection probability of rusa deer also increased with solar radiation. Detection probability also varied with plant composition for both deer species. We conclude that habitat use by coexisting tropical and temperate deer species in New Zealand likely depends on the interplay between the thermoregulatory and behavioural traits of the deer and the abiotic and biotic features of the habitat.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Elevation-dependent responses of tree mast seeding to climate change over 45 years.
- Author
-
Allen RB, Hurst JM, Portier J, and Richardson SJ
- Abstract
We use seed count data from a New Zealand mono-specific mountain beech forest to test for decadal trends in seed production along an elevation gradient in relation to changes in climate. Seedfall was collected (1965 to 2009) from seed trays located on transect lines at fixed elevations along an elevation gradient (1020 to 1370 m). We counted the number of seeds in the catch of each tray, for each year, and determined the number of viable seeds. Climate variables were obtained from a nearby (<2 km) climate station (914-m elevation). Variables were the sum or mean of daily measurements, using periods within each year known to correlate with subsequent interannual variation in seed production. To determine trends in mean seed production, at each elevation, and climate variables, we used generalized least squares (GLS) regression. We demonstrate a trend of increasing total and viable seed production, particularly at higher elevations, which emerged from marked interannual variation. Significant changes in four seasonal climate variables had GLS regression coefficients consistent with predictions of increased seed production. These variables subsumed the effect of year in GLS regressions with a greater influence on seed production with increasing elevation. Regression models enforce a view that the sequence of climate variables was additive in their influence on seed production throughout a reproductive cycle spanning more than 2 years and including three summers. Models with the most support always included summer precipitation as the earliest variable in the sequence followed by summer maximum daily temperatures. We interpret this as reflecting precipitation driven increases in soil nutrient availability enhancing seed production at higher elevations rather than the direct effects of climate, stand development or rising atmospheric CO2 partial pressures. Greater sensitivity of tree seeding at higher elevations to changes in climate reveals how ecosystem responses to climate change will be spatially variable.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Intraspecific relationships among wood density, leaf structural traits and environment in four co-occurring species of Nothofagus in New Zealand.
- Author
-
Richardson SJ, Allen RB, Buxton RP, Easdale TA, Hurst JM, Morse CW, Smissen RD, and Peltzer DA
- Subjects
- Geography, New Zealand, Specific Gravity, Environment, Plant Leaves, Quantitative Trait, Heritable, Trees chemistry, Wood chemistry
- Abstract
Plant functional traits capture important variation in plant strategy and function. Recent literature has revealed that within-species variation in traits is greater than previously supposed. However, we still have a poor understanding of how intraspecific variation is coordinated among different traits, and how it is driven by environment. We quantified intraspecific variation in wood density and five leaf traits underpinning the leaf economics spectrum (leaf dry matter content, leaf mass per unit area, size, thickness and density) within and among four widespread Nothofagus tree species in southern New Zealand. We tested whether intraspecific relationships between wood density and leaf traits followed widely reported interspecific relationships, and whether variation in these traits was coordinated through shared responses to environmental factors. Sample sites varied widely in environmental variables, including soil fertility (25-900 mg kg(-1) total P), precipitation (668-4875 mm yr(-1)), temperature (5.2-12.4 °C mean annual temperature) and latitude (41-46 °S). Leaf traits were strongly correlated with one another within species, but not with wood density. There was some evidence for a positive relationship between wood density and leaf tissue density and dry matter content, but no evidence that leaf mass or leaf size were correlated with wood density; this highlights that leaf mass per unit area cannot be used as a surrogate for component leaf traits such as tissue density. Trait variation was predicted by environmental factors, but not consistently among different traits; e.g., only leaf thickness and leaf density responded to the same environmental cues as wood density. We conclude that although intraspecific variation in wood density and leaf traits is strongly driven by environmental factors, these responses are not strongly coordinated among functional traits even across co-occurring, closely-related plant species.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Do assembly history effects attenuate from species to ecosystem properties? A field test with wood-inhabiting fungi.
- Author
-
Dickie IA, Fukami T, Wilkie JP, Allen RB, and Buchanan PK
- Subjects
- Biodiversity, Models, Biological, New Zealand, Species Specificity, Ecosystem, Fagaceae microbiology, Fungi physiology, Trees microbiology, Wood microbiology
- Abstract
Assembly history, or the order of species arrival, can have wide-ranging effects on species, communities and ecosystems. However, it remains unclear whether assembly history primarily affects individual species, with effects attenuating at the level of communities and ecosystems or, alternatively, has consistent effect sizes across increasing levels of ecological organisation. We address this question using a field-based manipulation of assembly history of wood-inhabiting fungi. The largest effect sizes were observed for the frequency of some individual species, and mean effect sizes were lower for community metrics of fungi immigrating from the regional species pool. There was little evidence, however, of attenuation in effect sizes at the ecosystem level (carbon, nitrogen, decomposition) in comparison to the species or community level. These results indicate that assembly history can have strong effects on ecosystem properties even under natural levels of environmental variability., (© 2011 Blackwell Publishing Ltd/CNRS.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Disturbance affects short-term facilitation, but not long-term saturation, of exotic plant invasion in New Zealand forest.
- Author
-
Spence LA, Ross JV, Wiser SK, Allen RB, and Coomes DA
- Subjects
- Markov Chains, Models, Biological, New Zealand, Population Dynamics, Asteraceae physiology, Introduced Species, Trees
- Abstract
We investigate the spread of an exotic herb, Hieracium lepidulum, into a New Zealand Nothofagus forest with the aim of understanding how stand-development of tree populations, propagule pressure and invader persistence, affect invasion across the landscape and within communities. Using data repeatedly collected over 35 years, from 250 locations, we parametrize continuous-time Markov chain models and use these models to examine future projections of the invasion under a range of hypothetical scenarios. We found that the probability of invasion into a stand was relatively high following canopy disturbance and that local abundance of Hieracium was promoted by minor disturbances. However, model predictions extrapolated 45 years into the future show that neither the rate of landscape-level invasion, nor local population growth of Hieracium, was affected much by changing the frequency of canopy disturbance events. Instead, invasion levels were strongly affected by the ability of Hieracium to persist in the understorey following forest canopy closure, and by propagule supply from streams, forest edges and plants already established within the stand. Our results show that disturbance frequency has surprisingly little influence on the long-term trajectory of invasion, while invader persistence strongly determines invasion patterns.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Size-specific tree mortality varies with neighbourhood crowding and disturbance in a Montane Nothofagus forest.
- Author
-
Hurst JM, Allen RB, Coomes DA, and Duncan RP
- Subjects
- New Zealand, Sunlight, Ecosystem, Trees growth & development
- Abstract
Tree mortality is a fundamental process governing forest dynamics, but understanding tree mortality patterns is challenging because large, long-term datasets are required. Describing size-specific mortality patterns can be especially difficult, due to few trees in larger size classes. We used permanent plot data from Nothofagus solandri var. cliffortioides (mountain beech) forest on the eastern slopes of the Southern Alps, New Zealand, where the fates of trees on 250 plots of 0.04 ha were followed, to examine: (1) patterns of size-specific mortality over three consecutive periods spanning 30 years, each characterised by different disturbance, and (2) the strength and direction of neighbourhood crowding effects on size-specific mortality rates. We found that the size-specific mortality function was U-shaped over the 30-year period as well as within two shorter periods characterised by small-scale pinhole beetle and windthrow disturbance. During a third period, characterised by earthquake disturbance, tree mortality was less size dependent. Small trees (<20 cm in diameter) were more likely to die, in all three periods, if surrounded by a high basal area of larger neighbours, suggesting that size-asymmetric competition for light was a major cause of mortality. In contrast, large trees (≥ 20 cm in diameter) were more likely to die in the first period if they had few neighbours, indicating that positive crowding effects were sometimes important for survival of large trees. Overall our results suggest that temporal variability in size-specific mortality patterns, and positive interactions between large trees, may sometimes need to be incorporated into models of forest dynamics.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Marie Rozette and her world: class, ethnicity, gender, and race in late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century Mauritius.
- Author
-
Allen RB
- Subjects
- History, 18th Century, History, 19th Century, Humans, Mauritius ethnology, Population Groups education, Population Groups ethnology, Population Groups history, Population Groups legislation & jurisprudence, Population Groups psychology, Socioeconomic Factors history, Anthropology, Cultural education, Anthropology, Cultural history, Ethnicity education, Ethnicity ethnology, Ethnicity history, Ethnicity legislation & jurisprudence, Ethnicity psychology, Gender Identity, Race Relations history, Race Relations legislation & jurisprudence, Race Relations psychology, Social Class history, Women education, Women history, Women psychology
- Abstract
In 1790, Marie Rozette, a freedwoman of Indian origin on Mauritius, executed a series of notarial acts which revealed that she possessed a small fortune in cash assets as well as slaves and substantial landed property in one of the island’s rural districts. The life of this former slave between 1776, when she first appears in the archival record, and her death in 1804 provides a vantage point from which to gain a subaltern perspective on aspects of Mascarene social and economic history, as well as developments in the wider Indian Ocean world during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Marie Rozette’s life history challenges the notion that free persons of color in Mauritius were little more than an “unappropriated” people, and invites us to consider how supposedly marginalized individuals were able to cross various socio-economic and cultural boundaries. More specifically, her life affords an opportunity to consider the ways in which class, ethnicity, and gender, as well as race, interacted to create a distinctive Creole society in Mauritius, the nature and dynamics of which bear directly on our knowledge and understanding of the free colored experience elsewhere in the European colonial slave plantation world.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Assembly history dictates ecosystem functioning: evidence from wood decomposer communities.
- Author
-
Fukami T, Dickie IA, Paula Wilkie J, Paulus BC, Park D, Roberts A, Buchanan PK, and Allen RB
- Subjects
- Biodiversity, New Zealand, Trees metabolism, Wood metabolism, Carbon metabolism, Ecosystem, Fungi metabolism, Models, Biological, Trees microbiology, Wood microbiology
- Abstract
Community assembly history is increasingly recognized as a fundamental determinant of community structure. However, little is known as to how assembly history may affect ecosystem functioning via its effect on community structure. Using wood-decaying fungi as a model system, we provide experimental evidence that large differences in ecosystem functioning can be caused by small differences in species immigration history during community assembly. Direct manipulation of early immigration history resulted in three-fold differences in fungal species richness and composition and, as a consequence, differences of the same magnitude in the rate of decomposition and carbon release from wood. These effects - which were attributable to the history-dependent outcome of competitive and facilitative interactions - were significant across a range of nitrogen availabilities observed in natural forests. Our results highlight the importance of considering assembly history in explaining ecosystem functioning.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Marine foraging birds as bioindicators of mercury in the Gulf of Maine.
- Author
-
Goodale MW, Evers DC, Mierzykowski SE, Bond AL, Burgess NM, Otorowski CI, Welch LJ, Hall CS, Ellis JC, Allen RB, Diamond AW, Kress SW, and Taylor RJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Maine, Oceans and Seas, Environmental Monitoring methods, Environmental Pollution, Mercury analysis, Raptors, Water Pollutants, Chemical analysis
- Abstract
From existing databases, we compiled and evaluated 604 total mercury (Hg) levels in the eggs and blood of 17 species of marine foraging birds from 35 Gulf of Maine islands to provide baseline data and to determine the best tissue, age class, and species for future biomonitoring. While mean Hg levels in most species did not exceed adverse effects thresholds, levels in some individual eggs did; for all species arithmetic mean egg Hg levels ranged from 0.04 to 0.62 (microg/g, wet weight). Piscivorous birds had higher Hg levels than invertivores. Leach's storm-petrel (Oceanodroma leucorhoa), razorbill (Alca torda), and black guillemot (Cepphus grylle) adult blood and egg Hg levels were higher than other species. Our results indicate that adult blood is preferable to chick blood for detecting long-term temporal trends because adult levels are higher and not confounded by metabolic effects. However, since we found that eggs and adult blood are comparable indicators of methylmercury bioavailability, we determined that eggs are the preferred tissue for long-term Hg monitoring because the relative ease in collecting eggs ensures consistent and robust datasets. We suggest specific sampling methods, and based on our results demonstrate that common eider (Somateria mollissima), Leach's storm-petrel, double-crested cormorant, and black guillemot are the most effective bioindicators of Hg of the Gulf of Maine.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Aboveground and belowground effects of single-tree removals in New Zealand rain forest.
- Author
-
Wardle DA, Wiser SK, Allen RB, Doherty JE, Bonner KI, and Williamson WM
- Subjects
- Climate, Ecosystem, New Zealand, Soil Microbiology, Tracheophyta physiology, Trees physiology
- Abstract
There has been considerable recent interest in how human-induced species loss affects community and ecosystem properties. These effects are particularly apparent when a commercially valuable species is harvested from an ecosystem, such as occurs through single-tree harvesting or selective logging of desired timber species in natural forests. In New Zealand mixed-species rain forests, single-tree harvesting of the emergent gymnosperm Dacrydium cupressinum, or rimu, has been widespread. This harvesting has been contentious in part because of possible ecological impacts of Dacrydium removal on the remainder of the forest, but many of these effects remain unexplored. We identified an area where an unintended 40-year "removal experiment" had been set up that involved selective extraction of individual Dacrydium trees. We measured aboveground and belowground variables at set distances from both individual live trees and stumps of trees harvested 40 years ago. Live trees had effects both above and below ground by affecting diversity and cover of several components of the vegetation (usually negatively), promoting soil C sequestration, enhancing ratios of soil C:P and N:P, and affecting community structure of soil microflora. These effects extended to 8 m from the tree base and were likely caused by poor-quality litter and humus produced by the trees. Measurements for the stumps revealed strong legacy effects of prior presence of trees on some properties (e.g., cover by understory herbs and ferns, soil C sequestration, soil C:P and N:P ratios), but not others (e.g., soil fungal biomass, soil N concentration). These results suggest that the legacy of prior presence of Dacrydium may remain for several decades or centuries, and certainly well over 40 years. They also demonstrate that, while large Dacrydium individuals (and their removal) may have important effects in their immediate proximity, within a forest, these effects should only be important in localized patches containing high densities of large trees. Finally, this study emphasizes that deliberate extraction of a particular tree species from a forest can exert influences both above and below ground if the removed species has a different functional role than that of the other plant species present.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Day-3 embryo morphology predicts euploidy among older subjects.
- Author
-
Moayeri SE, Allen RB, Brewster WR, Kim MH, Porto M, and Werlin LB
- Subjects
- Adult, Embryo Culture Techniques, Female, Humans, Predictive Value of Tests, Pregnancy, Retrospective Studies, Time Factors, Aneuploidy, Blastocyst pathology, Embryo Transfer, Fertilization in Vitro, Genetic Testing, In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence, Maternal Age, Preimplantation Diagnosis methods
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate whether day-3 embryo morphology predicts euploidy., Design: Retrospective., Setting: Private IVF center., Patient(s): Subjects (n = 144) undergoing in vitro fertilization and preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD)., Intervention(s): Translate day-3 embryo characteristics into a standardized score., Main Outcome Measure(s): Day-3 embryo morphology score and PGD fluorescence in situ hybridization results for chromosomes: 13, 15, 16, 17, 18, 21, 22, X, and Y., Result(s): Of 1,043 biopsied blastomeres, 67% (n = 696) were chromosomally abnormal. Women with advanced maternal age (AMA) were 1.3 times more likely to have chromosomal errors (95% CI 1.1-1.4) than younger subjects (<38 years old). Morphology predicted PGD results in the AMA group (n = 553), but not in younger women. Fragmentation predicted euploidy in both the younger and the AMA group, but cell number did not., Conclusion(s): Day-3 embryo morphology selects for euploidy among AMA subjects but not among younger women who may have other factors responsible for embryo dysmorphism. However, cellular fragmentation is a sensitive proxy for selecting chromosomally normal embryos in both age groups. It is unclear that PGD-aneuploidy screening is a better tool for selecting which embryos to transfer than the standard approach of using day-3 embryo features, particularly among older women, a group for whom this technology is targeted.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Rapid development of phosphorus limitation in temperate rainforest along the Franz Josef soil chronosequence.
- Author
-
Richardson SJ, Peltzer DA, Allen RB, McGlone MS, and Parfitt RL
- Subjects
- Ecology, Plant Development, Population Dynamics, Nitrogen metabolism, Phosphorus metabolism, Soil, Tracheophyta growth & development, Trees growth & development
- Abstract
The aim of this study was to examine how shifts in soil nutrient availability along a soil chronosequence affected temperate rainforest vegetation. Soil nutrient availability, woody plant diversity, composition and structure, and woody species leaf and litter nutrient concentrations were quantified along the sequence through ecosystem progression and retrogression. In this super-wet, high leaching environment, the chronosequence exhibited rapid soil development and decline within 120000 years. There were strong gradients of soil pH, N, P and C, and these had a profound effect on vegetation. N:P(leaf) increased along the chronosequence as vegetation shifted from being N- to P- limited. However, high N:P(leaf) ratios, which indicate P-limitation, were obtained on soils with both high and low soil P availability. This was because the high N-inputs from an N-fixing shrub caused vegetation to be P-limited in spite of high soil P availability. Woody species nutrient resorption increased with site age, as availability of N and P declined. Soil P declined 8-fold along the sequence and P resorption proficiency decreased from 0.07 to 0.01%, correspondingly. N resorption proficiency decreased from 1.54 to 0.26%, corresponding to shifts in mineralisable N. Woody plant species richness, vegetation cover and tree height increased through ecosystem progression and then declined. During retrogression, the forest became shorter, more open and less diverse, and there were compositional shifts towards stress-tolerant species. Conifers (of the Podocarpaceae) were the only group to increase in richness along the sequence. Conifers maintained a lower N:P(leaf) than other groups, suggesting superior acquisition of P on poor soils. In conclusion, there was evidence that P limitation and retrogressive forests developed on old soils, but N limitation on very young soils was not apparent because of inputs from an abundant N-fixing shrub.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Aortic root replacement with the pulmonary autograft in children with complex left heart obstruction.
- Author
-
Starnes VA, Luciani GB, Wells WJ, Allen RB, and Lewis AB
- Subjects
- Aorta, Thoracic abnormalities, Aortic Valve diagnostic imaging, Aortic Valve Insufficiency diagnostic imaging, Aortic Valve Insufficiency etiology, Aortic Valve Stenosis surgery, Echocardiography, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Heart Block etiology, Heart Septal Defects, Ventricular surgery, Heart Valve Prosthesis adverse effects, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Length of Stay, Male, Mitral Valve Insufficiency surgery, Mitral Valve Stenosis surgery, Pericardial Effusion etiology, Postoperative Complications, Reoperation, Respiratory Paralysis etiology, Stroke Volume, Survival Rate, Transplantation, Autologous, Ventricular Outflow Obstruction diagnostic imaging, Ventricular Outflow Obstruction physiopathology, Aortic Valve surgery, Pulmonary Valve transplantation, Ventricular Outflow Obstruction surgery
- Abstract
Background: The optimal surgical treatment of complex (multiple level or recurrent) left ventricular outflow tract obstruction (LVOTO) in infancy is controversial. Staged procedures expose the children to the need for reoperation, and currently available techniques of aortoventriculoplasty are associated with the morbidities of biological and mechanical prostheses., Methods: Between July 1992 and January 1996, we have performed 24 aortic root replacements with the pulmonary autograft in pediatric patients (< 18 years). Of this group, 8 were infants and children with complex LVOTO aged 9 days to 22 months (mean, 8.6 +/- 8 months) and weighing 3.3 to 10.2 kg (mean, 6.3 +/- 2.6 kg). The diagnoses were interrupted aortic arch/ventricular septal defect/subaortic stenosis in 3, recurrent aortic stenosis in 2, aortic stenosis and subaortic stenosis in 1, and aortic stenosis/subaortic stenosis/mitral stenosis/regurgitation in 2. All patients had undergone one to three previous operative procedures (mean, 1.5 +/- 0.8 procedures/patient). Preoperative echocardiographic peak LVOT gradient was 71.7 +/- 25 mm Hg (range, 40 to 110 mm Hg) and aortic annulus size was 7.2 +/- 2.3 mm (range, 4 to 10.6 mm). The surgical technique included replacement of the aortic root with the pulmonary autograft combined with incision of the conal septum to relieve subaortic stenosis or accommodate for size discrepancy between the aortic and pulmonary autograft root and a pulmonary homograft placed in the right ventricular outflow tract., Results: There were no perioperative or late deaths at follow-up (range, 2 to 25 months; mean, 13.5 +/- 8 months). Mean hospital stay was 15 +/- 17 days (range, 4 to 53 days). Three children had the following complications: diaphragmatic paresis (1), delayed pericardial effusion (1), and atrioventricular block requiring a pacemaker (1). In follow-up, echocardiographic findings showed absent aortic regurgitation in 3 and trivial aortic regurgitation in 5, and no significant LVOTO (mean peak gradient, 6.2 +/- 7.6 mm Hg; range, 0 to 16 mm Hg). Pulmonary homograft regurgitation was absent in 5, trivial in 2, and moderate in 1. Peak right ventricular outflow tract gradient by echocardiogram was trivial in 7, and a significant gradient of 55 mm Hg has developed in 1 infant. There were no infective or embolic complications during follow-up., Conclusions: Our experience shows that aortic root replacement with the pulmonary autograft can be performed in children with excellent clinical results. The technique of root replacement combined with ventriculoplasty allows definitive and simultaneous relief of complex and multiple-level obstructive lesions. Considering the growth potential of the pulmonary autograft, this should be regarded as the optimal treatment modality in infants with complex LVOTO:
- Published
- 1996
30. Single-lung ventilation in a patient with a freshly placed percutaneous tracheostomy.
- Author
-
Veit AM and Allen RB
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Respiration, Artificial methods, Tracheostomy methods
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Learning of stable states in stochastic asymmetric networks.
- Author
-
Allen RB and Alspector J
- Abstract
Boltzmann-based models with asymmetric connections are investigated. Although they are initially unstable, these networks spontaneously self-stabilize as a result of learning. Moreover, pairs of weights symmetrize during learning; however, the symmetry is not enough to account for the observed stability. To characterize the system it is useful to consider how its entropy is affected by learning and the entropy of the information stream. The stability of an asymmetric network is confirmed with an electronic model.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Rapid decreases in phosphatidylinositol in isolated luteal plasma membranes after stimulation by luteinizing hormone.
- Author
-
Allen RB, Su HC, Snitzer J, and Dimino MJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Bucladesine pharmacology, Cell Membrane drug effects, Cell Membrane metabolism, Corpus Luteum drug effects, Female, In Vitro Techniques, Swine, Corpus Luteum metabolism, Luteinizing Hormone pharmacology, Phosphatidylinositols metabolism
- Abstract
Phospholipid concentrations were determined in plasma membrane preparations from porcine corpora lutea after incubation for 15 to 120 s without or with 0.5 microgram/ml luteinizing hormone (LH) or 2 microM dibutyryl cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (dbcAMP). Treatment with LH caused a dramatic loss of 9 nmol in plasma membrane phosphatidylinositol (PI)/mg protein after 15 s of incubation, but no significant changes in other measurable phospholipids. Also, phospholipid concentrations were unchanged in untreated and dbcAMP-treated plasma membranes. The nature of the LH-induced decrease in PI was studied by incubating plasma membrane preparations for 15 s with [gamma 32P] adenosine 3',5'-triphosphate (ATP). 32P was incorporated only into three phospholipids: phosphatidic acid, phosphatidylinositol 4'-phosphate (PIP), and phosphatidylinositol 4',5'-bisphosphate (PIP2). Although LH generated small but significant increases in labeling of PIP and PIP2, less than 0.5 nmol of total phospholipids/mg protein were radiolabeled in 15 s. Phosphatidylinositol kinase activity, the enzyme that converts PI into PIP, was not affected by LH or dbcAMP treatment. However, incubation of luteal plasma membranes for 15 s with LH resulted in an increase of approximately 2 nmol 1,2-diacylglycerol/mg protein more than that observed in untreated or dbcAMP-treated plasma membranes. In summary, these experiments suggest that LH may stimulate hydrolysis of PI (and possibly PIP and PIP2) in isolated luteal plasma membranes.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Medical education--factor in socioeconomic development. The First and Second World Conferences on Medical Education.
- Author
-
Allen RB
- Subjects
- Health, Health Occupations, Humans, Congresses as Topic, Education, Medical, Organization and Administration, Schools, Medical
- Published
- 1968
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. The health sciences and nursing education.
- Author
-
ALLEN RB
- Subjects
- Humans, Education, Nursing
- Published
- 1947
35. The doctrine of mutual aid.
- Author
-
ALLEN RB
- Subjects
- Humans, Research
- Published
- 1946
36. Population growth: crash program needed.
- Author
-
Allen RB
- Subjects
- Academies and Institutes, Culture, Family Planning Services, International Cooperation, North America, South America, Population Control
- Published
- 1968
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Medicine--a lifelong study.
- Author
-
ALLEN RB
- Subjects
- Humans, Medicine, Philosophy, Philosophy, Medical
- Published
- 1959
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.