1,074 results on '"Robert J. Thomas"'
Search Results
1052. The Effect of Temperature on the Survival of Infective Larvae of Nematodes
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Robert J. Thomas and Brian Boag
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Infective larvae ,Zoology ,Parasitology ,Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Published
- 1985
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1053. Manufacturing Green Gold: The Conditions and Social Consequences of Lettuce Harvest Mechanization
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Wayne D. Rasmussen, Robert J. Thomas, William H. Friedland, and Amy E. Barton
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History ,Engineering ,business.industry ,Social consequence ,business ,Engineering (miscellaneous) ,Agricultural economics ,Mechanization - Published
- 1980
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1054. Citizenship, Gender, and Work: Social Organization of Industrial Agriculture
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Jess Gilbert and Robert J. Thomas
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Sociology and Political Science - Published
- 1986
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1055. Work and Elasticity
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Paul Thompson and Robert J. Thomas
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Microeconomics ,Sociology and Political Science ,Economics ,Elasticity (economics) - Published
- 1985
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1056. The crystal structure of (±)-dehydroaltenusin
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Robert J. Thomas, David J. Williams, and Donald Rogers
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chemistry.chemical_compound ,Crystallography ,chemistry ,Dehydroaltenusin ,Crystal structure - Abstract
The crystal structure of (±)-dehydroaltenusin, C15H12O6, has been determined by direct X-ray crystallographic analysis.
- Published
- 1971
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1057. Selective chromic acid oxidation of alternariol trimethyl ether; X-ray crystal structure of the major product
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Robert J. Thomas, David C. Povey, and Mark F. C. Ladd
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chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Product (mathematics) ,Alternariol ,X-ray ,Chromic acid ,Molecular Medicine ,Organic chemistry ,Ether ,Crystal structure ,Medicinal chemistry ,Derivative (chemistry) - Abstract
The structure (II) of a chromic acid oxidation product of the diphenyl derivative alternariol trimethyl ether (Ia) has been elucidated by X-ray crystallographic analysis; a possible intermediate (III) has also been characterised as a product of this reaction.
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- 1973
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1058. The biosynthesis of the plant phenalenone haemocorin
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Robert J. Thomas
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_compound ,Biochemistry ,Biosynthesis ,chemistry ,Haemocorin ,Phenylalanine ,Tyrosine - Abstract
The plant phenalenone, haemocorin, is shown to be derived from phenylalanine and tyrosine, in contrast to the known fungal phenalenones, which are biosynthesised via the acetate–polymalonate pathway.
- Published
- 1971
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1059. Molecular Dynamics Simulations of Laser-Induced and pH-Induced Unfolding in β-Lactoglobulin at Different Hydration Levels
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Lorenzo Brancaleon, Aaron F. Hoffman, Robert J. Thomas, and James E. Parker
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Crystallography ,Molecular dynamics ,Circular dichroism ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Electron transfer ,chemistry ,Docking (molecular) ,Globular protein ,Biophysics ,Molecule ,Electron ,Porphyrin - Abstract
Computational molecular dynamics simulations were used to estimate the unfolding effects of a single electron positioned appropriately in a globular protein of interest, β-lactoglobulin (BLG). Two sets of unfolding simulations were conducted: movement of the EF-loop in BLG, which is involved in the Tanford transition and a photo-induced electron transfer event between a non-covalently bound, dye molecule, meso-tetrakis p-sulfanatophenyl porphyrin, (TSPP) and BLG.The first simulations solvated BLG at several hydration levels for two different crystal structures: 3BLG at pH 7 (closed loop) and 2BLG at pH 9 (open loop), which became the reference initial and final structures to determine the accuracy of our simulations. Movement of the EF-loop was induced by placing an excess charge on the carboxyl group of glutamic acid residue GLU 89. After 10 ns, favorable structures were submitted to a residue based, coarse-graining algorithm to enable simulating 0.1 ms of the loop motion. The goal was three-fold: to allow the crystallized form to relax in an aqueous environment, to determine the minimal number of explicit water molecules that are sufficient to retain the thermodynamics of the system, and to verify the charge placement algorithm.For the second phase, the location of the electron transfer event was determined by the most probable binding site of the ligand that correlated with resonance Raman spectra and docking calculations of the TSPP-BLG complex. Residues within 3 A were examined for alignment with the ligand and electron affinity. Candidate sites became the origin of an excess electron on the protein, and a separate computation was conducted with coarse-graining methods applied to favorable trajectories as described above. The unfolding determined by these simulations was compared to previously collected circular dichroism data of TSPP-BLG complexes.
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1060. Plasma membrane nanoporation as a possible mechanism behind infrared excitation of cells.
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Hope T Beier, Gleb P Tolstykh, Joshua D Musick, Robert J Thomas, and Bennett L Ibey
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- 2014
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1061. LOCATION AND SUCCESS OF LESSER PRAIRIE-CHICKEN NESTS IN RELATION TO VEGETATION AND HUMAN DISTURBANCE
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PITMAN, HAGEN, ROBEL, LOUGHIN, APPLEGATE, JAMES C., CHRISTIAN A., ROBERT J., THOMAS M., ROGER D., PITMAN and Kelly
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- 2005
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1062. Mathematical model that describes the transition from thermal to photochemical damage in retinal pigment epithelial cell culture.
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Clifton D. Clark, Michael L. Denton, and Robert J. Thomas
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RETINAL (Visual pigment) ,MATHEMATICAL models ,MEDICAL lasers ,EPITHELIAL cells ,CELL culture ,PHOTOCHEMISTRY - Abstract
We propose a rate process model for describing photochemical damage to retinal cells by short wavelength laser exposures. The rate equation for photochemical damage contains a positive rate that is temperature independent, and a negative (quenching) rate that is temperature dependent. Using the traditional Arrhenius integral to describe thermal damage, we derive damage threshold doses for both thermal and photochemical mechanisms, and show that the model accounts for the sharp transition from thermal to photochemical damage thresholds that have recently been observed in an in-vitroretinal model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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1063. Infrared skin damage thresholds from 1940-nm continuous-wave laser exposures.
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Jeffrey W. Oliver, David J. Stolarski, Gary D. Noojin, Harvey M. Hodnett, Corey A. Harbert, Kurt J. Schuster, Michael F. Foltz, Semih S. Kumru, Clarence P. Cain, C. J. Finkeldei, Gavin D. Buffington, Isaac D. Noojin, and Robert J. Thomas
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INFRARED radiation in medicine ,SKIN diseases ,ELECTROMAGNETIC waves ,LASER beams ,THULIUM ,OPTICAL fibers ,NUMERICAL analysis - Abstract
A series of experiments are conducted in vivousing Yucatan mini-pigs (Sus scrofa domestica) to determine thermal damage thresholds to the skin from 1940-nm continuous-wave thulium fiber laser irradiation. Experiments employ exposure durations from 10 ms to 10 s and beam diameters of approximately 4.8 to 18 mm. Thermal imagery data provide a time-dependent surface temperature response from the laser. A damage endpoint of minimally visible effect is employed to determine threshold for damage at 1 and 24 h postexposure. Predicted thermal response and damage thresholds are compared with a numerical model of optical-thermal interaction. Results are compared with current exposure limits for laser safety. It is concluded that exposure limits should be based on data representative of large-beam exposures, where effects of radial diffusion are minimized for longer-duration damage thresholds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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1064. In-vitroretinal model reveals a sharp transition between laser damage mechanisms.
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Michael L. Denton, C. D. Clark, Michael S. Foltz, Kurt J. Schuster, Gary D. Noojin, Larry E. Estlack, and Robert J. Thomas
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MEDICAL lasers ,RETINAL injuries ,CELL death ,PHOTOTHERMAL spectroscopy ,PHOTOCHEMISTRY ,RADIATION exposure - Abstract
We use laser damage thresholds in an in-vitroretinal model, and computational simulations to examine the laser exposure durations at which damage transitions from photothermal to photochemical at 413 nm. Our results indicate a dramatic shift in 1-hdamage thresholds between exposure durations of 60 and 100 s. The trend in our in-vitroresults is similar to a trend found in a recent study where retinal lesions were assessed 1-hpost laser exposure in the rhesus eye Our data suggest that nonthermal mechanisms did not significantly contribute to cell death, even for exposures of 60 s. Knowledge of the transition point, and lack of concurrent thermal and nonthermal damage processes, are significant for those wishing to devise a comprehensive computational damage model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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1065. Thermal lensing in ocular media exposed to continuous-wave near-infrared radiation: the 1150–1350-nm region.
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Rebecca L. Vincelette, Ashley J. Welch, Robert J. Thomas, Benjamin A. Rockwell, and David J. Lund
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INFRARED radiation ,ELECTROMAGNETIC waves ,RETINAL degeneration ,EYE diseases ,ANIMAL models in research ,ACTION spectrum - Abstract
Ocular damage threshold data remain sparse in the continuous wave (CW), near-infrared (NIR) radiation region save for the 1300-nm area that has been investigated in the past several decades. The 1300-nm ocular damage data have yielded unusual characteristics where CW retinal damage was observed in rabbit models, but never in nonhuman primate models. This paper reviews the existing 1300-nm ocular damage threshold data in terms of the fundamental criteria of an action spectrum to assist in explaining laser-tissue effects from near-infrared radiation in the eye. Reviewing the action spectrum criteria and existing NIR retinal lesion data lend evidence toward the significant presence of thermal lensing in ocular media affecting damage, a relatively unexplored mechanism of laser-tissue interaction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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1066. Deactivation of dietary wariness through experience of novel food.
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Nicola M. Marples, Micheal Quinlan, Robert J. Thomas, and David J. Kelly
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CHICKENS ,CONSERVATISM ,POLITICAL science ,POULTRY hatcheries - Abstract
When a forager encounters an unfamiliar type of food, it must decide whether to eat it and risk being poisoned or avoid eating it and risk forfeiting a potentially valuable resource. Birds typically respond to such situations with âdietary warinessâ; they show a transient aversion to approaching new food (neophobia), and many individuals also show a much longer lasting reluctance to consume the new food (dietary conservatism), even once neophobia has waned. Very little is known about how these processes, together termed âwariness,â are controlled. We therefore present a series of experiments investigating how wariness of novel foods in domestic chicks, Gallus gallus domesticus, can be deactivated and reactivated by different experiences of colored foods, varying in their degree of novelty and palatability. We found that prior experience of a single novel color of palatable chick crumbs was sufficient to deactivate both neophobia and dietary conservatism of any other novel color of crumbs tested. Relatively little prior experience of a novel training food was needed to deactivate neophobia, after which the birds would peck at any other novel food. In contrast, much more extensive experience of eating a novel training food was needed before the birds would incorporate other novel foods into their diet. Chicks needed direct physical contact with the training food before they overcame their wariness to eat another novel food. However, observational learning was sufficient to encourage them to peck at the food (overcoming their neophobia). Reinstating wariness was much more easily achieved than its deactivation. We discuss these surprising results in relation to the foraging behavior of wild and domestic birds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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1067. Damage thresholds for cultured retinal pigment epithelial cells exposed to lasers at 532 nm and 458 nm.
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Michael L. Denton, Michael S. Foltz, Kurt J. Schuster, Larry E. Estlack, and Robert J. Thomas
- Subjects
RHODOPSIN ,RETINAL (Visual pigment) ,EPITHELIAL cells ,LIGHT sources - Abstract
The determination of safe exposure levels for lasers has come from damage assessment experiments in live animals, which typically involve correlating visually identifiable damage with laser dosimetry. Studying basic mechanisms of laser damage in animal retinal systems often requires tissue sampling (animal sacrifice), making justification and animal availability problematic. We determined laser damage thresholds in cultured monolayers of a human retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cell line. By varying exposure duration and laser wavelength, we identified conditions leading to damage by presumed photochemical or thermal mechanisms. A comparison with literature values for ocular damage thresholds validates the in vitro model. The in vitro system described will facilitate molecular and cellular approaches for understanding laser-tissue interaction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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1068. Temporal patterns of wildlife roadkill in the UK.
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Sarah Raymond, Amy L W Schwartz, Robert J Thomas, Elizabeth Chadwick, and Sarah E Perkins
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Wildlife-vehicle collisions are one of the main causes of mortality for wild mammals and birds in the UK. Here, using a dataset of 54,000+ records collated by a citizen science roadkill recording scheme between 2014-2019, we analyse and present temporal patterns of wildlife roadkill of the 19 most commonly reported taxa in the UK (84% of all reported roadkill). Most taxa (13 out of 19) showed significant and consistent seasonal variations in road mortality and fitted one of two seasonal patterns; bimodal or unimodal: only three species (red fox Vulpes vulpes, European polecat Mustela putorius and Reeves' muntjac deer Muntiacus reevesi) showed no significant seasonality. Species that increase movement in spring and autumn potentially have bimodal patterns in roadkill due to the increase in mate-searching and juvenile dispersal during these respective time periods (e.g. European badger Meles meles). Unimodal patterns likely represent increased mortality due to a single short pulse in activity associated with breeding (e.g. birds) or foraging (e.g. grey squirrels Sciurus carolinensis in autumn). Importantly, these patterns also indicate periods of increased risk for drivers, potentially posing a greater threat to human welfare. In addition to behaviour-driven annual patterns, abiotic factors (temperature and rainfall) explained some variance in roadkill. Notably, high rainfall was associated with decreased observations of two bird taxa (gulls and Eurasian magpies Pica pica) and European rabbit Oryctolagus cuniculus. By quantifying seasonal patterns in roadkill, we highlight a significant anthropogenic impact on wild species, which is important in relation to conservation, animal welfare, and human safety.
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- 2021
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1069. Urinary Neutrophil Gelatinase-Associated Lipocalin (NGAL) in Patients with Obstructive Sleep Apnea.
- Author
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Manish R Maski, Robert J Thomas, S Ananth Karumanchi, and Samir M Parikh
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BACKGROUND:Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a well-established risk factor for hypertension and cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. More recently, OSA has been implicated as an independent risk factor for chronic kidney disease. Urinary neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL) is a well-accepted early biomarker of subclinical kidney tubular injury, preceding an increase in serum creatinine. The goal of this study was to determine if an association exists between OSA and increased urinary NGAL levels. METHODS:We prospectively enrolled adult patients from the sleep clinic of an academic medical center. Each underwent polysomnography and submitted a urine specimen upon enrollment. We measured NGAL and creatinine levels on all urine samples before participants received treatment with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), and, in a subset of OSA patients, after CPAP therapy. We compared the urinary NGAL/creatinine ratio between untreated participants with and without OSA, and within a subset of 11 OSA patients also after CPAP therapy. RESULTS:A total of 49 subjects were enrolled: 16 controls based on an apnea-hypopnea index (events with at least 4% oxygen desaturation; AHI-4%) 5 events/hour (mean AHI-4% = 43.3 +/- 28.1). OSA patients had a higher mean body-mass index than the control group (36.58 +/- 11.02 kg/m2 vs. 26.81 +/- 6.55 kg/m2, respectively; p = 0.0005) and were more likely to be treated for hypertension (54.5% vs. 6.25% of group members, respectively; p = 0.0014). The groups were otherwise similar in demographics, and there was no difference in the number of diabetic subjects or in the mean serum creatinine concentration (control = 0.86 +/- 0.15 mg/dl, OSA = 0.87 +/- 0.19 mg/dl; p = 0.7956). We found no difference between the urinary NGAL-to-creatinine ratios among untreated OSA patients versus control subjects (median NGAL/creatinine = 6.34 ng/mg vs. 6.41 ng/mg, respectively; p = 0.4148). Furthermore, CPAP therapy did not affect the urinary NGAL-to-creatinine ratio (p = 0.7758 for two-tailed, paired t-test). CONCLUSIONS:In this prospective case-control study comparing patients with severe, hypoxic OSA to control subjects, all with normal serum creatinine, we found no difference between urinary levels of NGAL. Furthermore, CPAP therapy did not change these levels pre- and post-treatment.
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- 2016
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1070. The Effects of Supplementary Food on the Breeding Performance of Eurasian Reed Warblers Acrocephalus scirpaceus; Implications for Climate Change Impacts.
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James O Vafidis, Ian P Vaughan, T Hefin Jones, Richard J Facey, Rob Parry, and Robert J Thomas
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Understanding the mechanisms by which climate variation can drive population changes requires information linking climate, local conditions, trophic resources, behaviour and demography. Climate change alters the seasonal pattern of emergence and abundance of invertebrate populations, which may have important consequences for the breeding performance and population change of insectivorous birds. In this study, we examine the role of food availability in driving behavioural changes in an insectivorous migratory songbird; the Eurasian reed warbler Acrocephalus scirpaceus. We use a feeding experiment to examine the effect of increased food supply on different components of breeding behaviour and first-brood productivity, over three breeding seasons (2012-2014). Reed warblers respond to food-supplementation by advancing their laying date by up to 5.6 days. Incubation periods are shorter in supplemented groups during the warmest mean spring temperatures. Nestling growth rates are increased in nests provisioned by supplemented parents. In addition, nest predation is reduced, possibly because supplemented adults spend more time at the nest and faster nestling growth reduces the period of vulnerability of eggs and nestlings to predators (and brood parasites). The net effect of these changes is to advance the fledging completion date and to increase the overall productivity of the first brood for supplemented birds. European populations of reed warblers are currently increasing; our results suggest that advancing spring phenology, leading to increased food availability early in the breeding season, could account for this change by facilitating higher productivity. Furthermore, the earlier brood completion potentially allows multiple breeding attempts. This study identifies the likely trophic and behavioural mechanisms by which climate-driven changes in invertebrate phenology and abundance may lead to changes in breeding phenology, nest survival and net reproductive performance of insectivorous birds.
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- 2016
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1071. Habitat Use and Body Mass Regulation among Warblers in the Sahel Region during the Non-Breeding Season.
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James O Vafidis, Ian P Vaughan, T Hefin Jones, Richard J Facey, Rob Parry, and Robert J Thomas
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Migratory birds face significant challenges across their annual cycle, including occupying an appropriate non-breeding home range with sufficient foraging resources. This can affect demographic processes such as over-winter survival, migration mortality and subsequent breeding success. In the Sahel region of Africa, where millions of migratory songbirds attempt to survive the winter, some species of insectivorous warblers occupy both wetland and dry-scrubland habitats, whereas other species are wetland or dry-scrubland specialists. In this study we examine evidence for strategic regulation of body reserves and competition-driven habitat selection, by comparing invertebrate prey activity-density, warbler body size and extent of fat and pectoral muscle deposits, in each habitat type during the non-breeding season. Invertebrate activity-density was substantially higher in wetland habitats than in dry-scrubland. Eurasian reed warblers Acrocephalus scirpaceus occupying wetland habitats maintained lower body reserves than conspecifics occupying dry-scrub habitats, consistent with buffering of reserves against starvation in food-poor habitat. A similar, but smaller, difference in body reserves between wet and dry habitat was found among subalpine warblers Sylvia cantillans but not in chiffchaffs Phylloscopus collybita inhabiting dry-scrub and scrub fringing wetlands. Body reserves were relatively low among habitat specialist species; resident African reed warbler A. baeticatus and migratory sedge warbler A. schoenobaenus exclusively occupying wetland habitats, and Western olivaceous warblers Iduna opaca exclusively occupying dry habitats. These results suggest that specialists in preferred habitats and generalists occupying prey-rich habitats can reduce body reserves, whereas generalists occupying prey-poor habitats carry an increased level of body reserves as a strategic buffer against starvation.
- Published
- 2014
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1072. The impact of increased food availability on reproduction in a long-distance migratory songbird: implications for environmental change?
- Author
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Adam M Seward, Colin M Beale, Lucy Gilbert, T Hefin Jones, and Robert J Thomas
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Many populations of migratory songbirds are declining or shifting in distribution. This is likely due to environmental changes that alter factors such as food availability that may have an impact on survival and/or breeding success. We tested the impact of experimentally supplemented food on the breeding success over three years of northern wheatears (Oenanthe oenanthe), a species in decline over much of Europe. The number of offspring fledged over the season was higher for food-supplemented birds than for control birds. The mechanisms for this effect were that food supplementation advanced breeding date, which, together with increased resources, allowed further breeding attempts. While food supplementation did not increase the clutch size, hatching success or number of chicks fledged per breeding attempt, it did increase chick size in one year of the study. The increased breeding success was greater for males than females; males could attempt to rear simultaneous broods with multiple females as well as attempting second broods, whereas females could only increase their breeding effort via second broods. Multiple brooding is rare in the study population, but this study demonstrates the potential for changes in food availability to affect wheatear breeding productivity, primarily via phenotypic flexibility in the number of breeding attempts. Our results have implications for our understanding of how wheatears may respond to natural changes in food availability due to climate changes or changes in habitat management.
- Published
- 2014
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1073. Molecular evidence for gender differences in the migratory behaviour of a small seabird.
- Author
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Renata J Medeiros, R Andrew King, William O C Symondson, Bernard Cadiou, Bernard Zonfrillo, Mark Bolton, Rab Morton, Stephen Howell, Anthony Clinton, Marcial Felgueiras, and Robert J Thomas
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Molecular sexing revealed an unexpectedly strong female bias in the sex ratio of pre-breeding European Storm Petrels (Hydrobates pelagicus), attracted to playback of conspecific calls during their northwards migration past SW Europe. This bias was consistent across seven years, ranging from 80.8% to 89.7% female (mean annual sex ratio ± SD = 85.5% female ±4.1%). The sex ratio did not differ significantly from unity (i.e., 50% female) among (i) Storm Petrel chicks at a breeding colony in NW France, (ii) adults found dead on beaches in Southern Portugal, (iii) breeding birds attending nest burrows in the UK, captured by hand, and (iv) adults captured near a breeding colony in the UK using copies of the same sound recordings as used in Southern Europe, indicating that females are not inherently more strongly attracted to playback calls than males. A morphological discriminant function analysis failed to provide a good separation of the sexes, showing the importance of molecular sexing for this species. We found no sex difference in the seasonal or nocturnal timing of migration past Southern Europe, but there was a significant tendency for birds to be caught in sex-specific aggregations. The preponderance of females captured in Southern Europe suggests that the sexes may differ in migration route or in their colony-prospecting behaviour during migration, at sites far away from their natal colonies. Such differences in migration behaviour between males and females are poorly understood but have implications for the vulnerability of seabirds to pollution and environmental change at sea during the non-breeding season.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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1074. What Machines Can't Do : Politics and Technology in the Industrial Enterprise
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Robert J. Thomas and Robert J. Thomas
- Subjects
- Organizational change--United States--Case studies, Appropriate technology--United States--Case studies, Manufacturing resource planning--United States--Case studies, Technological innovations--Management, Organizational change, Manufacturing industries--Technological innovations--United States--Case studies
- Abstract
Virtually every manufacturing company has plans for an automated'factory of the future.'But Robert J. Thomas argues that smart machines may not hold the key to an industrial renaissance. In this provocative and enlightening book, he takes us inside four successful manufacturing enterprises to reveal the social and political dynamics that are an integral part of new production technology. His interviews with nearly 300 individuals, from top corporate executives to engineers to workers and union representatives, give his study particular credibility and offer surprising insights into the organizational power struggles that determine the form and performance of new technologies.Thomas urges managers not to put blind hopes into smarter machines but to find smarter ways to organize people. As U.S. companies battle for survival in an era of growing global competition, What Machines Can't Do is an invaluable treatise on the ways we organize work. While its call for change is likely to be controversial, it will also attract anyone who wishes to understand the full impact of new technology on jobs, organizations, and the future of the industrial enterprise.
- Published
- 1994
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