37 results on '"Goheen, J."'
Search Results
2. Experimental Removal of Strong and Weak Predators: Mice and Chipmunks Preying on Songbird Nests
- Author
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Schmidt, K. A., Goheen, J. R., Naumann, R., Ostfeld, R. S., Schauber, E. M., and Berkowitz, Alan
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The search behavior of terrestrial mammals
- Author
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Noonan, M. J., (0000-0003-2765-8147) Martinez Garcia, R., Fleming, C. H., Garcia De Figueiredo, B., Ali, A. H., Attias, N., Belant, J. L., Beyer Jr., D. E., Berteaux, D., Bidner, L. R., Boone, R., Boutin, S., Brito, J., Brown, M., Carter, A., Castellanos, A., Castellanos, F. X., Chitwood, C., Darlington, S., Antonio De La Torre, J., Dekker, J., Deperno, C., Droghini, A., Farhadinia, M., Fennessy, J., Fichtel, C., Ford, A., Gill, R., Goheen, J. R., Gustavo R. Oliveira-Santos, L., Hebblewhite, M., Hodges, K. E., Isbell, L. A., Janssen, R., Kappeler, P., Kays, R., Kaczensky, P., Kauffman, M., Lapoint, S., Alan Lashley, M., Leimgruber, P., Little, A., Macdonald, D. W., Masiaine, S., T. McBride Jr., R., Patricia Medici, E., Mertes, K., Moorman, C., Morato, R. G., Mourão, G., Mueller, T., Neilson, E. W., Pastorini, J., Patterson, B. D., Pereira, J., Petroelje, T. R., Piecora, K., John Power, R., Rachlow, J., Ranglack, D. H., Roshier, D., Safford, K., Scott, D. M., Serrouya, R., Songer, M., Songsasen, N., Stabach, J., Stacy-Dawes, J., Swingen, M. B., Thompson, J., Tucker, M. A., Velilla, M., Yarnell, R. W., Young, J., Fagan, W. F., (0000-0003-0575-6408) Calabrese, J., Noonan, M. J., (0000-0003-2765-8147) Martinez Garcia, R., Fleming, C. H., Garcia De Figueiredo, B., Ali, A. H., Attias, N., Belant, J. L., Beyer Jr., D. E., Berteaux, D., Bidner, L. R., Boone, R., Boutin, S., Brito, J., Brown, M., Carter, A., Castellanos, A., Castellanos, F. X., Chitwood, C., Darlington, S., Antonio De La Torre, J., Dekker, J., Deperno, C., Droghini, A., Farhadinia, M., Fennessy, J., Fichtel, C., Ford, A., Gill, R., Goheen, J. R., Gustavo R. Oliveira-Santos, L., Hebblewhite, M., Hodges, K. E., Isbell, L. A., Janssen, R., Kappeler, P., Kays, R., Kaczensky, P., Kauffman, M., Lapoint, S., Alan Lashley, M., Leimgruber, P., Little, A., Macdonald, D. W., Masiaine, S., T. McBride Jr., R., Patricia Medici, E., Mertes, K., Moorman, C., Morato, R. G., Mourão, G., Mueller, T., Neilson, E. W., Pastorini, J., Patterson, B. D., Pereira, J., Petroelje, T. R., Piecora, K., John Power, R., Rachlow, J., Ranglack, D. H., Roshier, D., Safford, K., Scott, D. M., Serrouya, R., Songer, M., Songsasen, N., Stabach, J., Stacy-Dawes, J., Swingen, M. B., Thompson, J., Tucker, M. A., Velilla, M., Yarnell, R. W., Young, J., Fagan, W. F., and (0000-0003-0575-6408) Calabrese, J.
- Abstract
Animals moving through landscapes need to strike a balance between finding sufficient resources to grow and reproduce while minimizing encounters with predators 1,2. Because encounter rates are determined by the average distance over which directed motion persists 1,3–5, this trade-off should be apparent in individuals’ movement. Using GPS data from 1,396 individuals across 62 species of terrestrial mammals, we show how predators maintained directed motion ~7 times longer than for similarly-sized prey, revealing how prey species must trade off search efficiency against predator encounter rates. Individual search strategies were also modulated by resource abundance, with prey species forced to risk higher predator encounter rates when resources were scarce. These findings highlight the interplay between encounter rates and resource availability in shaping broad patterns mammalian movement strategies.
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- 2023
4. Behavioral responses of terrestrial mammals to COVID-19 lockdowns
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Tucker, M., Schipper, A., Adams, T., Attias, N., Avgar, T., Babic, N., Barker, K., Bastille-Rousseau, G., Behr, D., Belant, J., Beyer Jr, D., Blaum, N., Blount, D., Bockmühl, D., Pires Boulhosa, R. L., Brown, M., Buuveibaatar, B., Cagnacci, F., (0000-0003-0575-6408) Calabrese, J., Černe, R., Chamaillé-Jammes, S., Chan, A. N., Chase, M., Chaval, Y., Chenaux-Ibrahim, Y., Cherry, S., Ćirović, D., Çoban, E., Cole, E., Conlee, L., Courtemanch, A., Cozzi, G., Davidson, S., Debloois, D., Dejid, N., Denicola, V., Desbiez, A., Douglas-Hamilton, I., Drake, D., Egan, M., Eikelboom, J., Fagan, W., Farmer, M., Fennessy, J., Finnegan, S., Fleming, C., Fournier, B., Fowler, N., Gantchoff, M., Garnier, A., Gehr, B., Geremia, C., Goheen, J., Hauptfleisch, M., Hebblewhite, M., Heim, M., Hertel, A., Heurich, M., Hewison, M., Hodson, J., Hoffman, N., Hopcraft, G., Huber, D., Isaac, E., Janik, K., Ježek, M., Johansson, Ö., Jordan, N. R., Kaczensky, P., Kamaru, D., Kauffman, M., Kautz, T., Kays, R., Kelly, A., Kindberg, J., Krofel, M., Kusak, J., Lamb, C., Lasharr, T., Leimgruber, P., Leitner, H., Lierz, M., Linnell, J., Lkhagvaja, P., Long, R., López-Bao, J., Loretto, M.-C., Marchand, P., Martin, H., Martinez, L., Mcbride Jr, R., Mclaren, A., Meisingset, E., Melzheimer, J., Merrill, E., Middleton, A., Monteith, K., Moore, S., Moorter, B. V., Morellet, N., Morrison, T., Müller, R., Mysterud, A., Noonan, M., O’Connor, D., Olson, D., Olson, K., Ortega, A., Ossi, F., Panzacchi, M., Patchett, R., Patterson, B., Paula, R. C. D., Payne, J., Peters, W., Petroelje, T., Pitcher, B., Pokorny, B., Poole, K., Potočnik, H., Poulin, M.-P., Pringle, R., Prins, H., Ranc, N., Reljić, S., Robb, B., Röder, R., Rolandsen, C., Rutz, C., Salemgareyev, A., Samelius, G., Sayine-Crawford, H., Schooler, S., Şekercioğlu, Ç., Selva, N., Semenzato, P., Sergiel, A., Sharma, K., Shawler, A., Signer, J., Silovský, V., Silva, J., Simon, R., Smiley, R., Smith, D., Solberg, E., Soto, D., Spiegel, O., Stabach, J., Stacy-Dawes, J., Stahler, D., Stephenson, J., Stewart, C., Strand, O., Sunde, P., Svoboda, N., Swart, J., Thompson, J., Toal, K., Uiseb, K., Vanacker, M., Velilla, M., Verzuh, T., Wachter, B., Wagler, B., Whittington, J., Wikelski, M., Wilmers, C., Wittemyer, G., Young, J., Zięba, F., Zwijacz-Kozica, T., Huijbregts, M., Mueller, T., Tucker, M., Schipper, A., Adams, T., Attias, N., Avgar, T., Babic, N., Barker, K., Bastille-Rousseau, G., Behr, D., Belant, J., Beyer Jr, D., Blaum, N., Blount, D., Bockmühl, D., Pires Boulhosa, R. L., Brown, M., Buuveibaatar, B., Cagnacci, F., (0000-0003-0575-6408) Calabrese, J., Černe, R., Chamaillé-Jammes, S., Chan, A. N., Chase, M., Chaval, Y., Chenaux-Ibrahim, Y., Cherry, S., Ćirović, D., Çoban, E., Cole, E., Conlee, L., Courtemanch, A., Cozzi, G., Davidson, S., Debloois, D., Dejid, N., Denicola, V., Desbiez, A., Douglas-Hamilton, I., Drake, D., Egan, M., Eikelboom, J., Fagan, W., Farmer, M., Fennessy, J., Finnegan, S., Fleming, C., Fournier, B., Fowler, N., Gantchoff, M., Garnier, A., Gehr, B., Geremia, C., Goheen, J., Hauptfleisch, M., Hebblewhite, M., Heim, M., Hertel, A., Heurich, M., Hewison, M., Hodson, J., Hoffman, N., Hopcraft, G., Huber, D., Isaac, E., Janik, K., Ježek, M., Johansson, Ö., Jordan, N. R., Kaczensky, P., Kamaru, D., Kauffman, M., Kautz, T., Kays, R., Kelly, A., Kindberg, J., Krofel, M., Kusak, J., Lamb, C., Lasharr, T., Leimgruber, P., Leitner, H., Lierz, M., Linnell, J., Lkhagvaja, P., Long, R., López-Bao, J., Loretto, M.-C., Marchand, P., Martin, H., Martinez, L., Mcbride Jr, R., Mclaren, A., Meisingset, E., Melzheimer, J., Merrill, E., Middleton, A., Monteith, K., Moore, S., Moorter, B. V., Morellet, N., Morrison, T., Müller, R., Mysterud, A., Noonan, M., O’Connor, D., Olson, D., Olson, K., Ortega, A., Ossi, F., Panzacchi, M., Patchett, R., Patterson, B., Paula, R. C. D., Payne, J., Peters, W., Petroelje, T., Pitcher, B., Pokorny, B., Poole, K., Potočnik, H., Poulin, M.-P., Pringle, R., Prins, H., Ranc, N., Reljić, S., Robb, B., Röder, R., Rolandsen, C., Rutz, C., Salemgareyev, A., Samelius, G., Sayine-Crawford, H., Schooler, S., Şekercioğlu, Ç., Selva, N., Semenzato, P., Sergiel, A., Sharma, K., Shawler, A., Signer, J., Silovský, V., Silva, J., Simon, R., Smiley, R., Smith, D., Solberg, E., Soto, D., Spiegel, O., Stabach, J., Stacy-Dawes, J., Stahler, D., Stephenson, J., Stewart, C., Strand, O., Sunde, P., Svoboda, N., Swart, J., Thompson, J., Toal, K., Uiseb, K., Vanacker, M., Velilla, M., Verzuh, T., Wachter, B., Wagler, B., Whittington, J., Wikelski, M., Wilmers, C., Wittemyer, G., Young, J., Zięba, F., Zwijacz-Kozica, T., Huijbregts, M., and Mueller, T.
- Abstract
COVID-19 lockdowns in early 2020 reduced human mobility, providing an opportunity to disentangle its effects on animals from those of landscape modifications. Using GPS data, we compared movements and road avoidance of 2300 terrestrial mammals (43 species) during the lockdowns to the same period in 2019. Individual responses were variable with no change in average movements or road avoidance behavior, likely due to variable lockdown conditions. However, under strict lockdowns 10-day 95th percentile displacements increased by 73%, suggesting increased landscape permeability. Animals’ 1-hour 95th percentile displacements declined by 12% and animals were 36% closer to roads in areas of high human footprint, indicating reduced avoidance during lockdowns. Overall, lockdowns rapidly altered some spatial behaviors, highlighting variable but substantial impacts of human mobility on wildlife worldwide.
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- 2023
5. Wild herbivores enhance resistance to invasion by exotic cacti in an African savanna
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Wells, H. B. M., Crego, R. D., (0000-0001-5309-7625) Alston, J., Ndungu, S. K., Khasoha, L. M., Reed, C. G., Hassan, A. A., Kurukura, S., Ekadeli, J., Namoni, M., Stewart, P. S., Kimuyu, D. M., Wolf, A. A., Young, T. P., Kartzinel, T. R., Palmer, T. M., Goheen, J. R., Pringle, R. M., Wells, H. B. M., Crego, R. D., (0000-0001-5309-7625) Alston, J., Ndungu, S. K., Khasoha, L. M., Reed, C. G., Hassan, A. A., Kurukura, S., Ekadeli, J., Namoni, M., Stewart, P. S., Kimuyu, D. M., Wolf, A. A., Young, T. P., Kartzinel, T. R., Palmer, T. M., Goheen, J. R., and Pringle, R. M.
- Abstract
Whether wild herbivores confer biotic resistance to invasion by exotic plants remains a key question in ecology. There is evidence that wild herbivores can impede invasion by exotic plants, but it is unclear whether and how this generalises across ecosystems with varying wild herbivore diversity and functional groups of plants, particularly over long-term (decadal) time frames. Using data from three long-term (13- to 26-year) exclosure experiments in central Kenya, we tested the effects of wild herbivores on the density of exotic invasive cacti, Opuntia stricta and O. ficus-indica (collectively, Opuntia), which are among the worst invasive species globally. We also examined relationships between wild herbivore richness and elephant occurrence probability with the probability of O. stricta presence at the landscape level (6150 km2). Opuntia densities were 74% to 99% lower in almost all plots accessible to wild herbivores compared to exclosure plots. Opuntia densities also increased more rapidly across time in plots excluding wild herbivores. These effects were largely driven by megaherbivores (≥1000 kg), particularly elephants. At the landscape level, modelled Opuntia stricta occurrence probability was negatively correlated with estimated species richness of wild herbivores and elephant occurrence probability. On average, O. stricta occurrence probability fell from ~0.56 to ~0.45 as wild herbivore richness increased from 6 to 10 species and fell from ~0.57 to ~0.40 as elephant occurrence probability increased from ~0.41 to ~0.84. These multi-scale results suggest that any facilitative effects of Opuntia by wild herbivores (e.g. seed/vegetative dispersal) are overridden by suppression (e.g. consumption, uprooting, trampling). Synthesis. Our experimental and observational findings that wild herbivores confer resistance to invasion by exotic cacti add to evidence that conserving and restoring native herbivore assemblages (particularly megaherbivores) can increase commun
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- 2023
6. Environmental drivers of body size in North American bats
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(0000-0001-5309-7625) Alston, J., Keinath, D., Willis, C., Lausen, C., O'Keefe, J., Tyburec, J., Broders, H., Moosman, P., Carter, T., Chambers, C., Gillam, E., Geluso, K., Weller, T., Burles, D., Fletcher, Q., Norquay, K., Goheen, J., (0000-0001-5309-7625) Alston, J., Keinath, D., Willis, C., Lausen, C., O'Keefe, J., Tyburec, J., Broders, H., Moosman, P., Carter, T., Chambers, C., Gillam, E., Geluso, K., Weller, T., Burles, D., Fletcher, Q., Norquay, K., and Goheen, J.
- Abstract
1. Bergmann's rule—which posits that larger animals live in colder areas—is thought to influence variation in body size within species across space and time, but evidence for this claim is mixed. 2. We used Bayesian hierarchical models to test four competing hypotheses for spatiotemporal variation in body size within 20 bat species across North America: (1) the heat conservation hypothesis, which posits that increased body size facilitates body heat conservation (and which is the traditional explanation for the mechanism underlying Bergmann's rule); (2) the heat mortality hypothesis, which posits that increased body size increases susceptibility to acute heat stress; (3) the resource availability hypothesis, which posits that increased body size is enabled in areas with more abundant food; and (4) the starvation resistance hypothesis, which posits that increased body size reduces susceptibility to starvation during acute food shortages. 3. Spatial variation in body mass was most consistently (and negatively) correlated with mean annual temperature, supporting the heat conservation hypothesis. Across time, variation in body mass was most consistently (and positively) correlated with net primary productivity, supporting the resource availability hypothesis. 4. Climate change could influence body size in animals through both changes in mean annual temperature and resource availability. Rapid reductions in body size associated with increasing temperatures have occurred in short-lived, fecund species, but such reductions will be obscured by changes in resource availability in longer-lived, less fecund species.
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- 2023
7. Data, code, and metadata for: Environmental drivers of body size in North American bats
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(0000-0001-5309-7625) Alston, J., Keinath, D., Willis, C., Lausen, C., O'Keefe, J., Tyburec, J., Broders, H., Moosman, P., Carter, T., Chambers, C., Gillam, E., Geluso, K., Weller, T., Burles, D., Fletcher, Q., Norquay, K., Goheen, J., (0000-0001-5309-7625) Alston, J., Keinath, D., Willis, C., Lausen, C., O'Keefe, J., Tyburec, J., Broders, H., Moosman, P., Carter, T., Chambers, C., Gillam, E., Geluso, K., Weller, T., Burles, D., Fletcher, Q., Norquay, K., and Goheen, J.
- Abstract
Data, code, and metadata that can be used to reproduce the analyses underlying 'Environmental drivers of body size in North American bats' by Alston et al. 2023 Functional Ecology (Preprint: https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.07.28.454183). Individual data owners are detailed in the data. Data may only be used to reproduce the analyses underlying Alston et al. (2023). Any other use requires the written permission of the individual data owners. For more detailed information, please visit the metadata file.
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- 2023
8. Daily torpor reduces the energetic consequences of habitat selection for a widespread bat
- Author
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(0000-0001-5309-7625) Alston, J., Dillon, M. E., Keinath, D. A., Abernethy, I. M., Goheen, J. R., (0000-0001-5309-7625) Alston, J., Dillon, M. E., Keinath, D. A., Abernethy, I. M., and Goheen, J. R.
- Abstract
Homeothermy requires increased metabolic rates as temperatures decline below the thermoneutral zone, so homeotherms typically select microhabitats within or near their thermoneutral zones during periods of inactivity. However, many mammals and birds are heterotherms that relax internal controls on body temperature when maintaining a high, stable body temperature is energetically costly. Such heterotherms should be less tied to microhabitats near their thermoneutral zones, and because heterotherms spend more time in torpor and expend less energy at colder temperatures, heterotherms may even select microhabitats in which temperatures are well below their thermoneutral zones. We studied how temperature and daily torpor influence selection of diurnal roosts by a heterothermic bat (Myotis thysanodes). We (1) quantified the relationship between ambient temperature and daily duration of torpor, (2) simulated daily energy expenditure over a range of microhabitat (roost) temperatures, and (3) quantified the influence of roost temperature on roost selection. While warm roosts substantially reduced energy expenditure of simulated homeothermic bats, heterothermic bats modulated their use of torpor to maintain a constant level of energy expenditure over the course of a day. Daily torpor expanded the range of energetically economical microhabitats, such that roost selection was independent of roost temperature. Our work adds to a growing literature documenting functions of torpor beyond its historical conceptualization as a last-resort measure to save energy during extended or acute energetic stress.
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- 2022
9. Data, code, and metadata for: Daily torpor reduces the energetic consequences of microhabitat selection for a widespread bat
- Author
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(0000-0001-5309-7625) Alston, J., Dillon, M. E., Keinath, D. A., Abernethy, I. M., Goheen, J. R., (0000-0001-5309-7625) Alston, J., Dillon, M. E., Keinath, D. A., Abernethy, I. M., and Goheen, J. R.
- Abstract
This repository contains all data, code, and metadata required to reproduce the results detailed in "Daily torpor reduces the energetic consequences of microhabitat selection for a widespread bat" by Alston et al.
- Published
- 2022
10. Daily torpor reduces the energetic consequences of habitat selection for a widespread bat
- Author
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Alston, J., Dillon, M. E., Keinath, D. A., Abernethy, I. M., and Goheen, J. R.
- Subjects
climate change ,VHF telemetry ,fringed myotis (Myotis thysanodes) ,daily torpor ,thermal ecology ,Bayesian hierarchical models ,temporal heterothermy - Abstract
Homeothermy requires increased metabolic rates as temperatures decline below the thermoneutral zone, so homeotherms typically select microhabitats within or near their thermoneutral zones during periods of inactivity. However, many mammals and birds are heterotherms that relax internal controls on body temperature when maintaining a high, stable body temperature is energetically costly. Such heterotherms should be less tied to microhabitats near their thermoneutral zones, and because heterotherms spend more time in torpor and expend less energy at colder temperatures, heterotherms may even select microhabitats in which temperatures are well below their thermoneutral zones. We studied how temperature and daily torpor influence selection of diurnal roosts by a heterothermic bat (Myotis thysanodes). We (1) quantified the relationship between ambient temperature and daily duration of torpor, (2) simulated daily energy expenditure over a range of microhabitat (roost) temperatures, and (3) quantified the influence of roost temperature on roost selection. While warm roosts substantially reduced energy expenditure of simulated homeothermic bats, heterothermic bats modulated their use of torpor to maintain a constant level of energy expenditure over the course of a day. Daily torpor expanded the range of energetically economical microhabitats, such that roost selection was independent of roost temperature. Our work adds to a growing literature documenting functions of torpor beyond its historical conceptualization as a last-resort measure to save energy during extended or acute energetic stress.
- Published
- 2022
11. Data, code, and metadata for: Daily torpor reduces the energetic consequences of microhabitat selection for a widespread bat
- Author
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Alston, J., Dillon, M. E., Keinath, D. A., Abernethy, I. M., and Goheen, J. R.
- Subjects
climate change ,VHF telemetry ,fringed myotis (Myotis thysanodes) ,daily torpor ,thermal ecology ,Bayesian hierarchical models ,temporal heterothermy - Abstract
This repository contains all data, code, and metadata required to reproduce the results detailed in "Daily torpor reduces the energetic consequences of microhabitat selection for a widespread bat" by Alston et al.
- Published
- 2022
12. Ecological consequences of large herbivore exclusion in an African savanna: 12 years of data from the UHURU experiment
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Alston, J., Reed, C. G., Khasoha, L. M., Brown, B. R. P., Busienei, G., Carlson, N., Coverdale, T. C., Dudenhoeffer, M., Dyck, M. A., Ekeno, J., Hassan, A. A., Hohbein, R., Jakopak, R. P., Kimiti, B., Kurukura, S., Lokeny, P., Louthan, A. M., Musila, S., Musili, P. M., Tindall, T., Weiner, S., Kartzinel, T. R., Palmer, T. M., Pringle, R. M., and Goheen, J. R.
- Subjects
elephant (Loxodonta africana) ,climate change ,extinction ,food webs ,dik-dik (Madoqua) ,impala (Aepyceros melampus) ,grazing and browsing herbivores ,East African savannas ,long-term ecological field experiments ,rangeland ecology - Abstract
Diverse communities of large mammalian herbivores (LMH), once widespread, are now rare. LMH exert strong direct and indirect effects on community structure and ecosystem functions, and measuring these effects is important for testing ecological theory and for understanding past, current, and future environmental change. This in turn requires long-term experimental manipulations, owing to the slow and often nonlinear responses of populations and assemblages to LMH removal. Moreover, the effects of particular species or body-size classes within diverse LMH guilds are difficult to pinpoint, and the magnitude and even direction of these effects often depends on environmental context. Since 2008, we have maintained the Ungulate Herbivory Under Rainfall Uncertainty (UHURU) experiment, a series of size-selective LMH exclosures replicated across a rainfall/productivity gradient in a semi-arid Kenyan savanna. The goals of the UHURU experiment are to measure the effects of removing successively smaller size classes of LMH (mimicking the process of size-biased extirpation) and to establish how these effects are shaped by spatial and temporal variation in rainfall. The UHURU experiment comprises three LMH-exclusion treatments and an unfenced control, applied to 9 randomized blocks of contiguous 1 ha plots (n = 36). The fenced treatments are: “MEGA” (exclusion of megaherbivores, elephant and giraffe); “MESO” (exclusion of herbivores ≥40 kg); and “TOTAL” (exclusion of herbivores ≥5 kg). Each block is replicated three times at three sites across the 20 km rainfall gradient, which has fluctuated over the course of the experiment. The first five years of data were published previously (Ecological Archives E095-064) and have been used in numerous studies. Since publication of this original data paper, we have (a) continued to collect data according to the original protocols, (b) improved the taxonomic resolution and accuracy of plant and small-mammal identifications, and (c) begun collecting several new data sets. Here, we present updated and extended raw data from the first 12 years of the UHURU experiment (2008–2019). Data include daily rainfall data throughout the experiment; annual surveys of understory plant communities; annual censuses of woody-plant communities; annual measurements of individually tagged woody plants; monthly monitoring of flowering and fruiting phenology; every-other-month small-mammal mark-recapture data; and quarterly large-mammal dung surveys.
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Data and code for: Experimental evidence that effects of megaherbivores on mesoherbivore space use are influenced by species' traits
- Author
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Wells, H. B. M., Crego, R. D., Opedal, Ø. H., Khasoha, L. M., Alston, J. M., Reed, C. G., Weiner, S., Kurukura, S., Hassan, A. A., Namoni, M., Ekadeli, J., Kimuyu, D., Young, T. P., Kartzinel, T. R., Palmer, T. M., Pringle, R. M., and Goheen, J. R.
- Abstract
Data and code that can be used to reproduce the analyses underlying "Experimental evidence that effects of megaherbivores on mesoherbivore space use are influenced by species’ traits" by Wells et al. (2021) https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.13565
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Experimental evidence that effects of megaherbivores on mesoherbivore space use are influenced by species’ traits
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Wells, H. B. M., Crego, R. D., Opedal, Ø. H., Khasoha, L. M., Alston, J., Reed, C. G., Weiner, S., Kurukura, S., Hassan, A. A., Namoni, M., Ekadeli, J., Kimuyu, D. M., Young, T. P., Kartzinel, T. R., Palmer, T. M., Pringle, R. M., and Goheen, J. R.
- Subjects
biotic interactions ,megafauna ,elephant ,African savanna ,competition ,trophic rewilding ,facilitation ,giraffe - Abstract
1. The extinction of 80% of megaherbivore (>1,000 kg) species towards the end of the Pleistocene altered vegetation structure, fire dynamics, and nutrient cycling worldwide. Ecologists have proposed (re)introducing megaherbivores or their ecological analogues to restore lost ecosystem functions and reinforce extant but declining megaherbivore populations. However, the effects of megaherbivores on smaller herbivores are poorly understood. 2. We used long-term exclusion experiments and multispecies hierarchical models fitted to dung counts to test 1) the effect of megaherbivore (elephant and giraffe) presence-absence on the occurrence (dung presence) and use intensity (dung-pile density) of mesoherbivores (2–1,000 kg), and 2) the extent to which the responses of each mesoherbivore species was predictable based on their traits (diet and shoulder height) and phylogenetic relatedness. 3. Megaherbivores increased the predicted occurrence and use intensity of zebras but reduced the occurrence and use intensity of several other mesoherbivore species. The negative effect of megaherbivores on mesoherbivore occurrence was stronger for shorter species, regardless of diet or relatedness. 4. Megaherbivores substantially reduced the expected total use intensity (i.e., cumulative dung density of all species) of mesoherbivores, but only minimally reduced the expected species richness (i.e., cumulative predicted occurrence probabilities of all species) of mesoherbivores (by
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- 2021
15. Ecological consequences of large herbivore exclusion in an African savanna: 12 years of data from the UHURU experiment
- Author
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(0000-0001-5309-7625) Alston, J., Reed, C. G., Khasoha, L. M., Brown, B. R. P., Busienei, G., Carlson, N., Coverdale, T. C., Dudenhoeffer, M., Dyck, M. A., Ekeno, J., Hassan, A. A., Hohbein, R., Jakopak, R. P., Kimiti, B., Kurukura, S., Lokeny, P., Louthan, A. M., Musila, S., Musili, P. M., Tindall, T., Weiner, S., Kartzinel, T. R., Palmer, T. M., Pringle, R. M., Goheen, J. R., (0000-0001-5309-7625) Alston, J., Reed, C. G., Khasoha, L. M., Brown, B. R. P., Busienei, G., Carlson, N., Coverdale, T. C., Dudenhoeffer, M., Dyck, M. A., Ekeno, J., Hassan, A. A., Hohbein, R., Jakopak, R. P., Kimiti, B., Kurukura, S., Lokeny, P., Louthan, A. M., Musila, S., Musili, P. M., Tindall, T., Weiner, S., Kartzinel, T. R., Palmer, T. M., Pringle, R. M., and Goheen, J. R.
- Abstract
Diverse communities of large mammalian herbivores (LMH), once widespread, are now rare. LMH exert strong direct and indirect effects on community structure and ecosystem functions, and measuring these effects is important for testing ecological theory and for understanding past, current, and future environmental change. This in turn requires long-term experimental manipulations, owing to the slow and often nonlinear responses of populations and assemblages to LMH removal. Moreover, the effects of particular species or body-size classes within diverse LMH guilds are difficult to pinpoint, and the magnitude and even direction of these effects often depends on environmental context. Since 2008, we have maintained the Ungulate Herbivory Under Rainfall Uncertainty (UHURU) experiment, a series of size-selective LMH exclosures replicated across a rainfall/productivity gradient in a semi-arid Kenyan savanna. The goals of the UHURU experiment are to measure the effects of removing successively smaller size classes of LMH (mimicking the process of size-biased extirpation) and to establish how these effects are shaped by spatial and temporal variation in rainfall. The UHURU experiment comprises three LMH-exclusion treatments and an unfenced control, applied to 9 randomized blocks of contiguous 1 ha plots (n = 36). The fenced treatments are: “MEGA” (exclusion of megaherbivores, elephant and giraffe); “MESO” (exclusion of herbivores ≥40 kg); and “TOTAL” (exclusion of herbivores ≥5 kg). Each block is replicated three times at three sites across the 20 km rainfall gradient, which has fluctuated over the course of the experiment. The first five years of data were published previously (Ecological Archives E095-064) and have been used in numerous studies. Since publication of this original data paper, we have (a) continued to collect data according to the original protocols, (b) improved the taxonomic resolution and accuracy of plant and small-mammal identifications, and (c) begun co
- Published
- 2021
16. Moving in the Anthropocene: Global reductions in terrestrial mammalian movements
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Tucker, M A, Bohning-Gaese, K, Fagan, W F, Fryxell, J M, Van Moorter, B, Alberts, S C, Ali, A H, Allen, A M, Attias, N, Avgar, T, Bartlam-Brooks, H L A, Bayarbaatar, B, Belant, J L, Bertassoni, A, Beyer, D, Bidner, L, Van Beest, F M, Blake, S, Blaum, N, Bracis, C, Brown, D, De Bruyn, P J N, Cagnacci, F, Calabrese, J M, Camilo-Alves, C, Chamaille-Jammes, S, Chiaradia, A, Davidson, S C, Dennis, T, DeStefano, S, Diefenbach, D, Douglas-Hamilton, I, Fennessy, J, Fichtel, C F, Fiedler, W, Fischer, C, Fischhoff, I, Fleming, C H, Ford, A T, Fritz, S A, Gehr, B, Goheen, J R, Gurarie, E, Hebblewhite, M, Heurich, M, Hewison, A J M, Hof, C, Hurme, E, Isbell, L A, Janssen, R, Jeltsch, F, Kaczensky, P, Kane, A, Kappeler, P M, and Kauffman, M
- Published
- 2018
17. Evaluating support for rangeland‐restoration practices by rural Somalis: an unlikely win‐win for local livelihoods and hirola antelope?
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Ali, A. H., primary, Amin, R., additional, Evans, J. S., additional, Fischer, M., additional, Ford, A. T., additional, Kibara, A., additional, and Goheen, J. R., additional
- Published
- 2018
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18. Evaluating support for rangeland‐restoration practices by rural Somalis: an unlikely win‐win for local livelihoods and hirola antelope?
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Goheen, J. R., Ali, A. H., Evans, J. S., Kibara, A., Amin, R., Fischer, M., and Ford, A. T.
- Subjects
- *
RANGE management , *HUNTER'S hartebeest , *ENDANGERED species , *MAMMAL conservation , *MAMMAL habitats , *HABITAT conservation - Abstract
In developing countries, governments often lack the authority and resources to implement conservation outside of protected areas. In such situations, the integration of conservation with local livelihoods is crucial to species recovery and reintroduction efforts. The hirola Beatragus hunteri is the world's most endangered antelope, with a population of <500 individuals that is restricted to <5% of its historical geographic range on the Kenya–Somali border. Long‐term hirola declines have been attributed to a combination of disease and rangeland degradation. Tree encroachment—driven by some combination of extirpation of elephants, overgrazing by livestock, and perhaps fire suppression—is at least partly responsible for habitat loss and the decline of contemporary populations. Through interviews in local communities across the hirola's current range, we identified socially acceptable strategies for habitat restoration and hirola recovery. We used classification and regression trees, conditional inference trees, and generalized linear models to identify sociodemographic predictors of support for range‐restoration strategies. Locals supported efforts to conserve elephants (which kill trees and thus facilitate grass growth), seed and fertilize grass, and remove trees, but were opposed to livestock reduction. Locals were ambivalent toward controlled burns and soil ripping (a practice through which soil is broken up to prevent compaction). Livestock ownership and years of residency were key predictors of locals' perceptions toward rangeland‐restoration practices. Locals owning few livestock were more supportive of elephant conservation, and seeding and fertilization of grass, while longer term residents were more supportive of livestock reduction but were less supportive of elephant conservation. Ultimately, wildlife conservation outside protected areas requires long‐term, community‐based efforts that are compatible with human livelihoods. We recommend elephant conservation, grass seeding and fertilization, manual tree removal and resting range from livestock both to enhance the potential for hirola recovery and to build positive rapport with local communities in the geographic range of this critically endangered species. The hirola Beatragus hunteri is the world's most endangered antelope, with the population of less than 500 individuals restricted to less than 5% of its historical geographic range on the Kenya–Somali border. Long‐term hirola declines have been attributed to a combination of disease and rangeland degradation. Through interviews with local communities across the hirola's current range, we identified socially acceptable strategies for habitat restoration and hirola recovery. We recommend elephant conservation, grass seeding and fertilization, manual tree removal and resting range from livestock (i.e. restricting livestock grazing in certain areas) both to enhance the potential for hirola recovery and to build positive rapport with the local communities in the geographic range of this critically endangered species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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19. Zero-sum, the niche,and metacommunities: long-term dynamics of community assembly
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Ernest, S.K. Morgan, Brown, J. H., Thibault, K. M., White, Ethan P., Goheen, J. R., and University of Chicago Press
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community dynamics ,metacommunities ,Biology ,niche ecosystem - Abstract
Recent models of community assembly, structure, and dynamics have incorporated, to varying degrees, three mechanistic processes: resource limitation and interspecific competition, niche requirements of species, and exchanges between a local community and a regional species pool. Synthesizing 30 years of data from an intensively studied desert rodent community, we show that all of these processes, separately and in combination, have influenced the structural organization of this community and affected its dynamical response to both natural environmental changes and experimental perturbations. In addition, our analyses suggest that zero-sum constraints, niche differences, and metacommunity processes are inextricably linked in the ways that they affect the structure and dynamics of this system. Explicit consideration of the interaction of these processes should yield a deeper understanding of the assembly and dynamics of other ecological communities. This synthesis highlights the role that long-term data, especially when coupled with experimental manipulations, can play in assessing the fundamental processes that govern the structure and function of ecological communities.
- Published
- 2008
20. Intra-guild Compensation Regulates Species Richness in Desert Rodents: Reply
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Goheen, J. R., White, Ethan P., Ernest, S.K. Morgan, Brown, J. H., and Ecological Society of America
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Intra guild ,desert rodents ,species richness ,Biology - Abstract
Null models have had a long and contentious history in community ecology (Connor and Simberloff 1979, Harvey et al. 1983, Gotelli and Graves 1996, Graves and Rahbek 2005). Much of this debate has arisen because multiple strategies for null models can be used to address a particular question of interest, and the present exchange is no exception. To assess constancy in species richness through time in a desert rodent community, Nichols et al. (2006) have proposed a Markov Chain model as an alternative to the random-walk model we developed (Goheen et al. 2005). While both null models simulate stochastic local extinction and colonization of species from a regional pool, our objectives differ substantially from those of Nichols et al. in ways that influence the choice of models and interpretation of results.
- Published
- 2006
21. Intra-guild compensation regulatesspecies richness in desert rodents: reply
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Goheen, J. R., White, Ethan P., Ernest, S.K. Morgan, Brown, J. H., and Ecological Society of America
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Intra guild ,desert rodents ,species richness ,Biology - Published
- 2006
22. Intra-guild compensation regulatesspecies richness in desert rodents
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Goheen, J., White, Ethan P., Ernest, S.K. Morgan, Brown, J. H., and Ecological Society of America
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Intra guild ,desert rodents ,species richness ,Biology - Abstract
Evidence from numerous studies suggests that species richness is an emergent property of local communities. The maintenance of species richness, despite changes in species composition and environmental conditions, requires compensatory colonization and extinction events with species coming from a regional pool. Using long-term data from a rodent community in the Chihuahuan Desert, we use randomization methods to test the null hypothesis that changes in species richness occur randomly. We find that the dynamics of species richness differ significantly from a random process, and that these nonrandom dynamics occur largely within the most speciose guild. Finally, we propose a general framework for assessing the importance of species compensation in maintaining biodiversity within local communities. Our results highlight the importance of niche complementarity and compensation in maintaining relatively constant species richness over time.
- Published
- 2005
23. Sexual Segregation Results in Differences in Content and Quality of Bison (Bos bison) Diets
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Post, D. M., primary, Armbrust, T. S., additional, Horne, E. A., additional, and Goheen, J. R., additional
- Published
- 2001
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24. Science as Aid to Morality.
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Goheen, J. D.
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ETHICS ,JUDGMENT (Psychology) ,SCIENCE & ethics ,VALUES (Ethics) - Abstract
This article discusses the book "Ethical Judgment: The Use of Science in Ethics," by Abraham Edel. The author outlines the modern controversy concerning the foundations of ethical beliefs and judgments. With great erudition he points out the extent to which judgments of good and bad are in fact influenced by the sciences relevant to human life. It is not his intention to maintain that the diversity of ethical judgments does not exist and will not continue to exist. Professor Edel observes on the one hand the classical contention that ethical judgments are completely determined by either moral precept or appeal to "reason."
- Published
- 1955
25. Root Disease Survey of the Proposed Ten Tails Timber Sale Quilcene Ranger District Olympic National Forest
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Donald J. Goheen, J. Scott Worrell. and Donald J. Goheen, J. Scott Worrell.
- Published
- 1980
26. Radiographic, hemodynamic and clinical comparison of pulmonary venous hypertension complicating acute respiratory failure in severe chronic airway obstruction
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Bone, R., primary, Goheen, J., additional, and Ruth, W., additional
- Published
- 1977
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27. From the brain's encoding of input dynamics to its behavior: neural dynamics shape bias in decision making.
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Wolman A, Lechner S, Angeletti LL, Goheen J, and Northoff G
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- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Young Adult, Reaction Time physiology, Decision Making physiology, Brain physiology, Electroencephalography
- Abstract
The human brain is tightly connected to the individual's environment and its input dynamics. How the dynamics of periodic environmental stimuli influence neural activity and subsequent behavior via neural entrainment or alignment is not fully clear yet, though. This study explores how periodic environmental stimuli influence neural activity and behavior. EEG data was collected during a Go-NoGo task with a periodic intertrial interval (ITI) of 1.3 s (0.769 Hz). Results showed that the task's temporal structure increased power spectrum activity at 0.769 Hz, which showed high intersubject variability. Higher task-periodicity effects were linked to stronger phase-based intertrial coherence (ITC) and reduced neural complexity, as measured by lower Lempel-Ziv Complexity (LZC). Additionally, higher periodicity in the power spectrum correlated with faster reaction times and stronger response bias. We conclude that the encoding of the inputs' dynamics into the brains power spectrum shapes subsequent behavior, e.g., RT and response bias, through reducing neural complexity., Competing Interests: Competing interests The authors declare no competing interests., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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28. Dynamic mechanisms that couple the brain and breathing to the external environment.
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Goheen J, Wolman A, Angeletti LL, Wolff A, Anderson JAE, and Northoff G
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- Humans, Male, Environment, Brain physiology, Respiration, Electroencephalography
- Abstract
Brain and breathing activities are closely related. However, the exact neurophysiological mechanisms that couple the brain and breathing to stimuli in the external environment are not yet agreed upon. Our data support that synchronization and dynamic attunement are two key mechanisms that couple local brain activity and breathing to external periodic stimuli. First, we review the existing literature, which provides strong evidence for the synchronization of brain and breathing in terms of coherence, cross-frequency coupling and phase-based entrainment. Second, using EEG and breathing data, we show that both the lungs and localized brain activity at the Cz channel attune the temporal structure of their power spectra to the periodic structure of external auditory inputs. We highlight the role of dynamic attunement in playing a key role in coordinating the tripartite temporal alignment of localized brain activity, breathing and input dynamics across longer timescales like minutes. Overall, this perspective sheds light on potential mechanisms of brain-breathing coupling and its alignment to stimuli in the external environment., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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29. Scale for time and space experience in anxiety (STEA): Phenomenology and its clinical relevance.
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Lu CJ, Goheen J, Wolman A, Lucherini Angeletti L, Arantes-Gonçalves F, Hirjak D, Wolff A, and Northoff G
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Middle Aged, Reproducibility of Results, Psychometrics, Anxiety diagnosis, Anxiety psychology, Self Report, Space Perception, Time Perception, Young Adult, Clinical Relevance, Anxiety Disorders diagnosis, Anxiety Disorders psychology, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales standards
- Abstract
Anxiety is a pervasive emotional state where, phenomenologically, subjects often report changes in their experience of time and space. However, a systematic and quantified examination of time and space experience in terms of a self-report scale is still missing which eventually could also be used for clinical differential diagnosis. Based on historical phenomenological literature and patients' subjective reports, we here introduce, in a first step, the Scale for Time and Space Experience of Anxiety (STEA) in a smaller sample of 19 subjects with anxiety disorders and, in a second step, validate its shorter clinical version (cSTEA) in a larger sample of 48 anxiety subjects. The main findings are (i) high convergent and divergent validity of STEA with both Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI) (r = 0.7325; p < 0.001) and Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) (r = 0.7749; p < 0.0001), as well as with spontaneous mind wandering (MWS) (r = 0.7343; p < 0.001) and deliberate mind wandering (MWD) (r = 0.1152; p > 0.05), (ii) statistical feature selection shows 8 key items for future clinical usage (cSTEA) focusing on the experience of temporal and spatial constriction, (iii) the effects of time and space experience (i.e., for both STEA and cSTEA scores) on the level of anxiety (BAI) are mediated by the degree of spontaneous mind wandering (MWS), (iv) cSTEA allows for differentiating high levels of anxiety from the severity of comorbid depressive symptoms, and (v) significant reduction in the cSTEA scores after a therapeutic intervention (breathing therapy). Together, our study introduces a novel fully quantified and highly valid self-report instrument, the STEA, for measuring time-space experiences in anxiety. Further we develop a shorter clinical version (cSTEA) which allows assessing time space experience in a valid, quick, and simple way for diagnosis, differential diagnosis, and therapeutic monitoring of anxiety., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest All authors declared no competing interests for this study. There are no other disclosures., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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30. Toward point-of-care diagnostics: Running enzymatic assays on a photonic waveguide-based sensor chip with a portable, benchtop measurement system.
- Author
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Neutens P, Zinoviev K, Jimenez Valencia AM, Woronoff G, Jansen R, Hosseini N, Uribe AJ, Goheen J, Kryszak LA, Stakenborg T, Clarke WA, and Van Roy W
- Subjects
- Creatinine, Equipment Design, Optics and Photonics, Point-of-Care Systems, Running
- Abstract
We demonstrate a portable, compact system to perform absorption-based enzymatic assays at a visible wavelength of 639 nm on a photonic waveguide-based sensor chip, suitable for lab-on-a-chip applications. The photonic design and fabrication of the sensor are described, and a detailed overview of the portable measurement system is presented. In this publication, we use an integrated photonic waveguide-based absorbance sensor to run a full enzymatic assay. An assay to detect creatinine in plasma is simultaneously performed on both the photonic sensor on the portable setup and on a commercial microplate reader for a clinically relevant creatinine concentration range. We observed a high correlation between the measured waveguide propagation loss and the optical density measurement from the plate reader and measured a limit-of-detection of 4.5 μM creatinine in the sensor well, covering the relevant clinical range for creatinine detection., (© 2023 Wiley-VCH GmbH.)
- Published
- 2024
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31. From Lung to Brain: Respiration Modulates Neural and Mental Activity.
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Goheen J, Anderson JAE, Zhang J, and Northoff G
- Subjects
- Humans, Hyperventilation, Heart Rate physiology, Lung, Respiration, Brain
- Abstract
Respiration protocols have been developed to manipulate mental states, including their use for therapeutic purposes. In this systematic review, we discuss evidence that respiration may play a fundamental role in coordinating neural activity, behavior, and emotion. The main findings are: (1) respiration affects the neural activity of a wide variety of regions in the brain; (2) respiration modulates different frequency ranges in the brain's dynamics; (3) different respiration protocols (spontaneous, hyperventilation, slow or resonance respiration) yield different neural and mental effects; and (4) the effects of respiration on the brain are related to concurrent modulation of biochemical (oxygen delivery, pH) and physiological (cerebral blood flow, heart rate variability) variables. We conclude that respiration may be an integral rhythm of the brain's neural activity. This provides an intimate connection of respiration with neuro-mental features like emotion. A respiratory-neuro-mental connection holds the promise for a brain-based therapeutic usage of respiration in mental disorders., (© 2023. Center for Excellence in Brain Science and Intelligence Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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32. Rapid Quantification of Plasma Creatinine Using a Novel Kinetic Enzymatic Assay.
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Jimenez Valencia AM, Kryszak LA, Goheen J, Van Roy W, Woronoff G, Mathieu E, Gudjonsdottir H, Stakenborg T, and Clarke WA
- Subjects
- Creatinine, Humans, Kinetics, Sarcosine Oxidase metabolism, Enzyme Assays
- Abstract
Background: Enzymatic assays are among the most common diagnostic tests performed in the clinical laboratory. Enzymatic substrate analysis is most commonly measured using endpoint methods; however, modulating the reaction kinetics allows fine control of the reaction rate, which can be adjusted based on specific monitoring technologies., Methods: We developed and optimized an enzymatic method for measurement of creatinine in plasma, using commonly paired enzymes of creatininase (Crtnnase), creatinase (Crtase), sarcosine oxidase (SOX), ascorbate oxidase (AOX), and horseradish peroxidase (HRP). The novel aspect of the assay is that it is fast and uses SOX as the limiting enzyme. The assay performance was assessed with respect to precision, accuracy, and interferences., Results: The intrarun %CV (n = 12) was approximately 5% for each concentration tested, with biases ranging from -3 to -9%. The interrun %CV (n = 39) ranged from 5 to 8%, with biases ranging from -2 to -6%. During the accuracy assessment (n = 127), only 4 samples did not meet the minimum acceptability criteria. Minimal interference was observed, except at low creatinine concentrations with elevated creatine., Conclusion: Our novel and versatile enzymatic assay to measure plasma creatinine using kinetic analysis with SOX as the limiting enzyme is rapid (<2 mins), sensitive, and specific and demonstrates excellent concordance with the laboratory standard. We anticipate this rapid kinetic assay to be compatible with emerging technologies in the field of portable diagnostic devices, such as the usage of silicon photonics to monitor biochemical reactions., (© American Association for Clinical Chemistry 2020. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
33. An evaluation of the SD Bioline HIV/syphilis duo test.
- Author
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Holden J, Goheen J, Jett-Goheen M, Barnes M, Hsieh YH, and Gaydos CA
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Point-of-Care Systems, Pregnancy, Reagent Kits, Diagnostic, Serologic Tests, Treponema pallidum immunology, HIV Infections diagnosis, Mass Screening methods, Point-of-Care Testing, Syphilis diagnosis, Syphilis Serodiagnosis methods
- Abstract
Many health agencies now recommend routine HIV and syphilis testing for pregnant women and most-at-risk populations such as men who have sex with men. With the increased availability of highly sensitive, low cost rapid point-of-care tests, the ability to meet those recommendations has increased, granting wider access to quick and accurate diagnoses. Using blood specimens collected from a Baltimore City Health Department (BCHD) sexually transmitted infection clinic, we evaluated the SD Bioline HIV/Syphilis Duo, a rapid test that simultaneously detects antibodies to HIV and syphilis and has the potential to further benefit clinics and patients by reducing costs, testing complexity, and patient wait times. SD DUO HIV sensitivity and specificity, when compared to BCHD results, were 91.7 and 99.5%, respectively. SD DUO syphilis sensitivity and specificity, when compared to rapid plasma reagin, were 85.7 and 96.8%, respectively, and 69.7 and 99.7%, respectively, when compared to Treponema pallidum particle agglutination (TPPA). SD DUO syphilis sensitivity and specificity, when compared to a traditional screening algorithm, improved to 92.3 and 100%, respectively, and improved to 72.9 and 99.7%, respectively, when compared to a reverse screening algorithm. The HIV component of the SD DUO performed moderately well. However, results for the SD DUO syphilis component, when compared to TPPA, support the need for further testing and assessment.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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34. Prospective comparison of RT-PCR/ESI-MS to Prodesse ProFlu Plus and Cepheid GenXpert for the detection of Influenza A and B viruses.
- Author
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Hardick J, Dugas A, Goheen J, Rothman R, and Gaydos C
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction methods, Sensitivity and Specificity, Young Adult, Influenza A virus isolation & purification, Influenza B virus isolation & purification, Influenza, Human virology, Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization methods
- Abstract
RT-PCR/ESI-MS has previously demonstrated the capability to detect and identify respiratory viral pathogens in nasopharyngeal swabs. This study expands on previous research by performing a prospective evaluation of RT-PCR/ESI-MS to detect and identify Influenza A and B viruses compared to Prodesse ProFlu Plus and combined ProFlu Plus and Cepheid Xpert Flu. ProFlu Plus was also used as a gold standard for comparison for respiratory syncytial virus detection. Using ProFlu Plus as a gold standard, RT-PCR/ESI-MS had sensitivity and specificity of 82.1% (23/28) and 100% (258/258), respectively, for Influenza A, 100% (16/16) and 99.6% (269/270), respectively for Influenza B, and 88.6% (39/44) and 99.6% (241/242) for any Influenza virus. Using matching results from ProFlu Plus and Xpert Flu as a gold standard, RT-PCR/ESI-MS had 85.2% (23/27) and 100% (259/259) sensitivity and specificity respectively for Influenza A, 100% (14/14) and 99.6% (270/272), respectively for Influenza B virus. Overall, RT-PCR/ESI-MS was not as sensitive as the combined gold standard of ProFlu Plus and Xpert Flu, although it has the capability of detecting other respiratory viruses., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Two recent developments regarding tax-exempt status of hospitals.
- Author
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Goheen JC
- Subjects
- Financial Audit legislation & jurisprudence, Government Agencies, Hospital-Physician Joint Ventures economics, Hospital-Physician Joint Ventures legislation & jurisprudence, Hospitals, Voluntary economics, United States, Hospitals, Voluntary legislation & jurisprudence, Taxes legislation & jurisprudence
- Published
- 1992
36. Hayflick-NIH Settlement.
- Author
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Strehler BL, Abraham S, Bayreuther K, Bienenstock A, Binstock R, Birren J, Blumenthal HT, Brautbar C, Brody EM, Brody H, Comfort A, Cottle RW, Danielli JF, Danon D, Datan N, Ebbesen P, Elsen A, Freundt EA, Gallop PM, Girardi AJ, Glenn PF, Goheen JD, Goldstein S, Good RA, Goodlin RC, Granoff A, Gray A, Haber PA, Hamparian VV, Hijmans W, Holliday R, Horvath SM, Houck JC, Huebner RJ, Itoh H, Jukes T, Kaplan HS, Kirkman H, Kuwert E, Leiderman PH, Liss A, Litwin J, Lubin B, Macieira-Coelho A, Madoff S, Maletta GJ, Maramorosch K, Martin GM, Masover G, Matsumura T, Medvedev Z, Melnick JL, Merchant DJ, Namba M, Neter E, Neugarten B, Orgel L, Outschoorn AS, Pace DM, Packer L, Parker JC, Patterson MD Jr, Pollard M, Portnuff J, Razin S, Reiff TR, Robert L, Rockstein M, Rosamoff H, Rosanoff EI, Rottem S, Schachter J, Schwartz H, Shanas E, Shimkin MB, Smith JR, Somerson NL, Stinebring W, Textor R, Thomas L, Viidik A, Weg R, Yabrov A, Yanofsky C, and Zatz LM
- Published
- 1982
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Idioventricular tachycardia with angina pectoris.
- Author
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Wong B, Brymer J, Goheen J, and Dunn M
- Subjects
- Bundle of His physiopathology, Cardiac Catheterization, Coronary Disease complications, Electrocardiography, Exercise Test adverse effects, Heart Ventricles, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pain, Tachycardia etiology, Angina Pectoris complications, Tachycardia complications
- Abstract
Idioventricular tachycardia (IVT) occurred in a patient with angina pectoris on three separate occasions associated with stress induced angina. It occurred immediately after a Master's test, a treadmill exercise test, and following an episode of paroxysmal atrial tachycardia which was precipitated by endocardial pacing. His bundle electrograms demonstrated that the rhythm was ventricular in origin. Cardiac catheterization documented the presence of severe coronary artery disease. Idioventricular tachycardia is often seen with acute myocardial infarction. It is rarely seen with angina or with exercise testing. To our knowledge this is the first reported case of IVT which could be repeatedly produced by stress induced angina.
- Published
- 1975
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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