45 results on '"Jane V. Wheeler"'
Search Results
2. A Proposed Theory Life Cycle Model: Standing on the Shoulders of Giants
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Anton F. Schlechter, Steven H. Cady, Suki Goodman, and Jane V. Wheeler
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Work motivation ,Shoulders ,05 social sciences ,Evidence-based management ,050109 social psychology ,Development theory ,Product lifecycle ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,Economic analysis ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Classical economics ,050203 business & management ,Applied Psychology - Abstract
In this article, we draw on the product life cycle framework to propose an adapted model for evaluating the evolution of a theory. The product life cycle was designed as an economic analysis tool, and its intuitive usefulness led to its adaptation for a variety of disciplines. Nevertheless, it has not been applied to theory. We propose a five-stage model of theory development: (1) emergence, (2) development, (3) maturity, and (4) decline toward (5) death or reemergence. The proposed model is then tested by applying it to work motivation theory. We conclude by offering implications and recommendations for using the theory life cycle model in research, teaching, and practice.
- Published
- 2019
3. Natural to cultural:The vegetation history of the southern Yorkshire Dales, UK
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Philip Murphy, Graeme T. Swindles, Timothy Taylor, Jennifer M. Galloway, Jane V. Wheeler, and Garry Rushworth
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0106 biological sciences ,010506 paleontology ,Peat ,Holocene ,Paleontology ,Edaphic ,Human impact ,Woodland ,Vegetation ,Late glacial ,15. Life on land ,Present day ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Archaeology ,Yorkshire Dales ,Natural (archaeology) ,Geography ,Pollen ,Glacial period ,Paleoecology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
The Yorkshire Dales is one of the most iconic agricultural landscapes in Britain. However, many questions remain over the evolution of this landscape through time and its natural state before major human impacts. Here we present new palynological data that provide insight into the vegetation and fire history of the southern Yorkshire Dales from the late glacial period to present day. Our data suggest that there is considerable variation in vegetation history between sites, which probably reflects topographic and edaphic factors. Several of the records contain hiatuses that may reflect forest clearance, slow peat accumulation, or peat drainage, cutting and/or burning. Our data show a marked clearance of woodland beginning in the Neolithic period and intensifying in more recent times, marking the development of the contemporary agricultural landscape of the Yorkshire Dales.
- Published
- 2021
4. Genomic diversity, population structure and accessory genome analysis of Pasteurella multocida: New Insights into host adaptation and disease specialization
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Lenin Maturrano, Luis Luna, Raúl Rosadio, Vasco Azevedo, Dennis Carhuaricra, Jane V. Wheeler, and Raquel Hurtado
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Genetics ,biology ,Phylogenetics ,Operon ,Lineage (evolution) ,Host adaptation ,Adaptation ,Pasteurella multocida ,biology.organism_classification ,Phenotype ,Pathogen - Abstract
Pasteurella multocida is a multi-host pathogen that infects a wide spectrum of domestic and wild animals including humans. Despite its impact on health and economics, P. multocida is considered an enigmatic pathogen and the genetic basis of its pathogenicity and host adaptation still remains unclear. Here we present a detailed genomic framework based on 336 whole-genome sequences of P. multocida isolates from different animal species and countries. Our data provide genomic support of the existence of two very divergent phylogroups (PmI and PmII), which present a barrier to homologous recombination suggesting genetic isolation. Additionally, a torCAD operon, which reduces TMAO (trimethylamine N-oxide) to produce energy during bacterial anaerobic respiration, is present only in PmI and can act as a hypothetical driver of niche segregation between phylogroups. The PmI phylogroup harbors strains that infect a wider range of hosts than PmII, and shows a highly diverse phylogeny and accessory genome. We identified nine clonal lineages for PmI, seven of which are associated with specific hosts or diseases and contain distinct accessory gene pools that can confer ecologically relevant phenotypes. We found differential presence of a trehalose metabolism operon in the bovine lineage associated with pneumonic pasteurellosis; while, citrate, L-arabinose, L-fucose, and D-allose operons are only present in avian lineages. These findings suggest that alternative metabolic pathways may facilitate the establishment of P. multocida during host colonization in the early stages of infection promoting the adaptation of P. multocida lineages to certain hosts.
- Published
- 2020
5. Genomic analysis of the domestication and post-Spanish conquest evolution of the llama and alpaca
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Valeria Varas, Xukui Yang, Benito A. González, Xiaohui Sun, Shengkai Pan, Mario Barbato, Erli Li, Jane V. Wheeler, Chi Zhang, Kasper Munch, Yafei Hu, Changsheng Dong, Junping He, Russel Corbett-Detig, Ruiwen Fan, Juan C. Marín, Zhongru Gu, Michael William Bruford, Wenjun Gao, Xuanmin Guang, and Xiangjiang Zhan
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Male ,lcsh:QH426-470 ,Introgression ,Settore BIO/18 - GENETICA ,Adaptation, Biological ,Alpaca ,Spanish conquest ,Biology ,Genetic Introgression ,Genome ,Domestication ,Settore BIO/05 - ZOOLOGIA ,Animals ,Selection, Genetic ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Gene ,Synteny ,Settore AGR/17 - ZOOTECNICA GENERALE E MIGLIORAMENTO GENETICO ,Llama ,Research ,South America ,Biological Evolution ,Phenotype ,Human genetics ,Phylogeography ,lcsh:Genetics ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,Evolutionary biology ,Female ,Adaptation ,Camelids, New World - Abstract
Background Despite their regional economic importance and being increasingly reared globally, the origins and evolution of the llama and alpaca remain poorly understood. Here we report reference genomes for the llama, and for the guanaco and vicuña (their putative wild progenitors), compare these with the published alpaca genome, and resequence seven individuals of all four species to better understand domestication and introgression between the llama and alpaca. Results Phylogenomic analysis confirms that the llama was domesticated from the guanaco and the alpaca from the vicuña. Introgression was much higher in the alpaca genome (36%) than the llama (5%) and could be dated close to the time of the Spanish conquest, approximately 500 years ago. Introgression patterns are at their most variable on the X-chromosome of the alpaca, featuring 53 genes known to have deleterious X-linked phenotypes in humans. Strong genome-wide introgression signatures include olfactory receptor complexes into both species, hypertension resistance into alpaca, and fleece/fiber traits into llama. Genomic signatures of domestication in the llama include male reproductive traits, while in alpaca feature fleece characteristics, olfaction-related and hypoxia adaptation traits. Expression analysis of the introgressed region that is syntenic to human HSA4q21, a gene cluster previously associated with hypertension in humans under hypoxic conditions, shows a previously undocumented role for PRDM8 downregulation as a potential transcriptional regulation mechanism, analogous to that previously reported at high altitude for hypoxia-inducible factor 1α. Conclusions The unprecedented introgression signatures within both domestic camelid genomes may reflect post-conquest changes in agriculture and the breakdown of traditional management practices.
- Published
- 2020
6. 23. Genetic Analysis Of The Origins Of Domestic South American Camelids
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Jane V. Wheeler, Michael William Bruford, Lounès Chikhi, and Daniel G. Bradley
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Geography ,South american ,Ethnology ,Genetic analysis - Published
- 2019
7. Vegetation Changes and Woodland Management Associated with a Prehistoric to Medieval Burnt Mound Complex at Ballygawley, Northern Ireland
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Jane V. Wheeler, Tim Mighall, M. Taylor, M. Bamforth, L. Bailey, Scott Timpany, and L. Gray
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010506 paleontology ,Archeology ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Floodplain ,Vegetation ,Woodland ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,medicine.disease_cause ,01 natural sciences ,Archaeology ,Prehistory ,Bronze Age ,visual_art ,Pollen ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,medicine ,Period (geology) ,Charcoal ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
This paper examines the impact on woodlands associated with burnt mound use from floodplain sediments and peats, using a combination of pollen, non-pollen palynomorphs, micro- and macro-charcoal and worked wood for the first time. We present this data from a multi-period burnt mound complex, dating from the Late Neolithic to the Medieval period, at Ballygawley, Co. Tyrone, Northern Ireland, to reconstruct vegetation changes from the Neolithic onwards and establish the significance of these changes, in particular on woodlands whilst the burnt mounds were in use. The findings from the macroscopic charcoal suggests the most abundant trees were commonly, but not exclusively, exploited. Local woodland was seemingly unaffected by use of burnt mounds during the Neolithic and early Bronze Age based on pollen evidence. A sustained increase in microscopic charcoal coincides with a permanent decrease in alder-carr woodland during a period of near continuous burnt mound use between 1725 and 530 BC, and a seco...
- Published
- 2017
8. The Environmental Context and Function of Burnt-Mounds: New Studies of Irish Fulachtaí Fiadh
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Jackie Hatton, Jane V. Wheeler, Nora Bermingham, Emma Tetlow, Fiona Reilly, Emer K. Dennehy, Tim Mighall, Lorna O'Donnell, Kate Taylor, Antony G. Brown, Steven R. Davis, Charlotte O'Brien, Shirley Wynne, and Scott Timpany
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010506 paleontology ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,060102 archaeology ,Floodplain ,Ecology ,Macrofossil ,06 humanities and the arts ,General Medicine ,Woodland ,engineering.material ,01 natural sciences ,Archaeology ,language.human_language ,Prehistory ,Irish ,Bronze Age ,visual_art ,engineering ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,language ,0601 history and archaeology ,Bronze ,Charcoal ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Burnt mounds, or fulachtaí fiadh as they are known in Ireland, are probably the most common prehistoric site type in Ireland and Britain. Typically Middle–Late Bronze Age in age (although both earlier and later examples are known), they are artefact-poor and rarely associated with settlements. The function of these sites has been much debated with the most commonly cited uses being for cooking, as steam baths or saunas, for brewing, tanning, or textile processing. A number of major infrastructural development schemes in Ireland in the years 2002–2007 revealed remarkable numbers of these mounds often associated with wood-lined troughs, many of which were extremely well-preserved. This afforded an opportunity to investigate them as landscape features using environmental techniques – specifically plant macrofossils and charcoal, pollen, beetles, and multi-element analyses. This paper summarises the results from eight sites from Ireland and compares them with burnt mound sites in Great Britain. The fulachtaí fiadh which are generally in clusters, are all groundwater-fed by springs, along floodplains and at the bases of slopes. The sites are associated with the clearance of wet woodland for fuel; most had evidence of nearby agriculture and all revealed low levels of grazing. Multi-element analysis at two sites revealed elevated heavy metal concentrations suggesting that off-site soil, ash or urine had been used in the trough. Overall the evidence suggests that the most likely function for these sites is textile production involving both cleaning and/or dyeing of wool and/or natural plant fibres and as a functionally related activity to hide cleaning and tanning. Whilst further research is clearly needed to confirm if fulachtaí fiadh are part of the ‘textile revolution’ we should also recognise their important role in the rapid deforestation of the wetter parts of primary woodland and the expansion of agriculture into marginal areas during the Irish and British Bronze Ages.
- Published
- 2016
9. A Palaeoenvironmental Investigation of Two Prehistoric Burnt Mound Sites in Northern Ireland
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Scott Timpany, Laura Scott, Tim Mighall, and Jane V. Wheeler
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Palynology ,010506 paleontology ,Archeology ,060102 archaeology ,biology ,Context (language use) ,06 humanities and the arts ,Woodland ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,Archaeology ,Sphagnum ,Prehistory ,Bronze Age ,visual_art ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,0601 history and archaeology ,Charcoal ,Mesolithic ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
This paper provides a summary of the palaeoenvironmental evidence from a spread of late Mesolithic burnt material and two late Neolithic to early Bronze Age burnt mounds. The burnt mounds were up to 10 m diameter, had an amorphous shape, and were consistently less than 0.8 m thick. Monoliths were collected from two sites, Ballygawley and Roughan, in Co. Tyrone, Northern Ireland. This provided an opportunity to use a detailed palaeoecological approach for the first time to investigate the use and function of burnt mounds. Pollen, non-pollen palynomorphs, micro- and macroscopic charcoal were used to place these features within their environmental context, and to establish if such an approach could provide further insights into their function. The palynological results shared similar characteristics: high microscopic charcoal values, repetitive fluctuations in tree and shrub taxa, increased Sphagnum, and the presence of non-pollen palynomorphs (NPPs) HdV-114 and HdV-146, all of which could be diagnostic indicators of burnt mounds in palynological records. While the data do not allow us to ascribe a specific function for the burnt mounds, their environmental setting is discussed. A “see-saw” pattern of arboreal pollen, combined with the macroscopic charcoal data, indicate possible species selection and management of local woodland for fuelwood.
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- 2016
10. Resilience of peatland ecosystem services over millennial timescales: evidence from a degraded British bog
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Jane V. Wheeler, Alistair Headley, Karen L. Bacon, Graeme T. Swindles, Jennifer M. Galloway, T. Edward Turner, Paul J. Morris, and Mark W. Smith
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Ecological stability ,010506 paleontology ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Peat ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Ecology ,biology ,Climate change ,Plant community ,Molinia caerulea ,Plant Science ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,Ecosystem services ,Environmental science ,Ecosystem ,Bog ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Summary Many peatland ecosystems in Europe have become degraded in the last century owing to the effects of drainage, burning, pollution and climate change. There is a need to understand the drivers of peatland degradation because management and restoration interventions are expensive and can affect the natural ecohydrological dynamics of such sensitive environments. However, if given enough time, peatlands may have the ability to recover spontaneously without deliberate action. We use a detailed multiproxy palaeoecological data set from a degraded raised bog in Northern England to examine its ecosystem stability and long-term dynamics in response to anthropogenic disturbance over a variety of timescales. One feature of many degraded peatlands (including our study site) is the local dominance of Molinia caerulea (purple moor-grass), which has expanded at the expense of characteristic peatland plants, including sedges and Sphagnum mosses. Our data show that there has been a long history of human impacts at the site which have culminated in its current unfavourable condition. Several distinct episodes of past peat cutting are evident as hiatuses in peat accumulation; however, peat accumulation and plant community structure have subsequently recovered spontaneously. The appearance of M. caerulea occurs coevally with an unprecedented variety of recent anthropogenic impacts, all of which have contributed to providing a suitable environment for its rise to dominance. We have dated the appearance of M. caerulea to the latter half of the twentieth century which corresponds to a number of anthropogenic press disturbances, including the following: dust loading from post-war expansion of the adjacent quarry; burning; drainage; airborne pollution; and contamination from soil dust and agrochemicals. [Synthesis] Our study demonstrates the importance of palaeoecology for understanding the trajectories of peatland development and ecosystem dynamics, including their resilience and resistance to pulse and press disturbances. We show that peatlands have the capability to recover spontaneously from severe disturbances such as peat cutting, albeit on timescales much longer than those applied to contemporary monitoring of restoration efforts. The implications are relevant for determining whether it is preferable to manage and restore peatlands, or to allow them to recover naturally without human intervention.
- Published
- 2016
11. Institutional effect on born global firms in China: the role of Sun Tzu’s The Art of War strategies
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Jane V. Wheeler, Qian Gao, Jungsook Kwon, and Man Zhang
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Value (ethics) ,Strategy and Management ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Military strategy ,Internationalization ,Originality ,0502 economics and business ,050211 marketing ,Business ,Business and International Management ,Marketing ,Emerging markets ,China ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance ,Guanxi ,050203 business & management ,Qualitative research ,media_common - Abstract
Purpose – This paper aims to investigate the role of Sun Tzu’s significant strategies on the relationship between the institutional environment and international performance of Chinese born global firms, a type of small- and medium-sized enterprise (SME) characterized by the company’s limited resources and its early efforts to internationalize. Design/methodology/approach – The methodology is based on a multi-case analysis of interviews conducted with four chosen born global firms, coupled with public database and Web site searches. Through the use of qualitative methods, propositions were developed. Findings – This paper provides insights regarding how the institutional environment, both formal and informal, has a strong positive relationship with born global firm’s international performance. Moreover, Sun Tzu’s significant strategies play a critical role in the internationalization process of born global firms in emerging markets. Originality/value – Although existing studies discuss the application of Eastern philosophical strategies adopted by firms in emerging markets, to the best of our knowledge, this is one of the earliest studies which evaluates the moderation effect of Sun Tzu’s significant strategies on the relationship between institutional environment and business performance. The paper contributes to scholarly discourse on the influencing factors of born global firm’s internationalization process. It also has practical relevance to international entrepreneurs and SMEs from emerging markets.
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- 2016
12. Interbreeding among South American camelids threatens species integrity
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Andrea Longo, Valeria Varas, Pablo A. Valdecantos, Warren E. Johnson, Romina Rivera, Jane V. Wheeler, Juan C. Marín, and Juan Pablo Vásquez
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0106 biological sciences ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Ecology ,Genetic genealogy ,Zoology ,Introgression ,Biology ,Subspecies ,Selective breeding ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Gene flow ,Microsatellite ,Vicugna ,Domestication ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
Selective breeding of the guanaco and vicuna indisputably led to the domestic llama and alpaca. However, the place, time and process of domestication remain poorly documented, exacerbated by increased evidence of historic and recent introgression among both domestic populations, especially those involving alpaca. Here, we report the first comprehensive assessment of patterns of microsatellite variation of 13 polymorphic microsatellites in 797 individuals representing 4 species and 2 subspecies to estimate historic and ongoing patterns of gene flow. Our results confirm that llamas were domesticated almost exclusively from the northern subspecies of guanaco (Lama guanicoe cacsilensis), but cluster analyses did not support previous findings that alpacas are solely derived from the northern subspecies of vicuna (Vicugna mensalis), with some more-recent admixture with southern populations. We also confirmed continued gene flow between llama and alpaca, and found evidence for crosses between presumably feral llamas and guanacos in northern Chile. Our results highlight the need to develop and test more-accurate markers and tools for assessing the genetic heritage of individuals, to link phenotypic variation with genetic ancestry, and to conserve historic patterns of unique variation among both the wild and domestic populations.
- Published
- 2020
13. Airport operations and security screening: An examination of social justice
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Amelia S. Carr, Tania Biswas, and Jane V. Wheeler
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050210 logistics & transportation ,Airport security ,020209 energy ,Strategy and Management ,05 social sciences ,Control (management) ,ComputerApplications_COMPUTERSINOTHERSYSTEMS ,Transportation ,Sample (statistics) ,02 engineering and technology ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Social justice ,Security controls ,Test (assessment) ,Management implications ,0502 economics and business ,Security check ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Business ,Marketing ,Law - Abstract
Airports are a crucial part of the United States transportation system and airport officials are continuously challenged to ensure that their operations are secure. A major part of providing airport security is implementing check points where passengers interface with the security screening system. The airlines and airport security administration receive negative publicity when passengers are mistreated at security check points. Further, these organizations spend a lot of time to assess the situation and take corrective actions. This study examines passenger perceived bias and the airport security screening system. Using data from a randomly selected sample of 145 airline passengers, six hypotheses are tested. The hypotheses exam the predictive relationships of control procedures, security personnel training, security personnel professionalism, and security screening systems on passenger perceived bias. Multiple regression analysis is used to test the hypotheses. The research findings indicate that security personnel professionalism is negatively and significantly related to passenger perceived bias. Also, security personnel training and security control procedures are positively and significantly related to security personnel professionalism. Management implications, limitations, and recommendations for future research are offered.
- Published
- 2020
14. Self-Management and Work Performance: An Exploratory Cross-Cultural Study
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Jane V. Wheeler, Amelia S. Carr, Steven H. Cady, and Lillian Schumacher
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Self-management ,Process (engineering) ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Public relations ,Work performance ,Test (assessment) ,Work (electrical) ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Introspection ,Cross-cultural ,Consciousness ,Psychology ,business ,General Environmental Science ,media_common - Abstract
Without understanding one's self, individuals blindly and with a minimal amount of consciousness, go about their lives and their businesses. Understanding one's self and how it can influence work performance offers individuals the opportunity to more meaningfully carry out their duties and fulfil their work requirements. Sri Aurobindo, an Indian spiritual philosopher and advocate of self-management, argued that man is not the last step in the evolutionary process; rather, man is a transitional being with the capacity to collaborate in its own evolution. The international township of Auroville, India was founded with Aurobindo's vision in mind. We administered a questionnaire to people in Auroville and a comparable group in Ohio, USA. This cross-cultural study allowed us to test hypotheses and compare the samples. Results suggest that practicing self-management on a moment-to-moment basis can help a person become more self-aware, thereby enhancing the individual's work performance. Results and implications are provided.
- Published
- 2020
15. Comparing genetic diversity and demographic history in co-distributed wild South American camelids
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Lenin Maturrano, Juan C. Marín, Yibo Hu, Pablo Orozco-terWengel, D. Hoces, Jane V. Wheeler, M. Kadwell, Michael William Bruford, Ciara S. Casey, M. Fernández, Raúl Rosadio, and K. Yaya
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Genetic Markers ,0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Range (biology) ,Demographic history ,Population ,Biology ,DNA, Mitochondrial ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,Coalescent theory ,03 medical and health sciences ,Gene Frequency ,Effective population size ,Peru ,Genetic variation ,Genetics ,Animals ,Cluster Analysis ,Chile ,Domestication ,education ,Genetics (clinical) ,Demography ,Genetic diversity ,education.field_of_study ,Ecology ,Genetic Variation ,Genetics, Population ,030104 developmental biology ,Haplotypes ,Genetic Loci ,Camelids, New World ,Microsatellite Repeats - Abstract
Vicuñas and guanacos are two species of wild South American camelids that are key ruminants in the ecosystems where they occur. Although closely related, these species feature differing ecologies and life history characters, which are expected to influence both their genetic diversity and population differentiation at different spatial scales. Here, using mitochondrial and microsatellite genetic markers, we show that vicuña display lower genetic diversity within populations than guanaco but exhibit more structure across their Peruvian range, which may reflect a combination of natural genetic differentiation linked to geographic isolation and recent anthropogenic population declines. Coalescent-based demographic analyses indicate that both species have passed through a strong bottleneck, reducing their effective population sizes from over 20,000 to less than 1000 individuals. For vicuña, this bottleneck is inferred to have taken place ~3300 years ago, but to have occurred more recently for guanaco at ~2000 years ago. These inferred dates are considerably later than the onset of domestication (when the alpaca was domesticated from the vicuña while the llama was domesticated from the guanaco), coinciding instead with a major human population expansion following the mid-Holocene cold period. As importantly, they imply earlier declines than the well-documented Spanish conquest, where major mass mortality events were recorded for Andean human and camelid populations. We argue that underlying species’ differences and recent demographic perturbations have influenced genetic diversity in modern vicuña and guanaco populations, and these processes should be carefully evaluated in the development and implementation of management strategies for these important genetic resources.
- Published
- 2018
16. Seroprevalence to pathogenic leptospira in Peruvian alpacas and vicuñas
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G Hermelinda Rivera, A Raúl Rosadio, A Álvaro Véliz, D Hugo Castillo, L Katherine Yaya, Jane V. Wheeler, and H Antony Rodríguez
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Serotype ,Veterinary medicine ,Titer ,Specific antibody ,Food Animals ,biology ,Agglutination Testing ,Leptospira ,Seroprevalence ,Animal Science and Zoology ,biology.organism_classification ,Serum samples - Abstract
Micro agglutination testing was used to detect specific antibodies against five pathogenic Leptospira serovars ( icterohaemorrhagiae , pomona , canicola , wolfii and ballum ) in 793 alpaca and 195 vicuna serum samples collected in the Huancavelica and Ayacucho Departments of Peru. The study revealed that 89.6% of the alpacas and 77.4% of the vicunas were positive to one or more serovars. In alpacas, the titers varied from 1:100 to 1:1600 for reactions to icterohaemorrhagiae (43.4%) and pomona (37.8%), whereas among vicunas titers varied from 1:100 to 1:400 for reactions to the same serovarsi cterohaemorrhagiae (69.2%) and pomona (8.2%). The alpacas also had antibodies to canicola (7.8%) and wolfii (0.6%). These results show that these animals had previous exposure to 4 of the 5 serovars tested, and the elevated titers to icterohaemorrhagiae and pomona in alpacas suggest a recent infection event.
- Published
- 2015
17. Exploring supply management status, internal collaboration and operating performance
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Jane V. Wheeler, Michelle D. Steward, Janet L. Hartley, Michelle Brodke, and Zhaohui Wu
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Process management ,Strategy and Management ,Supply chain ,Service management ,Management Science and Operations Research ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Delivery Performance ,Management of Technology and Innovation ,Supply management ,Internal link ,Lower cost ,Business ,Marketing ,Path analysis (statistics) - Abstract
An important internal link in the supply chain is between supply managers and their internal customers. These individuals must collaborate to determine purchase specifications, develop sourcing strategies, ensure supplier performance, and maintain effective supplier relationships. Using power and social networking as the theoretical lenses, we develop and test a conceptual model examining the supply management function’s status, supply manager’s networking behavior, collaboration with the internal customer, and operating performance (lower cost, better quality, faster delivery, and consistent delivery). We also examine the mediating effect of collaboration and networking behavior on the positive effect of status and operating performance. Data gathered in an online survey of supply management professionals are examined using path analysis. Results show that without including the mediators, supply management status is directly related to all four operating performance measures. It is also positively related to collaboration with the internal customer and networking behavior. Contrary to expectations, the supply manager’s networking behavior is not related to collaboration with the internal customer. Collaboration is positively related to all four operating performance measures. However, the supply manager’s networking behavior is only related to one operating performance measure, better quality. Mediation analysis shows that supply management status has a direct effect on faster delivery performance beyond what is explained by collaboration and the supply manager’s networking behavior. The findings suggest that organizations should look for ways to elevate the status of the supply management function to improve internal collaboration and operating performance.
- Published
- 2014
18. Synergistic roles of climate warming and human occupation in Patagonian megafaunal extinctions during the Last Deglaciation
- Author
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Rafael Sebastián Paunero, Matías E. Medina, Teresa Civalero, Mariana E. De Nigris, Pablo Fernandez, Jeremy J. Austin, Chris S. M. Turney, Ludovic Orlando, Daniel Loponte, Jessica L. Metcalf, Rodolfo Salas-Gismondi, Fabiana María Martin, Ross Barnett, Clara Otaola, Alan Cooper, Kevin L. Seymour, Sarah C Bray, Alejandra Gasco, Luis Alberto Borrero, Julia T. Vilstrup, Víctor Durán, Jane V. Wheeler, Francisco Juan Prevosti, Corey J. A. Bradshaw, Adolfo Gil, Metcalf, Jessica L, Turney, Chris, Barnett, Ross, Martin, Fabiana, Bray, Sarah C, and Cooper, Alan
- Subjects
human occupation ,0301 basic medicine ,Felidae ,mitochondrial DNA ,01 natural sciences ,Arqueología ,purl.org/becyt/ford/1 [https] ,Antarctic Cold Reversal ,megafauna ,warming phase ,Late Pleistocene ,Megafauna ,Climate change ,Human Activities ,Ice Cover ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Research Articles ,Multidisciplinary ,Ecology ,extinction ,SciAdv r-articles ,humanities ,Pleistocene ,PATAGONIA ,climate change ,EXTINCTION ,Late Pleistocene megafaunal extinctions ,geographic locations ,CIENCIAS NATURALES Y EXACTAS ,Ursidae ,Research Article ,010506 paleontology ,Otras Ciencias Biológicas ,Extinction, Biological ,DNA, Mitochondrial ,Bone and Bones ,Ciencias Biológicas ,03 medical and health sciences ,Journal Article ,Deglaciation ,Animals ,Humans ,human ,Stadial ,purl.org/becyt/ford/1.6 [https] ,climate ,Camelidae ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Extinction event ,Megafaunal extinctions ,Radiometric Dating ,MEGAFAUNAL ,Global warming ,social sciences ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,South America ,Ecología ,15. Life on land ,CLIMATE ,030104 developmental biology ,13. Climate action ,radiocarbon ,HUNTING ,sense organs - Abstract
The causes of Late Pleistocene megafaunal extinctions (60, 000 to 11, 650 years ago, hereafter 60 to 11.65 ka) remain contentious, with major phases coinciding with both human arrival and climate change around the world. The Americas provide a unique opportunity to disentangle these factors as human colonization took place over a narrow timeframe (∼15 to 14.6 ka) but during contrasting temperature trends across each continent. Unfortunately, limited data sets in South America have so far precluded detailed comparison. We analyze genetic and radiocarbon data from 89 and 71 Patagonian megafaunal bones, respectively, more than doubling the high-quality Pleistocene megafaunal radiocarbon data sets from the region.Weidentify anarrowmegafaunal extinction phase 12, 280 ± 110 years ago, some 1 to 3 thousand years after initial human presence in the area. Although humans arrived immediately prior to a cold phase, the Antarctic Cold Reversal stadial, megafaunal extinctions did not occur until the stadial finished and the subsequent warming phase commenced some 1 to 3 thousand years later. The increased resolution provided by the Patagonianmaterial reveals that the sequence of climate andextinctionevents inNorthandSouth America were temporally inverted, but in both cases, megafaunal extinctions did not occur until human presence and climate warming coincided. Overall, metapopulation processes involving subpopulation connectivity on a continental scale appear to have been critical for megafaunal species survival of both climate change and human impacts., La lista completa de autores que integran el documento puede consultarse en el archivo, Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo
- Published
- 2016
19. Identifying archaeological wood stack charcoal production sites using geophysical prospection: magnetic characteristics from a modern wood stack charcoal burn site
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Alan J. Powell, Jane V. Wheeler, and Catherine M. Batt
- Subjects
Archeology ,Temperature monitoring ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Feature (archaeology) ,Kiln ,Geophysical prospection ,Stack (geology) ,Archaeology ,Mining engineering ,Geophysical survey (archaeology) ,visual_art ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Environmental science ,Charcoal - Abstract
Charcoal making was a common process in the woodlands of Britain for many centuries. However, historic ‘wood stack’ production sites are difficult to identify. This paper tests the hypothesis that geophysical survey is an appropriate method for the discovery and identification of archaeological charcoal making sites. A traditional wood stack charcoal kiln was constructed in Low Staindale, Dalby Forest, near Pickering, North Yorkshire, to investigate the charcoaling process and the effect of low-temperature carbonisation on the magnetic properties of the soil underlying the kiln. The results from temperature monitoring (within and beneath the charcoal stack) throughout the charcoaling process, geophysical surveys across the charcoal kiln platform, and laboratory analysis of soil and ash samples, are presented. The degree to which the magnetic properties of the ground beneath the charcoal kiln had been enhanced as a consequence of this low-temperature process is discussed. Whilst some magnetic enhancement to the soil beneath the kiln platform was recorded, enhancement appears to be the result of contamination from the wood stack sealing material rather than the effect of heat transfer resulting from the charcoaling process. The results suggest that whilst historic wood stack charcoal production sites are likely to remain an enigmatic and under-reported feature in the archaeological landscape, geophysical prospection does have the potential for identification of these sites.
- Published
- 2012
20. Charcoal analysis of industrial fuelwood from medieval and early modern iron-working sites in Bilsdale and Rievaulx, North Yorkshire, UK: evidence for species selection and woodland management
- Author
-
Jane V. Wheeler
- Subjects
Archeology ,Blast furnace ,Forest management ,Logging ,Species diversity ,Woodland ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,Archaeology ,Bloomery ,Geography ,visual_art ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Dendrochronology ,Charcoal - Abstract
This paper presents the results of species diversity and dendrological analyses of archaeological charcoal excavated from medieval and early modern iron production sites in Bilsdale, and at Rievaulx in the neighbouring valley of Ryedale, North Yorkshire, UK. Standard methods of quantification are used to assess species diversity, sampling sufficiency and taxa presence. The assessment of dendrological features provides additional evidence for growth trends and cutting cycles analogous with cyclical woodland management, as well as environmental and growing conditions. Analysis of archaeological charcoal from four medieval bloomery furnace sites in Bilsdale, and from the site of the hammersmithy and blast furnace at the early modern iron works at Rievaulx, provide comparable data-sets which indicate a change in cutting practise and dominant species selection for industrial fuelwood occurred between the 12th- and mid-16th centuries AD. Results show that dominant species presence changed from an admix...
- Published
- 2011
21. Finding Bosworth Battlefield: a multiproxy palaeoenvironmental investigation of lowland sediments from Dadlington, Leicestershire, England
- Author
-
Graeme T. Swindles, Benjamin R. Gearey, and Jane V. Wheeler
- Subjects
Archeology ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Battle ,Marsh ,Floodplain ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Wetland ,Context (language use) ,Vegetation ,Archaeology ,Middle Ages ,Geology ,Chronology ,media_common - Abstract
This paper presents the results of palaeoenvironmental investigations in an area proposed to contain the site of Bosworth Battlefield, near Dadlington, Leicestershire. Polydore Vergil's sixteenth century account is the only source, albeit secondary, that is referenced in histories and logistical interpretations of the battle. Antiquarians and historians repeatedly reference this account, citing its description of a ‘marsh’ which is believed to have been the central site of the melee. Two sites in the floodplain of the former River Tweed have been identified as containing organic deposits characteristic of wetland environments. High-resolution lithostratigraphic and palaeoenvironmental data from each site are used to critically evaluate if the deposits represent the marsh and thus define the battlefield as described by Vergil. These new multiproxy data consolidate the local chronology of vegetation, hydrology, and sedimentological dynamics at the site from the Neolithic to the Medieval period. Whilst a precise interpretation of ground conditions at the time of the battle in 1485 cannot be made, due to truncation of the record as a result of modern ploughing and floodplain processes, the results provide a wider landscape context and illustrate the presence of local wetlands in this area that existed into the Medieval period.
- Published
- 2010
22. The relationship between emotional intelligence and buyer's performance
- Author
-
Jane V. Wheeler, Amelia S. Carr, and Lillian Schumacher
- Subjects
Marketing ,Survey methodology ,Variables ,Process (engineering) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Emotional intelligence ,Regression analysis ,Business ,Business and International Management ,media_common - Abstract
PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to explore the relationship between buyer's emotional intelligence and buyer's relationship performance.Design/methodology/approachA survey methodology was used to collect data for this study. The survey was administered using an assessment process which incorporated “buyers'” and “suppliers'” assessment for the independent variable, emotional intelligence, and the dependent variable, relationship performance. The respondents consisted of 34 buyers and 102 suppliers.FindingsCorrelation and regression analysis revealed several significant relationships between the variables. Specifically, buyers' self‐assessed emotional intelligence was not significantly related to buyers' self‐assessed relationship performance. Buyers' emotional intelligence assessed by suppliers was significantly related to buyers' relationship performance assessed by suppliers. Buyers' emotional intelligence (as assessed by buyers and suppliers' assessment differences) was not significantly related to buyers' self‐assessed relationship performance. Last, buyers' emotional intelligence (as assessed by buyers' and suppliers' assessment differences) was significantly related to buyers' relationship performance (as assessed by buyers' and suppliers' assessment differences). Thus, the results suggest that buyers' emotional intelligence is positively related to relationship performance, most significantly from the perspective of their key suppliers.Originality/valueThis study is the first to introduce emotional intelligence within an environment that consisted of individuals working with others outside of their respective organizations (buyers and suppliers). This research offers some insight to buyers on the implications of emotional intelligence and how it can be used to support their interactions with their key suppliers.
- Published
- 2009
23. The impact of social environments on emotional, social, and cognitive competency development
- Author
-
Jane V. Wheeler
- Subjects
Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Applied psychology ,Individualized instruction ,General Engineering ,Social environment ,Erikson's stages of psychosocial development ,Cognition ,Theory of change ,Social learning ,Assessment data ,Cognitive development ,Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous) ,Psychology ,Social psychology - Abstract
PurposeThe purpose of this research is to examine the interactions between individuals and the social environment as individuals engage in self‐directed learning, a predecessor to intentional change theory. The individuals are graduates of a part‐time MBA program and the social environment is the life sphere framework introduced with this study. Self‐directed learning refers to the learning agendas that these people outlined for themselves when they first entered the MBA program.Design/methodology/approachLongitudinal assessment data were collected using the critical incident interview, the learning skills profile, and the life sphere interview. Correlations were run testing the hypotheses: as the number of life spheres, relationships, or activities increases, so will the demonstration of the targeted competencies; and if the participant is able to work on developing these competencies in the life sphere that he or she designates as primary to the learning goal, then the demonstration of these competencies will improve.FindingsThe number of life spheres, relationships, and activities does impact positively on the demonstration of these competencies and those participants for whom the work organization life sphere is primary to learning goal achievement showed improved demonstration of the targeted competencies.Research limitations/implicationsThe study needs to be replicated with a larger sample size. This initial study was merely exploratory in nature.Originality/valueAs society approaches the virtual office it makes sense that it will get what it needs, when it needs it – no matter where one is or to whom one is talking. With these changes has come the need to find resources in places and from people that may not have been considered previously. The relationships and activities in one's social environment are more critical than ever before.
- Published
- 2008
24. Spheroidal carbonaceous particles are a defining stratigraphic marker for the Anthropocene
- Author
-
Thomas Hadlari, Graeme T. Swindles, T. Edward Turner, Karen L. Bacon, Jane V. Wheeler, Elizabeth J. Watson, and Jennifer M. Galloway
- Subjects
010506 paleontology ,Multidisciplinary ,Peat ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Earth science ,Global Standard Stratigraphic Age ,Biology ,Bioinformatics ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,Global Boundary Stratotype Section and Point ,Arctic ,Ice core ,13. Climate action ,Anthropocene ,Sedimentary rock ,SDG 14 - Life Below Water ,General ,Holocene ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
There has been recent debate over stratigraphic markers used to demarcate the Anthropocene from the Holocene Epoch. However, many of the proposed markers are found only in limited areas of the world or do not reflect human impacts on the environment. Here we show that spheroidal carbonaceous particles (SCPs), a distinct form of black carbon produced from burning fossil fuels in energy production and heavy industry, provide unambiguous stratigraphic markers of the human activities that have rapidly changed planet Earth over the last century. SCPs are found in terrestrial and marine sediments or ice cores in every continent, including remote areas such as the high Arctic and Antarctica. The rapid increase in SCPs mostly occurs in the mid-twentieth century and is contemporaneous with the ‘Great Acceleration’. It therefore reflects the intensification of fossil fuel usage and can be traced across the globe. We integrate global records of SCPs and propose that the global rapid increase in SCPs in sedimentary records can be used to inform a Global Standard Stratigraphic Age for the Anthropocene. A high-resolution SCP sequence from a lake or peatland may provide the much-needed ‘Golden Spike’ (Global Boundary Stratotype Section and Point).
- Published
- 2015
25. The Magnetic Sentences Industry Game: A Competitive In-Class Experience of Business-Level Strategy
- Author
-
Maureen Casile and Jane V. Wheeler
- Subjects
Strategic planning ,Class (computer programming) ,Knowledge management ,Higher education ,business.industry ,Teaching method ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,General Business, Management and Accounting ,Experiential learning ,Education ,Variety (cybernetics) ,0502 economics and business ,Pedagogy ,Organizational learning ,Product (category theory) ,business ,Psychology ,0503 education ,050203 business & management - Abstract
The Magnetic Sentences Industry Game is a high-energy in-class exercise designed to help students gain hands-on experience with setting, implementing, evaluating, and revising business-level strategy. Students compete in teams to create and market sentences using Magnetic Poetry (a product of Magnetic Poetry, Inc.). Revenues earned are highly dependent on the successful development and implementation of a cohesive business-level strategy. The game experience should create opportunities for the class to discuss a variety of strategic issues including external environment, internal environment, competitive dynamics, the advantages and disadvantages of various generic business-level strategies, organizational learning, and strategic groups.
- Published
- 2005
26. How to lead a self-managing team
- Author
-
Vanessa Urch Druskat and Jane V. Wheeler
- Subjects
Team composition ,Collaborative software ,Engineering ,business.industry ,Strategy and Management ,Team effectiveness ,Public relations ,Lead (geology) ,Production manager ,Management of Technology and Innovation ,Operations management ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Set (psychology) ,business ,Working group ,Productivity - Abstract
This work discusses the teams that are basically left to run themselves can be highly efficient and productive. To be successful, though, such autonomous groups require a specific type of external leadership. To get work done, many companies organize employees into self-managing teams that are basically left to run themselves with some guidance from an external leader. In fact, comprehensive surveys report that 79% of companies in the fortune 1000 and 81% of manufacturing organizations currently deploy such "empowered", "self-directed" or "autonomous" teams. Because of their widespread use, much research has been devoted to understanding how best to set up self-managing teams to maximize their productivity and effectiveness. Interestingly, though, relatively little attention has been paid to the leaders who must oversee such working groups.
- Published
- 2004
27. Managing from the Boundary: The Effective Leadership of Self-Managing Work Teams
- Author
-
Jane V. Wheeler and Vanessa Urch Druskat
- Subjects
Strategic planning ,Teamwork ,Organizational behavior management ,Process management ,Computer science ,Process (engineering) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Employee empowerment ,Strategy and Management ,General Medicine ,Shared leadership ,General Business, Management and Accounting ,Boundary (real estate) ,Role expectation ,Management of Technology and Innovation ,Task analysis ,Participatory management ,Business ,Work teams ,Span of control ,Business and International Management ,Organizational effectiveness ,Critical Incident Technique ,media_common - Abstract
We used in-depth critical incident interviews with the external leaders of self-managing work teams and their team members, and interviews and surveys provided by managers, to understand how effective leader behaviors and strategies unfold over time. Content analyses of the data produced a process model showing that effective external leaders move back and forth across boundaries to build relationships, scout necessary information, persuade their teams and outside constituents to support one another, and empower their teams to achieve success.
- Published
- 2003
28. Expanding our Teaching Effectiveness: Understanding our Responses to 'In-The-Moment' Classroom Events
- Author
-
Poppy Lauretta McLeod and Jane V. Wheeler
- Subjects
05 social sciences ,050301 education ,Flexibility (personality) ,Affect (psychology) ,General Business, Management and Accounting ,Experiential learning ,Education ,Formative assessment ,Moment (mathematics) ,0502 economics and business ,Psychology ,0503 education ,Social psychology ,050203 business & management ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Responses to “in-the-moment” events—defined as events that take an unexpected and potentially negative turn and that require immediate unplanned responses, which may affect the continued integrity and effectiveness of the learning environment—are examined as formative of teaching effectiveness. It is argued that teacher flexibility when responding is a key factor for effectiveness. Using experiential learning theory as a framework, the concept of flexibility in responding to such events is explored. Case studies of actual teaching situations are used as the authors illustrate the application of the framework and offer strategies for increasing response flexibility.
- Published
- 2002
29. Ancient DNA Evidence for Old World Origin of New World Dogs
- Author
-
Raúl Valadez, Robert K. Wayne, Jane V. Wheeler, Jennifer A. Leonard, Carles Vilà, and Sonia Guillén
- Subjects
Mitochondrial DNA ,Multidisciplinary ,Old World ,Ancient DNA ,Pleistocene ,Phylogenetics ,Zoology ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Biology ,Clade ,Cladistics - Abstract
Mitochondrial DNA sequences isolated from ancient dog remains from Latin America and Alaska showed that native American dogs originated from multiple Old World lineages of dogs that accompanied late Pleistocene humans across the Bering Strait. One clade of dog sequences was unique to the New World, which is consistent with a period of geographic isolation. This unique clade was absent from a large sample of modern dogs, which implies that European colonists systematically discouraged the breeding of native American dogs.
- Published
- 2002
30. Genetic analysis reveals the wild ancestors of the llama and the alpaca
- Author
-
Helen F. Stanley, Ricardo Baldi, Raúl Rosadio, Matilde Fernandez, Miranda Kadwell, Jane V. Wheeler, and Michael William Bruford
- Subjects
Male ,Mitochondrial DNA ,Lineage (genetic) ,Genotype ,Sequence Homology ,Animals, Wild ,Biology ,Vicugna pacos ,DNA, Mitochondrial ,Genetic analysis ,Article ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Gene Frequency ,biology.domesticated_animal ,Animals ,Allele ,Domestication ,General Environmental Science ,Hybrid ,Genetics ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,General Medicine ,South America ,Evolutionary biology ,Animals, Domestic ,Microsatellite ,Female ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Camelids, New World ,Microsatellite Repeats - Abstract
The origins of South America's domestic alpaca and llama remain controversial due to hybridization, near extirpation during the Spanish conquest and difficulties in archaeological interpretation. Traditionally, the ancestry of both forms is attributed to the guanaco, while the vicuña is assumed never to have been domesticated. Recent research has, however, linked the alpaca to the vicuña, dating domestication to 6000-7000 years before present in the Peruvian Andes. Here, we examine in detail the genetic relationships between the South American camelids in order to determine the origins of the domestic forms, using mitochondrial (mt) and microsatellite DNA. MtDNA analysis places 80% of llama and alpaca sequences in the guanaco lineage, with those possessing vicuña mtDNA being nearly all alpaca or alpaca-vicuña hybrids. We also examined four microsatellites in wild known-provenance vicuña and guanaco, including two loci with non-overlapping allele size ranges in the wild species. In contrast to the mtDNA, these markers show high genetic similarity between alpaca and vicuña, and between llama and guanaco, although bidirectional hybridization is also revealed. Finally, combined marker analysis on a subset of samples confirms the microsatellite interpretation and suggests that the alpaca is descended from the vicuña, and should be reclassified as Vicugna pacos. This result has major implications for the future management of wild and domestic camelids in South America.
- Published
- 2001
31. Centennial-scale climate change in Ireland during the Holocene
- Author
-
Phil Stastney, Ian Armit, Jeffrey J. Blackford, Antony Blundell, Bettina S. Stefanini, Fraser J.G. Mitchell, Katharina Becker, Julia McCarroll, Gill Plunkett, Heidi A. Rea, T.J. Daley, Frank M. Chambers, T. Edward Turner, Jonathan A. Holmes, Peter G. Langdon, Pirita Oksanen, Oliver G. Pritchard, Ian Matthews, Matthew J. Amesbury, Jane Holmes, Ian T. Lawson, Frank McDermott, Jane V. Wheeler, Graeme T. Swindles, Thomas P. Roland, Nicholas Branch, Benjamin R. Gearey, Georg Schettler, Helen Roe, Maarten Blaauw, Dan J. Charman, and Daniel Young
- Subjects
geography ,Peat ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Water table ,Climate change ,Speleothem ,550 - Earth sciences ,Coherence (statistics) ,Climatology ,SDG 13 - Climate Action ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Thermohaline circulation ,Tephra ,Holocene ,Geology - Abstract
We examine mid- to late Holocene centennial-scale climate variability in Ireland using proxy data from peatlands, lakes and a speleothem. A high degree of between-record variability is apparent in the proxy data and significant chronological uncertainties are present. However, tephra layers provide a robust tool for correlation and improve the chronological precision of the records. Although we can find no statistically significant coherence in the dataset as a whole, a selection of high-quality peatland water table reconstructions co-vary more than would be expected by chance alone. A locally weighted regression model with bootstrapping can be used to construct a ‘best-estimate’ palaeoclimatic reconstruction from these datasets. Visual comparison and cross-wavelet analysis of peatland water table compilations from Ireland and Northern Britain shows that there are some periods of coherence between these records. Some terrestrial palaeoclimatic changes in Ireland appear to coincide with changes in the North Atlantic thermohaline circulation and solar activity. However, these relationships are inconsistent and may be obscured by chronological uncertainties. We conclude by suggesting an agenda for future Holocene climate research in Ireland.
- Published
- 2013
32. Llamas and Alpacas: Pre-conquest breeds and post-conquest hybrids
- Author
-
A.J.F. Russel, Hilary Redden, and Jane V. Wheeler
- Subjects
Archeology ,Fauna ,Zoology ,Biology ,Lama ,biology.organism_classification ,Archaeology ,Bottle neck ,Hybrid ,CONQUEST - Abstract
Comparison of pre-conquest and contemporary Andean llama and alpaca phenotypes suggests that a breakdown in specialized breeding took place after European contact which led to the disappearance of fine fibre producing alpaca and llama breeds. The causes of this loss ultimately lie in the decimation of native Andean herds and herders during the Spanish conquest. The heterogeneous characteristics of today's animals can be attributed to extensive hybridization and a possible genetic bottle neck during the 16th century.
- Published
- 1995
33. OPTIMIZACIÓN DE UNA TÉCNICA PARA LA EXTRACCIÓN DE UN ADN DE HECES DE VICUÑA (Vicugna vicugna mensalis)
- Author
-
M L Juan Aguilar, H Lenin Maturrano, Jane V. Wheeler, D Paloma Krüger, I Jesús Chávez, and A Raúl Rosadio
- Subjects
General Veterinary ,Biology ,Humanities - Abstract
Actualmente es posible determinar el estatus de especies silvestres mediante el analisis de ADN extraido de muestras no invasivas como las heces. Aunque dichos analisis suelen ser dificultosos debido principalmente a la composicion y conservacion de las heces, se ha demostrado en muchas especies que con el desarrollo de metodos adecuados de extraccion es posible maximizar la fiabilidad y eficacia de este procedimiento. Por tanto, el objetivo del presente estudio fue optimizar un metodo de extraccion de ADN de heces de vicuna Vicugna vicugna mensalis, especie clasificada como casi amenazada en el Peru, con la finalidad de obtener ADN de suficiente calidad para analisis moleculares. Se recolectaron 51 muestras de heces durante los meses de agosto y septiembre de 2008 en dos comunidades vicuneras ubicadas a mas de 4600 msnm en los departamentos de Junin y Moquegua. Luego de observar la defecacion, las muestras fueron recolectadas en forma inmediata, conservadas en etanol y transportadas al laboratorio para la extraccion del ADN. El kit comercial QIAamp® DNA Stool Mini Kit (QIAGEN) fue modificado para incluir un vigoroso y extenso proceso de agitacion y los resultados fueron comparados con dos protocolos comunmente utilizados: fenol/cloroformo/alcohol isoamilico y el mismo kit QIAGEN. La cantidad del ADN extraido fue observado en electroforesis horizontal en geles de agarosa, y la calidad evaluada mediante la amplificacion y visualizacion de los tamanos esperados de los microsatelites YWLL46 y LCA19. Aunque se logro extraer ADN con los tres metodos, solamente el metodo modificado permitio obtener ADN de suficiente calidad para ser utilizado en pruebas moleculares. Palabras clave: extraccion de ADN, heces, vicuna
- Published
- 2012
34. DETERMINACIÓN DEL SEXO MEDIANTE LA TÉCNICA DE REACCIÓN EN CADENA DE LA POLIMERASA EN CAMÉLIDOS SUDAMERICANOS
- Author
-
A Raúl Rosadio, H Lenin Maturrano, Jane V. Wheeler, and V Vanya Montenegro
- Subjects
General Veterinary ,Biology ,Molecular biology - Abstract
Se reporta el desarrollo y optimizaciones de tecnicas moleculares (PCR simple, mul- tiple y semi-anidada) para determinar el sexo de camelidos sudamericanos (CSA) amplifi- cando la secuencia del gen Zinc Finger Protein (ZF). La tecnica utilizo ADN obtenido de 28 muestras de sangre de alpacas, llamas y vicunas, 20 muestras de heces de vicunas y guanacos conservadas en etanol al 96%, y 22 embriones de alpaca colectados entre 72 y 96 horas postmonta y preservados en etanol. Las muestras de ADN de sangre y heces fueron extraidas usando kits comerciales, y las de embriones aplicando tres metodos (ebullicion, proteinasa K y fenol-cloroformo). Una vez optimizada la PCR simple para la deteccion de los genes ZFY y ZFX, se implemento la PCR multiple para ADN de sangre y heces y la PCR semi-anidada para ADN de embriones. La tecnica de PCR multiple deter- mino el sexo correctamente en el 100% de las muestras de ADN sanguineo, en el 87.5% de muestras de ADN de heces colectadas en 2008 y en el 50% de las muestras de ADN de heces colectadas en 2004 y preservadas durante cuatro anos antes del analisis. La prue- ba de PCR semi-anidada, sin embargo, no pudo ser optimizada
- Published
- 2012
35. Mitochondrial DNA variation and systematics of the guanaco (Lama guanicoe, ARTIODACTYLA: CAMELIDAE)
- Author
-
R. Eduardo Palma, Jane V. Wheeler, Cristian Bonacic, Michael William Bruford, Benito A. González, Ciara S. Casey, Angel E. Spotorno, Elie Poulin, and Juan C. Marín
- Subjects
Systematics ,education.field_of_study ,Genetic diversity ,Ungulate ,Ecology ,biology ,Population ,Zoology ,Subspecies ,biology.organism_classification ,Monophyly ,Phylogeography ,D-loop ,parasitic diseases ,Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,education ,geographic locations ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
Guanacos (Lama guanicoe) are the most important native herbivorous species in the South American steppes and the dominant ungulate in a fauna rich in rodents but poor in large mammal species. Between 2 and 4 subspecies are usually recognized within Lama guanicoe, based on subtle morphological differences and geographic distribution. To evaluate whether molecular variation is consistent with the latter hypotheses, we analyzed the complete cytochrome-b and partial control region mitochondrial DNA sequences of L. guanicoe from 22 localities in Peru, Bolivia, Argentina, and Chile. Sequence analyses of both genes support the monophyly of the species but failed to distinguish the occurrence of subspecies along the geographic range. Despite that, the northernmost populations (Peru and northern Chile) showed some degree of genetic differentiation with respect to southern representatives from Argentina, Bolivia, and rest of Chile. Analysis of genetic diversity also showed a strong signal of past low population size and a recent population expansion.
- Published
- 2008
36. Domestication of Guinea Pigs from a Southern Peru-Northern Chile Wild Species and their Middle Pre-Columbian MummiesDomesticacióN Del Cuy A Partir De Poblaciones Originarias Del Sur Del Perú Y Norte De Chile, Con La Descripción De Sus Momias Precolombinas
- Author
-
Germán Raúl Manríquez Soto, Andrea Fernández L., Ángel Spotorno Oyarzún, Juan C. Marín, Fermín González Bergas, and Jane V. Wheeler
- Subjects
Wild species ,Geography ,Zoology ,Ancient history ,Domestication - Published
- 2007
37. Sistemática, taxonomía y domesticación de alpacas y llamas: nueva evidencia cromosómica y molecular
- Author
-
M. Angélica Alliende, Cristian Bonacic, Ciara S. Casey, Benito A. González, Michael William Bruford, R. Eduardo Palma, Ángel E Spotorno, Jane V. Wheeler, Elie Poulin, Juan C. Marín, and Beatriz Zapata
- Subjects
Phylogenetic tree ,biology ,G banding ,Zoology ,Lamini ,Lama ,Subspecies ,biology.organism_classification ,Lama glama ,biology.domesticated_animal ,Vicugna ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,General Environmental Science ,Camelid - Abstract
Four camelid species exist in South America: two wild, the guanaco (Lama guanicoe) and the vicuna (Vicugna vicugna), and two domestic, the alpaca (Lama pacos) and the llama (Lama glama). However, the origin of the domestic species has been a matter of debate. In the present study, variations in chromosome G banding patterns and in two mitochondrial gene sequences have been used to study the origin and classification of the llama and alpaca.-Similar patterns in chromosome G band structure were observed in all four Lamini species, and these in turn were similar to the bands described for camels, Camelus bactrianus. However, fine and consistent differences were found in the short arms of chromosome 1, separating camels, guanacos and llamas from vicunas and alpacas. This pattern was consistent even in a hybrid guanaco x alpaca. Equivalent relationship showed the complete cytochrome b gene sequences, and the minimum expansion tree of the partial control region sequence, grouping guanaco with llama and vicuna with alpaca. Phylogenetic analyses showed V. vicugna and L. guanicoe as monophyletic groups. Analysis of both gene sequences revealed two clades within vicuna, concordant with the two described subspecies, but the results for guanaco did not confirm existence of the four previously proposed subspecies. The combined analysis of chromosomal and molecular variation showed close genetic similarity between alpacas and vicunas, as well as between llamas and guanacos. Although directional hybridization was revealed, our results strongly support the hypothesis that the llama would have derived from L. guanicoe and the alpaca from V. vicugna, supporting reciassification as V. pacos.
- Published
- 2007
38. Mitochondrial phylogeography and demographic history of the Vicuña: implications for conservation
- Author
-
Jane V. Wheeler, Raúl Rosadio, J. Rodriguez, Ciara S. Casey, J. Olazabal, Angel E. Spotorno, Michael William Bruford, K. Yaya, Miranda Kadwell, Juan C. Marín, and D. Hoces
- Subjects
Pleistocene ,Demographic history ,Population ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Biology ,Extinction, Biological ,DNA, Mitochondrial ,Genetic variation ,Genetics ,Animals ,education ,Genetics (clinical) ,Phylogeny ,Genetic diversity ,education.field_of_study ,Base Sequence ,Ecology ,Genetic Variation ,Small population size ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,biology.organism_classification ,Phylogeography ,C432 Veterinary Genetics ,Vicugna ,C180 Ecology ,Camelids, New World - Abstract
The vicuña (Vicugna vicugna; Miller, 1924) is a conservation success story, having recovered from near extinction in the 1960s to current population levels estimated at 275,000. However, lack of information about its demographic history and genetic diversity has limited both our understanding of its recovery and the development of science-based conservation measures. To examine the evolution and recent demographic history of the vicuña across its current range and to assess its genetic variation and population structure, we sequenced mitochondrial DNA from the control region (CR) for 261 individuals from 29 populations across Peru, Chile and Argentina. Our results suggest that populations currently designated as Vicugna vicugna vicugna and Vicugna vicugna mensalis comprise separate mitochondrial lineages. The current population distribution appears to be the result of a recent demographic expansion associated with the last major glacial event of the Pleistocene in the northern (18 to 22 degrees S) dry Andes 14-12,000 years ago and the establishment of an extremely arid belt known as the 'Dry Diagonal' to 29 degrees S. Within the Dry Diagonal, small populations of V. v. vicugna appear to have survived showing the genetic signature of demographic isolation, whereas to the north V. v. mensalis populations underwent a rapid demographic expansion before recent anthropogenic impacts.
- Published
- 2007
39. DETERMINACIÓN DE PARENTESCO EN ALPACAS (Vicugna pacos) POR MEDIO DEL ANÁLISIS DE ADN MICROSATÉLITE
- Author
-
Michael William Bruford, Ciara Siobhan Dodd, A Raúl Rosadio, B Jorge Rodríguez, and Jane V. Wheeler
- Subjects
Genetics ,alpaca ,Cervus ,General Veterinary ,biology ,microsatélites ,paternidad ,biology.organism_classification ,microsatellites ,Geography ,Polymorphic microsatellites ,Microsatellite ,paternity - Abstract
Diez microsatélites polimórficos para alpacas y llamas fueron usados para evaluar el parentesco en 47 alpacas (18 crías, 18 madres y 11 padres) de la Estación Experimental IVITA-Maranganí, provincia de Canchis (Cusco, Perú). El análisis se llevó a cabo utilizando dos metodologías: secuenciador automático (ABI 377 DNA sequencers®) y técnica de tinción con nitrato de plata. Los microsatélites fueron amplificados en tres reacciones de PCR múltiple y diez reacciones de PCR simple. El número de alelos varió entre 4 y 20. Las frecuencias alélicas y la probabilidad de exclusión (PE) fueron calculadas utilizando el software Cervus 2.0. Todos los loci, a excepción de dos, se encontraron dentro de los rangos encontrados en la literatura. La probabilidad de exclusión acumulada para los 10 loci fue 0.9999. La probabilidad de exclusión acumulada para cada reacción de PCR múltiple fue mayor a 0.90. Ambas metodologías obtuvieron los mismos resultados. Los resultados confirmaron la paternidad en 18 casos; sin embargo en el 22% de los casos (n=4) se identificaron padres alternativos que no correspondieron a los padres registrados., Ten polymorphic microsatellites for alpacas and llamas were used to evaluate paternity in 47 alpacas (18 crias, 18 mothers and 11 fathers) registered at IVITA-Maranganí Research Station, Canchis Province (Cusco-Peru). Analysis was carried out using two methodologies: Automatic Sequencer (ABI 377 DNA sequencers®) and silver staining techniques. Microsatellites were amplified in three multiple and ten single PCR reactions. The number of alleles varied between 4 and 20. The allelic frequencies and the exclusion probability were calculated using Cervus 2.0. All loci, except for two, were within the range published elsewhere. The accumulated exclusion probability for the ten loci was 0.9999. For each multiplex reaction the accumulated exclusion probability was more than 0.90. Both methodologies yielded the same results. The results confirmed paternity in 18 cases of parent-cria pairs, however in 22% of cases (n=4) were identified alternative parents than those indicated in farm records.
- Published
- 2004
40. Genetic Diversity and Management Implications for Vicuña Populations in Peru
- Author
-
Raúl Rosadio, Ciara Siobhan Dodd, Jane V. Wheeler, Michael William Bruford, J. Rodriguez, and D. Hoces
- Subjects
Genetic diversity ,Genetic distance ,Management implications ,Genetic drift ,Evolutionary biology ,Genetic marker ,Ecology ,Microsatellite ,Biology ,Genetic erosion ,Inbreeding - Abstract
The scientific aims of this Darwin Initiative-funded project were to use molecular genetic markers (specifically microsatellites) to: (1)elucidate the recent evolutionary history of Peruvian vicuna populations; (2)evaluate the genetic diversity and its partitioning in those populations; (3)identify demographically independent management units within these populations for future management; and (4)assess the likely genetic effects of past and future management strategies, including the likely consequences of sustainable utilisation practices. It is important to emphasise that this is the first such study carried out on a wild South American camelid.
- Published
- 2003
41. Philosophy as a missing link between values and behavior
- Author
-
Jane V. Wheeler, Richard E. Boyatzis, and Angela J. Murphy
- Subjects
Value (ethics) ,Adult ,Male ,Personality Inventory ,Social Values ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Empathy ,Humanism ,050105 experimental psychology ,Learning styles ,0502 economics and business ,Utilitarianism ,Personality ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Social Behavior ,General Psychology ,media_common ,Interpretation (philosophy) ,05 social sciences ,Flexibility (personality) ,Middle Aged ,Philosophy ,Social Perception ,Female ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,050203 business & management - Abstract
Despite the persistence of social scientists, evaluating the relationship between values and behavior has not yielded clear results. Here, a model is proposed to conceptualize and measure a person's operating philosophy. This assesses a different level of the value structure within personality from separate values or clusters of values; it is the evaluative structure within which a person's values exist. Building on major philosophies, such as utilitarianism or humanism, the model assumes that a person has a predominant Pragmatic, Intellectual, or Human Operating Philosophy. In a sample of 801 subjects, each of these operating philosophies had significant associations with a variety of the expected behaviors evident in work and graduate school, such as initiative and empathy, as well as learning styles, skills, and flexibility. Interpretation of the results is offered as a way to understand the relationship between people's values or beliefs and their behavior and approach to learning.
- Published
- 2000
42. Women Corporate Directors: Current Research and Future Directions
- Author
-
Jane V. Wheeler and Diana Bilimoria
- Subjects
business.industry ,Political science ,Engineering ethics ,Current (fluid) ,Public relations ,business - Published
- 2000
43. Molecular evolution of the family Camelidae: a mitochondrial DNA study
- Author
-
Helen F. Stanley, Jane V. Wheeler, and Miranda Kadwell
- Subjects
Mitochondrial DNA ,Old World ,Camelus ,Molecular Sequence Data ,DNA, Mitochondrial ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,DNA sequencing ,Molecular evolution ,Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid ,Camelini ,Animals ,Codon ,Gene ,Phylogeny ,General Environmental Science ,DNA Primers ,Genetics ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Phylogenetic tree ,biology ,Base Sequence ,Nucleic acid sequence ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Cytochrome b Group ,Biological Evolution ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Camelids, New World - Abstract
We report the first molecular evolutionary analysis of the family Camelidae by analysing the full DNA sequence of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene. Estimates for the time of divergence of the Old World (Camelini) and New World (Lamini) tribes obtained from sequence data are in agreement with those derived from the fossil record. The DNA sequence data were also used to test current hypotheses concerning the ancestors of the domesticated llama and alpaca. The results show that hybridization has occurred in the ancestry of both domesticated camelids, obscuring the origin of the domestic species.
- Published
- 1994
44. Community Participation, Sustainable Use, and Vicuna Conservation in Peru
- Author
-
R Domingo Hoces and Jane V. Wheeler
- Subjects
business.industry ,Community participation ,Sustainability ,Environmental resource management ,Environmental Chemistry ,Business ,Development ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 1997
45. Evolution of High Andean Puna Ecosystems: Environment, Climate, and Culture Change over the Last 12,000 Years in the Central Andes
- Author
-
Carlos A. Baied and Jane V. Wheeler
- Subjects
Palynology ,Geography ,National park ,Ecology ,Paleoclimatology ,Paleoecology ,Period (geology) ,Environmental Chemistry ,Ecosystem ,Development ,Traditional knowledge ,Holocene ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
In the High Andes, much of the traditional knowledge related to natural resource utilization and agricultural practices was lost with the arrival of the Spaniards. That which has survived has been transformed, together with the landscape. Based upon ongoing research on the paleoecology and archaeology of the central High Andes, this paper presents the first results of pollen analysis from late-Pleistocene/early Holocene Laguna Seca (latitude 18011' South, longitude 69014'30" West) in the Chungara- Cotacotani lake district of Lauca National Park. The Laguna Seca record covers two crucial events in the evolution of high Andean puna ecosystems: (1) the period preceding the earliest human occupation, and (2) the period of change from a food-gathering to a food-producing economy. The results, though preliminary, indicate the contribution that these studies can make to the management and preservation of fragile mountain ecosystems.
- Published
- 1993
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