100 results on '"Post DM"'
Search Results
2. The impact of patients' participation on physicians' patient-centered communication.
- Author
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Cegala DJ and Post DM
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The goal of this study is to add to a small, but growing body of research exploring how patients' communication style affects physicians' communication. In particular, we examine how patients' active participation (e.g., asking questions, providing information) affects physicians' use of patient-centered communication. METHODS: The same 25 physicians were observed interacting with high and low participation patients. High participation was defined as the frequency of information seeking/verifying, information provision, assertive utterances, and expressing concerns. On average, physicians interviewed 2.56 high participation patients and 3.44 low participation patients. Transcripts of the interviews were coded for physicians' patient-centered communication. High and low patient participation interviews were then compared using nested ANOVAs. RESULTS: When interacting with high participation patients, physicians engaged in significantly more patient-centered communication overall than when interacting with low participation patients. Analyses on separate components of patient-centeredness indicated that physicians engaged in significantly more exploring of patients' disease and illness, but did not engage in significantly more understanding of the whole person or finding of common ground. CONCLUSION: Patients who actively participate in medical interviews influence physicians to adopt a more patient-centered style of communication. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Educating seniors to be patient safety self-advocates in primary care.
- Author
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Elder NC, Regan SL, Pallerla H, Levin L, Post DM, and Cegala DJ
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Strain imaging as an early predictor in acute myocardial infarction - An augmented cross-sectional study.
- Author
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Kumar D, Saha M, Guha S, Roy T, Kumar R, and Sinha AK
- Subjects
- Humans, Cross-Sectional Studies, Heart, Echocardiography methods, Ventricular Function, Left, ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction diagnosis, Myocardial Infarction diagnosis
- Abstract
Introduction: Cardiac fibres are affected invariably in myocardial infarction, with longitudinal strain being the earliest to be detected in the ischaemic cascade. The present study aims to assess strain imaging in acute myocardial infarction (AMI) patients admitted to the cardiology department at our institute and correlate GLS and DESL findings with other markers for myocardial function., Methods and Material: This augmented cross-sectional study was conducted amongst the patients admitted with diagnosis of AMI. During the study period, 157 subjects were sampled through convenience sampling, and examined as well as tested with routine investigations at baseline. The subjects were then followed through at first, third and six months, and findings noted. Chi-square was used to assess the crude association between sample characteristics. Pearson correlation and student t-test were used to find association between continuous variables., Results: After screening 564 patients, 157 patients were included in the study after fulfilment of inclusion and exclusion criteria. A significant difference was found in baseline GLS scores and NTproBNP levels at 6 months in alive patients with STEMI, t (21.728) = -5.717, p < .001. Out of the 50 NSTEMI patients, 35 (70 %) were positive for ESL, similarly out of 43 STEMI patients without any RWMA, ESL was positive in 39 (90.02 %) patients., Conclusions: GLS by STE has good correlation with LVEF, WMSI and NT pro-BNP and it is an independent predictor of mortality and heart failure among patients with AMI., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 Cardiological Society of India. Published by Elsevier, a division of RELX India, Pvt. Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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5. Rapid population growth and high management costs have created a narrow window for control of introduced hippos in Colombia.
- Author
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Subalusky AL, Sethi SA, Anderson EP, Jiménez G, Echeverri-Lopez D, García-Restrepo S, Nova-León LJ, Reátiga-Parrish JF, Post DM, and Rojas A
- Subjects
- Colombia, Population Growth
- Abstract
The introduction of hippos into the wild in Colombia has been marked by their rapid population growth and widespread dispersal on the landscape, high financial costs of management, and conflicting social perspectives on their management and fate. Here we use population projection models to investigate the effectiveness and cost of management options under consideration for controlling introduced hippos. We estimate there are 91 hippos in the middle Magdalena River basin, Colombia, and the hippo population is growing at an estimated rate of 9.6% per year. At this rate, there will be 230 hippos by 2032 and over 1,000 by 2050. Applying the population control methods currently under consideration will cost at least 1-2 million USD to sufficiently decrease hippo population growth to achieve long-term removal, and depending on the management strategy selected, there may still be hippos on the landscape for 50-100 years. Delaying management actions for a single decade will increase minimum costs by a factor of 2.5, and some methods may become infeasible. Our approach illustrates the trade-offs inherent between cost and effort in managing introduced species, as well as the importance of acting quickly, especially when dealing with species with rapid population growth rates and potential for significant ecological and social impacts., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
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6. The meta-gut: community coalescence of animal gut and environmental microbiomes.
- Author
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Dutton CL, Subalusky AL, Sanchez A, Estrela S, Lu N, Hamilton SK, Njoroge L, Rosi EJ, and Post DM
- Subjects
- Animals, Bacteria genetics, Ecosystem, Fresh Water microbiology, Likelihood Functions, Linear Models, Phylogeny, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S metabolism, Rivers, Water Microbiology, Artiodactyla microbiology, Feces microbiology, Gastrointestinal Microbiome genetics, Gastrointestinal Tract physiology, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S genetics
- Abstract
All animals carry specialized microbiomes, and their gut microbiota are continuously released into the environment through excretion of waste. Here we propose the meta-gut as a novel conceptual framework that addresses the ability of the gut microbiome released from an animal to function outside the host and alter biogeochemical processes mediated by microbes. We demonstrate this dynamic in the hippopotamus (hippo) and the pools they inhabit. We used natural field gradients and experimental approaches to examine fecal and pool water microbial communities and aquatic biogeochemistry across a range of hippo inputs. Sequencing using 16S RNA methods revealed community coalescence between hippo gut microbiomes and the active microbial communities in hippo pools that received high inputs of hippo feces. The shared microbiome between the hippo gut and the waters into which they excrete constitutes a meta-gut system that could influence the biogeochemistry of recipient ecosystems and provide a reservoir of gut microbiomes that could influence other hosts. We propose that meta-gut dynamics may also occur where other animal species congregate in high densities, particularly in aquatic environments., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2021
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7. NEOTROPICAL ALIEN MAMMALS: a data set of occurrence and abundance of alien mammals in the Neotropics.
- Author
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Rosa CAD, Ribeiro BR, Bejarano V, Puertas FH, Bocchiglieri A, Barbosa ALDS, Chiarello AG, Paglia AP, Pereira AA, Moreira AFS, Souza AC, Pellegrin A, Gatica A, Medeiro AZ, Pereira AD, Braz AG, Yanosky A, Valenzuela AEJ, Bertassoni A, Prado ADSVD, Nava AFD, Rocha A, Bovo AAA, Bager A, Cravino A, Pires ADS, Martensen AC, Filippini A, Percequillo AR, Vogliotti A, Antunes AZ, Leite de Oliveira AC, da Silva de Oliveira AJ, Devlin A, de Paula A, Ferreira AS, García-Olaechea A, Subalusky A, Sánchez A, de Aquino ACMM, Srbek-Araujo AC, Paldês Gonçales A, Araújo ACL, Gozzi AC, Ochoa AC, Mendes de Oliveira AC, Lacerda ACR, Francisco AK, Paschoal AMO, Gomes APN, Potrich AP, Olímpio APM, Rojas A, Meiga AYY, Jácomo ATA, Calaça AM, Feijó A, Pagoto A, Borja Miranda A, Chein Alonso A, Barreto-Lima AF, Lanna A, Luza AL, Camilo AR, Tavares A, Nunes AV, Kindel A, de Miguel A, Gatti A, Nobre AB, Campêlo ADC, Albuquerque ACF, de la Torre A, Mangione A, Mendes Pontes AR, Fernandes AS, Felicio ALA, Ferreguetti AC, Marcili A, Piratelli AJ, Nascimento AGSD, Banhos Dos Santos Á, Rosa BF, Cezila BA, de Thoisy B, Ingberman B, Köhler B, Morais BC, Gómez-Valencia B, Bertagni de Camargo B, Bezerra BM, Tamasauskas B, Parahyba Campos BAT, Kubiak BB, Saranholi BH, Nakagawa BK, Leles BP, Lim BK, Pereira Mendes C, Islas CA, Aoki C, Cantagallo Devids C, Figueiredo C, Abreu CMG, Silva Oliveira CR, Cassano CR, Lugarini C, Caputo C, Gestich CC, Tedesco CD, Vera Y Conde CF, Hegel CGZ, Kasper CB, De Angelo C, Grelle CEV, Fragoso CE, Esbérard CEL, Rocha CFD, Verona CE, Salvador CH, Vieira CL, Abrahão CR, Brocardo CR, Fieker CZ, Braga C, Sánchez Lalinde C, Bueno C, Ikuta CY, Luna CLB, Cestari C, Del Vechio Koike C, Knogge C, Anderson CB, Hurtado CM, Ferreira Antunes de Oliveira C, Tellaeche C, Cesário CS, Costa CG, Kanda CZ, Costa SA, Seixas CS, Trinca CT, López-Fuerte CF, da Cunha CJ, Doutel Ribas C, Santos CC, Buscariol D, Carreira D, Nascimento DCD, Carvalho DR, Ferraz DDS, Galiano D, Homem DH, Jesús-Espinosa D, Bôlla DAS, Moreno DJ, Moreira DO, Ramos DL, de Amorim DA, Barros-Battesti DM, Lopez DE, Tavares DC, Post DM, Couto DR, Patrocínio DN, Carvalho DLKP, Silva DA, Córdoba D, Queirolo D, Varela D, de Oliveira DAG, Casanova DC, Dias DM, Machado da Silva D, Barbier E, Rivadeneira EF, Alexandrino E, Carrano E, Santos EM, Venticinque EM, Hernández-Pérez E, Casazza EDF, Anderson EP, Fraga EDC, de Lima EF, D'Bastiani E, Vieira EM, Guijosa-Guadarrama E, González EM, Maggiorini EV, Aguiar EFS, Martínez-Nambo ED, Castro ÉP, de la Peña-Cuéllar E, Pedó E, Melo FCSA, Rocha FL, Fonseca FL, Girardi F, Melo FR, Roque FO, Keesen Ferreira F, Peters FB, Moreli Fantacini F, Pedrosa F, Pessoa da Silva F, Vélez-García F, Abra FD, de Azevedo FC, Guedes da Silva F, Neri FM, Teixeira FZ, Fernandez FADS, Carvalho F, Passos FC, Jacinavicius FC, Ferreira F, Pinho FF, Gonçalves F, Ibanez Martins F, Lima F, Contreras-Moreno FM, Ribeiro FS, Tortato F, Patel FM, Caruso F, Tirelli FP, Rodrigues FHG, Ubaid FK, Palmeira FBL, Grotta Neto F, Gabriel FH, de Souza FL, Costa FEDVD, de Aguiar GL, Lemos FG, Magezi GS, Panigai GFVD, Hofmann GS, Heliodoro G, Rosa Graviola G, Beca G, Andrade GR, Jiménez Romero G, Duarte GT, Melo GL, Dierings GL, Sabino-Santos G Jr, de Oliveira GL, Santana GG, Ciocheti G, Zanirato GL, Alves GB, Batista GO, Behling GM, Ferreira GB, da Rocha GC, Lessa G, Mourão G, Maras GA, Toledo GADC, Gonsioroski G, Canale GR, Schuchmann KL, Sebastião H, Alves do Prado H, Bergallo HG, Secco HKC, Roig HL, Rajão H, Carlos HSA, Duarte HOB, Ermenegildo H, Pena HFJ, Entringer Júnior H, Paulino Neto HF, Lemos HM, Del Castillo H, Fernandes-Ferreira H, Coitiño Banquero HI, Roesler I, Ribeiro IK, Coelho IP, Lima IMS, Bechara IM, Lermen IS, Mella Méndez I, Schuck G, Esperandio IB, Silva IO, Mourthe I, Oliveira I, Bernardi IP, Miller JR, Marinho-Filho J, Zocche JJ, Russell JC, Seibert JB, Hinojosa J, Vitule JRS, Thompson JJ, Silva JCR, Gouvea JA, Santos JP, Falcão JCF, Castro-Prieto J, Ferreira JP, Pincheira-Ulbrich J, Nodari JZ, Zecchini Gebin JC, Giovanelli JGR, Miranda JMD, Souza-Alves JP, Marins JRGA, Costa JF, Sponchiado J, de Souza JL, Gallo JA, Cherem JJ, Cordeiro JLP, Duarte JMB, Dantas JO, de Matos JR, Pires JSR, Martínez Lanfranco JA, de la Cruz Godoy JC, Rudolf JC, Parrish JFR, Tellarini JF, Peña-Mondragón JL, Arrabal JP, Reppucci J, Ruiz-Esparza J, Beduschi J, Oshima JEF, Ribeiro JF, Almeida Rocha JM, Ferreira Neto JS, Silveira Dos Santos J, Pereira-Ribeiro J, Zanoni JB, Bogoni JA, Ferreira JR, Bicca-Marques JC, Chacón Pacheco JJ, Scarascia PO, Guidoni-Martins KG, Burs K, Ferraz KMPMB, Pisciotta KR, Silva KVKA, Juarez KM, de la Cruz-Félix K, de Morais KDR, Candelária LP, Fornitano L, Bailey LL, Gonçalves LO, Fasola L, Nova León LJ, de Andrade LR, Marques LO, Macedo L, Moreira LS, Silveira L, Oliveira LC, da Silva LH, Jerusalinsky L, La Serra L, Marques Costa L, Sartorello LR, Munhoes LP, Oliveira-Silva LRB, de Pina LF, Bonjorne L, Rampim LE, Sales LP, Gonçalves da Silva L, Quintilham LLT, Perillo LN, Rodríguez-Planes LI, Martín L, Araújo LS, Tiepolo LM, Zago Silva L, García Loaiza LM, Querido LCA, da Silva LF, La Sala LF, Bopp LT, Hufnagel L, Oliveira LFB, Oliveira-Santos LGR, Lyra LH, Guimarães LN, Jimenez Segura LF, de Sousa LC, Möcklinghoff L, Guichón ML, de la Maza J, Barrios-Garcia MN, Talamoni SA, Severo MM, Martins MZA, Oliveira MA, Figuerêdo Duarte Moraes M, Lima MGM, Soares Pinheiro M, Pônzio MDC, Guerreiro M, Cervini M, da Silva M, Oliveira MJR, Magioli M, Passamani M, Silva de Almeida M, Amaku M, Leite de Oliveira M, Tortato MA, Melo MA, Coutinho ME, Dantas Santos MP, Vieira MV, Andrade MA, Barros MC, Rosario MCFD, Domit MDADS, Fernandes MEA, Iezzi ME, do Nascimento MHS, Andrade-Núñez MJ, Lorini ML, Morini MSC, Nagy-Reis MB, Landis MB, Vale MM, Xavier MS, Kaizer MC, Baptiste MP, Bergel MM, Borgnia M, Barros MAS, Lima da Silva M, Favarini MO, Sales Munerato M, Zaluar MT, Winter M, Xavier da Silva M, Zanin M, Marques MI, Haberfeld MB, Di Bitetti MS, Galliez M, Alvarez MR, Malerba M, Rivero M, Melo Dias M, de Oliveira MY, Dos Reis MG, Corrêa MRJ, Graipel ME, Godoi MN, Núñez-Regueiro MM, Moura MO, Orsi ML, Galvão da Silva MA, Sanvicente Lopez M, Benedetti MA, Beltrão MG, Camino M, Faria MB, Miretzki M, Luiz MR, Perine M, Monteiro MCM, Alves-Eigenheer M, Perilli MLL, da Silva MA, Marini MÂ, Silva Pereira M, de Freitas Junior MC, Cossa N, Denkiewicz NM, Tôrres NM, Olifiers N, de Albuquerque NM, Canassa NF, Detogne N, Gurgel Filho N, Seoane NF, da Rosa Oliveira N, Megale N, Pasqualotto N, Cáceres NC, Peroni N, Zanella N, Pays O, Arimoro OAS, Acevedo-Charry O, de Almeida Curi NH, Pinha PRS, Perovic P, Gonçalves PR, Santos PM, Brennand PGG, Kerches Rogeri P, Rosas Ribeiro P, da Rocha PA, de Lázari PR, Pedreira PA, Pinheiro PF, Lira PK, Ferreira PM, Martin PS, Antas PTZ, Marinho PH, Ruffino PHP, Camargo PHSA, Landgref Filho P, Mangini PR, Farias P, Cordeiro-Estrela P, de Faria Peres PH, Galetti PM Jr, Ramírez-Bautista P, Maués PCRA, Renaud PC, Sartorello R, Barros PA, Lombardi PM, Bessa R, Arroyo-Gerala P, de Souza RCC, Zenni RD, Flores Peredo R, Hoogesteijn R, Loyola R, Alves RSC, Rodarte RRP, Silva RL, de Oliveira R, Beltrão-Mendes R, Alencar RM, da Silva RC, Pedroso R, Sampaio RF, Ribeiro RLA, Pardini R, Twardowsky Ramalho Bonikowski R, Pagotto RV, Dias RA, Bassini-Silva R, Corassa Arrais R, Sampaio R, de Cassia Bianchi R, Paolino RM, Fusco-Costa R, Trovati RG, Espíndola Hack RO, Mauro RA, Nobre RA, Gessulli RD, León Pérez R, Massara RL, Fróes da Silva RM, de Paula RC, da Cunha RGT, Costa RT, Marques RV, Morato RG, Bovendorp RS, Dornas RADP, Andrade RS, Siciliano S, Guaragni SA, Rolim SG, Astete S, Cavalcanti S, Hartz SM, Carvalho S, Cortez S, Silvestre de Sousa SM, Ballari SA, Ramos Lima S, Cirignoli S, García-R S, Bazilio S, Solari Torres S, Back Franco S, Martins SR, de Bustos S, Age SG, Ferrari SF, Francisco TM, Micheletti T, Godim TMDS, Luiz TG, Ochotorena de Freitas TR, Rodrigues TF, Piovezan U, Barcos UC, Onofrio VC, Martin-Albarracin VL, Towns V, Araújo VC, Kanaan V, Daga VS, Boere V, de Araujo VPG, Benitez VV, Leandro-Silva V, Geraldi VC, Alberici V, Bastazini VAG, Gasparotto VPO, Orsini VS, da Silva VS, Rojas Bonzi V, Pereira VJA, Layme VMG, Duarte da Silva VH, Tomas WM, Moreira TA, Martins WP, de Moraes Pires WM, Hannibal W, Dáttilo W, Mottin V, Endo W, Bercê W, Carvalho WD, Magnusson W, Akkawi P, Di Blanco Y, Amaral PR, Ramos YGC, Rodríguez-Calderón YG, Mendes YR, Ribeiro YGG, Campos Z, Galetti M, and Ribeiro MC
- Subjects
- Animals, Argentina, Biodiversity, Cattle, Chile, Dogs, Florida, Mexico, Introduced Species, Mammals
- Abstract
Biological invasion is one of the main threats to native biodiversity. For a species to become invasive, it must be voluntarily or involuntarily introduced by humans into a nonnative habitat. Mammals were among first taxa to be introduced worldwide for game, meat, and labor, yet the number of species introduced in the Neotropics remains unknown. In this data set, we make available occurrence and abundance data on mammal species that (1) transposed a geographical barrier and (2) were voluntarily or involuntarily introduced by humans into the Neotropics. Our data set is composed of 73,738 historical and current georeferenced records on alien mammal species of which around 96% correspond to occurrence data on 77 species belonging to eight orders and 26 families. Data cover 26 continental countries in the Neotropics, ranging from Mexico and its frontier regions (southern Florida and coastal-central Florida in the southeast United States) to Argentina, Paraguay, Chile, and Uruguay, and the 13 countries of Caribbean islands. Our data set also includes neotropical species (e.g., Callithrix sp., Myocastor coypus, Nasua nasua) considered alien in particular areas of Neotropics. The most numerous species in terms of records are from Bos sp. (n = 37,782), Sus scrofa (n = 6,730), and Canis familiaris (n = 10,084); 17 species were represented by only one record (e.g., Syncerus caffer, Cervus timorensis, Cervus unicolor, Canis latrans). Primates have the highest number of species in the data set (n = 20 species), partly because of uncertainties regarding taxonomic identification of the genera Callithrix, which includes the species Callithrix aurita, Callithrix flaviceps, Callithrix geoffroyi, Callithrix jacchus, Callithrix kuhlii, Callithrix penicillata, and their hybrids. This unique data set will be a valuable source of information on invasion risk assessments, biodiversity redistribution and conservation-related research. There are no copyright restrictions. Please cite this data paper when using the data in publications. We also request that researchers and teachers inform us on how they are using the data., (© 2020 The Authors. Ecology © 2020 The Ecological Society of America.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Hippopotamus are distinct from domestic livestock in their resource subsidies to and effects on aquatic ecosystems.
- Author
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Masese FO, Kiplagat MJ, González-Quijano CR, Subalusky AL, Dutton CL, Post DM, and Singer GA
- Subjects
- Animals, Biomass, Herbivory, Kenya, Livestock physiology, Natural Resources, Rivers, Artiodactyla physiology, Cattle, Ecosystem
- Abstract
In many regions of the world, populations of large wildlife have been displaced by livestock, and this may change the functioning of aquatic ecosystems owing to significant differences in the quantity and quality of their dung. We developed a model for estimating loading rates of organic matter (dung) by cattle for comparison with estimated rates for hippopotamus in the Mara River, Kenya. We then conducted a replicated mesocosm experiment to measure ecosystem effects of nutrient and carbon inputs associated with dung from livestock (cattle) versus large wildlife (hippopotamus). Our loading model shows that per capita dung input by cattle is lower than for hippos, but total dung inputs by cattle constitute a significant portion of loading from large herbivores owing to the large numbers of cattle on the landscape. Cattle dung transfers higher amounts of limiting nutrients, major ions and dissolved organic carbon to aquatic ecosystems relative to hippo dung, and gross primary production and microbial biomass were higher in cattle dung treatments than in hippo dung treatments. Our results demonstrate that different forms of animal dung may influence aquatic ecosystems in fundamentally different ways when introduced into aquatic ecosystems as a terrestrially derived resource subsidy.
- Published
- 2020
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9. Restoration-mediated secondary contact leads to introgression of alewife ecotypes separated by a colonial-era dam.
- Author
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Reid K, Carlos Garza J, Gephard SR, Caccone A, Post DM, and Palkovacs EP
- Abstract
Secondary contact may have important implications for ecological and evolutionary processes; however, few studies have tracked the outcomes of secondary contact from its onset in natural ecosystems. We evaluated an anadromous alewife ( Alosa pseudoharengus ) reintroduction project in Rogers Lake (Connecticut, USA), which contains a landlocked alewife population that was isolated as a result of colonial-era damming. After access to the ocean was restored, adult anadromous alewife were stocked into the lake. We assessed anadromous juvenile production, the magnitude and direction of introgression, and the potential for competition between ecotypes. We obtained fin clips from all adult alewife stocked into the lake during the restoration and a sample of juveniles produced in the lake two years after the stocking began. We assessed the ancestry of juveniles using categorical assignment and pedigree reconstruction with newly developed microhaplotype genetic markers. Anadromous alewives successfully spawned in the lake and hybridized with the landlocked population. Parentage assignments revealed that male and female anadromous fish contributed equally to juvenile F1 hybrids. The presence of landlocked backcrosses shows that some hybrids were produced within the first two years of secondary contact, matured in the lake, and reproduced. Therefore, introgression appears directional, from anadromous into landlocked, in the lake environment. Differences in estimated abundance of juveniles of different ecotypes in different habitats were also detected, which may reduce competition between ecotypes as the restoration continues. Our results illustrate the utility of restoration projects to study the outcomes of secondary contact in real ecosystems., Competing Interests: None declared., (© 2019 The Authors. Evolutionary Applications published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2019
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10. A 2000-year sediment record reveals rapidly changing sedimentation and land use since the 1960s in the Upper Mara-Serengeti Ecosystem.
- Author
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Dutton CL, Subalusky AL, Hill TD, Aleman JC, Rosi EJ, Onyango KB, Kanuni K, Cousins JA, Staver AC, and Post DM
- Abstract
The Mara River basin is a trans-boundary basin of international importance. It forms the headwaters of the Nile River and serves as the primary dry season water source for an estimated 1.1 million rural people and the largest remaining overland migration of 1.4 million wildebeest in the Serengeti-Mara Ecosystem. Changes throughout the basin are impacting the quantity and quality of the Mara River, yet the historical context of environmental conditions in the basin is not well known. We collected sediment cores throughout the wetland at the mouth of the Mara River, and we used isotopic dating methods and a suite of analyses to examine historical patterns of sediment quantity and source, mercury contamination, and carbon and nutrient loading. Our results show that ecological conditions in the Mara River basin were fairly stable over paleoecological time scales (2000-1000 years before present), but there has been a period of rapid change in the basin over the last 250 years, particularly since the 1960s. A shift in the source and quantity of sediments in the river began in the late 1700s and became much more pronounced in the 1950s and 1960s, coincident with increasing mercury concentrations. The quantity of sediment from the Upper Mara increased, particularly since 1960, but the proportion of total sediment from this region decreased as the Talek and Middle Mara portions of the basin began producing more sediment. The decadal oscillation in sediment accumulation was congruent with known periods of extreme precipitation events. Carbon and nitrogen loading also increased since the 1960s, and the shift in the isotopic ratio of nitrogen provides evidence for increased anthropogenic loading. Altogether, these data likely reflect patterns of change also experienced in other basins throughout East Africa., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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11. Hippos ( Hippopotamus amphibius ): The animal silicon pump.
- Author
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Schoelynck J, Subalusky AL, Struyf E, Dutton CL, Unzué-Belmonte D, Van de Vijver B, Post DM, Rosi EJ, Meire P, and Frings P
- Subjects
- Animals, Diatoms chemistry, Geologic Sediments chemistry, Grassland, Isotopes analysis, Kenya, Lakes chemistry, Phytoplankton chemistry, Poaceae chemistry, Rivers chemistry, Soil chemistry, Artiodactyla physiology, Digestion physiology, Eating physiology, Feces chemistry, Silicon analysis
- Abstract
While the importance of grasslands in terrestrial silicon (Si) cycling and fluxes to rivers is established, the influence of large grazers has not been considered. Here, we show that hippopotamuses are key actors in the savannah biogeochemical Si cycle. Through a detailed analysis of Si concentrations and stable isotope compositions in multiple ecosystem compartments of a savannah-river continuum, we constrain the processes influencing the Si flux. Hippos transport 0.4 metric tons of Si day
-1 by foraging grass on land and directly egesting in the water. As such, they bypass complex retention processes in secondary soil Si pools. By balancing internal processes of dissolution and precipitation in the river sediment, we calculate that hippos affect up to 76% of the total Si flux. This can have a large impact on downstream lake ecosystems, where Si availability directly affects primary production in the diatom-dominated phytoplankton communities.- Published
- 2019
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12. Context dependency of animal resource subsidies.
- Author
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Subalusky AL and Post DM
- Subjects
- Animal Migration, Animals, Biomass, Body Size physiology, Carbon metabolism, Climate Change, Nitrogen metabolism, Phosphorus metabolism, Population Density, Seasons, Time Factors, Ecosystem
- Abstract
The transport of resource subsidies by animals has been documented across a range of species and ecosystems. Although many of these studies have shown that animal resource subsidies can have significant effects on nutrient cycling, ecosystem productivity, and food-web structure, there is a great deal of variability in the occurrence and strength of these effects. Here we propose a conceptual framework for understanding the context dependency of animal resource subsidies, and for developing and testing predictions about the effects of animal subsidies over space and time. We propose a general framework, in which abiotic characteristics and animal vector characteristics from the donor ecosystem interact to determine the quantity, quality, timing, and duration (QQTD) of an animal input. The animal input is translated through the lens of recipient ecosystem characteristics, which include both abiotic and consumer characteristics, to yield the QQTD of the subsidy. The translated subsidy influences recipient ecosystem dynamics through effects on both trophic structure and ecosystem function, which may both influence the recipient ecosystem's response to further inputs and feed back to influence the donor ecosystem. We present a review of research on animal resource subsidies across ecosystem boundaries, placed within the context of this framework, and we discuss how the QQTD of resource subsidies can influence trophic structure and ecosystem function in recipient ecosystems. We explore the importance of understanding context dependency of animal resource subsidies in increasingly altered ecosystems, in which the characteristics of both animal vectors and donor and recipient ecosystems may be changing rapidly. Finally, we make recommendations for future research on animal resource subsidies, and resource subsidies in general, that will increase our understanding and predictive capacity about their ecosystem effects., (© 2018 Cambridge Philosophical Society.)
- Published
- 2019
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13. The evolution of eye size in response to increased fish predation in Daphnia.
- Author
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Beston SM, Dudycha JL, Post DM, and Walsh MR
- Subjects
- Animal Distribution, Animals, Connecticut, Eye anatomy & histology, Female, Food Chain, Lakes, Daphnia anatomy & histology, Fishes, Predatory Behavior
- Abstract
Variation in eye size is ubiquitous across taxa. Increased eye size is correlated with improved vision and increased fitness via shifts in behavior. Tests of the drivers of eye size evolution have focused on macroevolutionary studies evaluating the importance of light availability. Predator-induced mortality has recently been identified as a potential driver of eye size variation. Here, we tested the influence of increased predation by the fish predator, the alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus) on eye size evolution in waterfleas (Daphnia ambigua) from lakes in Connecticut. We quantified the relative eye size of Daphnia from lakes with and without alewife using wild-caught and third-generation laboratory reared specimens. This includes comparisons between lakes where alewife are present seasonally (anadromous) or permanently (landlocked). Wild-caught specimens did not differ in eye size across all lakes. However, third-generation lab reared Daphnia from lakes with alewife, irrespective of the form of alewife predation, exhibited significantly larger eyes than Daphnia from lakes without alewife. This genetically based increase in eye size may enhance the ability of Daphnia to detect predators. Alternatively, such shifts in eye size may be an indirect response to Daphnia aggregating at the bottom of lakes. To test these mechanisms, we collected Daphnia as a function of depth and found that eye size differed in Daphnia found at the surface versus the bottom of the water column between anadromous alewife and no alewife lakes. However, we found no evidence of Daphnia aggregating at the bottom of lakes. Such results indicate that the evolution of a larger eye may be explained by a connection between eyes and enhanced survival. We discuss the cause of the lack of concordance in eye size variation between our phenotypic and genetic specimens and the ultimate drivers of eye size., (© 2019 The Author(s). Evolution © 2019 The Society for the Study of Evolution.)
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- 2019
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14. Hispanic breast cancer patients' symptom experience and patient-physician communication during chemotherapy.
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Krok-Schoen JL, Fernandez K, Unzeitig GW, Rubio G, Paskett ED, and Post DM
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- Breast Neoplasms mortality, Communication, Female, Focus Groups, Hispanic or Latino, Humans, Middle Aged, Surveys and Questionnaires, Survivors, Breast Neoplasms drug therapy, Physician-Patient Relations ethics
- Abstract
Objective: Patient-clinician communication difficulties are a major barrier to effective symptom management during chemotherapy especially among non-English-speaking and minority patients. This study sought to examine how information is exchanged between patients and clinicians during chemotherapy treatment regarding pain, depression, fatigue, and nausea experienced among the most prevalent non-English-speaking group in the USA, Hispanic breast cancer survivors., Methods: Hispanic breast cancer patients and clinicians participated in focus groups to examine Hispanic breast cancer survivors' experience and patient-physician communication of symptoms during chemotherapy. Three separate focus groups (English language with patients, Spanish language with patients, and English language with clinicians) were conducted. All participants completed a demographic questionnaire., Results: Six breast cancer survivors participated in the English-language focus group, ten breast cancer survivors participated in the Spanish-language focus group, and five clinicians participated. Presence and communication of depressive symptoms between the English- and Spanish-language groups differed, with the majority of the English-language group sharing their experiences of depressive symptoms while those in the Spanish-language group did not report depressive symptoms. Results also indicated that most patients were unhappy with the response of clinicians regarding their reported symptoms. Several barriers to effective patient-clinician communication, including limited physician time, lack of patient knowledge, timidity, and language, were identified., Conclusion: The findings of this study underscore the need to improve patient-physician communication during chemotherapy to reduce the symptom burden among Hispanic breast cancer patients.
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- 2019
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15. Increasing Adherence to Adjuvant Hormone Therapy Among Patients With Breast Cancer: A Smart Phone App-Based Pilot Study.
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Krok-Schoen JL, Naughton MJ, Young GS, Moon J, Poi M, Melin SA, Wood ME, Hopkins JO, Paskett ED, and Post DM
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- Female, Humans, Medication Adherence, Middle Aged, Pilot Projects, Social Support, Breast Neoplasms drug therapy, Hormone Replacement Therapy methods, Quality of Life psychology, Smartphone standards
- Abstract
Purpose: This study tested the feasibility and efficacy of using a text-based intervention to increase initiation, decrease discontinuation, and improve adherence as prescribed to adjuvant hormone therapy (AHT) among hyphenate post-menopausal breast cancer survivors., Methods: The 3-month intervention consisted of daily text message reminders to take medication, coupled with a dynamic (eg, feedback on progress) tailored intervention using weekly interactive surveys delivered by a smartphone app. Five clinic sites within the Alliance for Clinical Trials in Oncology participated. Hormone levels were measured prior to AHT initiation and at study exit., Results: Of the 39 patients recruited to the pilot study, 27 (69.2%) completed all study requirements (completed both the baseline and the exit surveys, both blood draws, and did not miss more than 2 weekly surveys). Significant improvements were observed pre- to postintervention for self-reported medication adherence ( P = .015), mental health functioning ( P = .007), and perceived stress ( P = .04). Significant decreases in estradiol, estrogen, and estrone hormone levels were observed from baseline to study exit ( P < .001), indicating the accuracy of self-reported AHT adherence. Participants (91.9%) and physicians (100%) agreed that participant participation in the intervention was beneficial., Conclusions: The results of this pilot study established the general feasibility and efficacy of an app-based intervention to support patient AHT adherence. Larger controlled, randomized trials are needed to examine the effectiveness of the app-based intervention in improving AHT and quality of life among breast cancer survivors.
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- 2019
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16. Organic matter and nutrient inputs from large wildlife influence ecosystem function in the Mara River, Africa.
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Subalusky AL, Dutton CL, Njoroge L, Rosi EJ, and Post DM
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- Animals, Kenya, Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Rivers, Ecosystem, Nutrients
- Abstract
Animals can be important vectors for the movement of resources across ecosystem boundaries. Animals add resources to ecosystems primarily through egestion, excretion, and carcasses, and the stoichiometry and bioavailability of these inputs likely interact with characteristics of the recipient ecosystem to determine their effects on ecosystem function. We studied the influence of hippopotamus excretion/egestion and wildebeest carcasses, and their interactions with discharge, in the Mara River, Kenya. We measured nutrient dissolution and decomposition rates of wildlife inputs, the influence of inputs on nutrient concentrations and nutrient limitation in the river and the influence of inputs on biofilm growth and function in both experimental streams and along a gradient of inputs in the river. We found that hippopotamus excretion/egestion increases ammonium and coarse particulate organic matter in the river, and wildebeest carcasses increase ammonium, soluble reactive phosphorus, and total phosphorus. Concentrations of dissolved carbon and nutrients in the water column increased along a gradient of wildlife inputs and during low discharge, although concentrations of particulate carbon decreased during low discharge due to deposition on the river bottom. Autotrophs were nitrogen limited and heterotrophs were carbon limited and nitrogen and phosphorus colimited upstream of animal inputs but there was no nutrient limitation downstream of inputs. In experimental streams, hippo and wildebeest inputs together increased biofilm gross primary production (GPP) and respiration (R). These results differed in the river, where low concentrations of hippo inputs increased gross primary production (GPP) and respiration (R) of biofilms, but high concentrations of hippo inputs in conjunction with wildebeest inputs decreased GPP. Our research shows that inputs from large wildlife alleviate nutrient limitation and stimulate ecosystem metabolism in the Mara River and that the extent to which these inputs subsidize the ecosystem is mediated by the quantity and quality of inputs and discharge of the river ecosystem. Thus, animal inputs provide an important ecological subsidy to this river, and animal inputs were likely important in many other rivers prior to the widespread extirpation of large wildlife., (© 2018 by the Ecological Society of America.)
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- 2018
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17. Managing the emergence of pathogen resistance via spatially targeted antimicrobial use.
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Okamoto KW, Post DM, Vasseur DA, and Turner PE
- Abstract
From agriculture to public health to civil engineering, managing antimicrobial resistance presents a considerable challenge. The dynamics underlying resistance evolution reflect inherently spatial processes. Resistant pathogen strains increase in frequency when a strain that emerges in one locale can spread and replace pathogen subpopulations formerly sensitive to the antimicrobial agent. Moreover, the strength of selection for antimicrobial resistance is in part governed by the extent of antimicrobial use. Thus, altering how antimicrobials are used across a landscape can potentially shift the spatial context governing the dynamics of antimicrobial resistance and provide a potent management tool. Here, we model how the efficacy of adjusting antimicrobial use over space to manage antimicrobial resistance is mediated by competition among pathogen strains and the topology of pathogen metapopulations. For several pathogen migration scenarios, we derive critical thresholds for the spatial extent of antimicrobial use below which resistance cannot emerge, and relate these thresholds to (a) the ability to eradicate antimicrobial-sensitive pathogens locally and (b) the strength of the trade-off between resistance ability and competitive performance where antimicrobial use is absent. We find that in metapopulations where patches differ in connectedness, constraining antimicrobial use across space to mitigate resistance evolution only works if the migration of the resistant pathogen is modest; yet, this situation is reversed if the resistant strain has a high colonization rate, with variably connected metapopulations exhibiting less sensitivity to reducing antimicrobial use across space. Furthermore, when pathogens are alternately exposed to sites with and without the antimicrobial, bottlenecking resistant strains through sites without an antimicrobial is only likely to be effective under a strong competition-resistance trade-off. We therefore identify life-history constraints that are likely to suggest which pathogens can most effectively be controlled by a spatially targeted antimicrobial regime. We discuss implications of our results for managing and thinking about antimicrobial resistance evolution in spatially heterogeneous contexts.
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- 2018
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18. Evaluating the potential for prezygotic isolation and hybridization between landlocked and anadromous alewife ( Alosa pseudoharengus ) following secondary contact.
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Littrell KA, Ellis D, Gephard SR, MacDonald AD, Palkovacs EP, Scranton K, and Post DM
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The recent increase in river restoration projects is altering habitat connectivity for many aquatic species, increasing the chance that previously isolated populations will come into secondary contact. Anadromous and landlocked alewife ( Alosa pseudoharengus ) are currently undergoing secondary contact as a result of a fishway installation at Rogers Lake in Old Lyme, Connecticut. To determine the degree of prezygotic isolation and potential for hybridization between alewife life history forms, we constructed spawning time distributions for two anadromous and three landlocked alewife populations using otolith-derived age estimates. In addition, we analyzed long-term data from anadromous alewife migratory spawning runs to look for trends in arrival date and spawning time. Our results indicated that anadromous alewife spawned earlier and over a shorter duration than landlocked alewife, but 3%-13% of landlocked alewife spawning overlapped with the anadromous alewife spawning period. The degree of spawning time overlap was primarily driven by annual and population-level variation in the timing of spawning by landlocked alewife, whereas the timing and duration of spawning for anadromous alewife were found to be relatively invariant among years in our study system. For alewife and many other anadromous fish species, the increase in fish passage river restoration projects in the coming decades will re-establish habitat connectivity and may bring isolated populations into contact. Hybridization between life history forms may occur when prezygotic isolating mechanisms are minimal, leading to potentially rapid ecological and evolutionary changes in restored habitats.
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- 2018
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19. Organic matter loading by hippopotami causes subsidy overload resulting in downstream hypoxia and fish kills.
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Dutton CL, Subalusky AL, Hamilton SK, Rosi EJ, and Post DM
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- Africa, Eastern, Animals, Artiodactyla growth & development, Ecosystem, Environmental Monitoring, Eutrophication, Population Dynamics, Rivers chemistry, Artiodactyla metabolism, Fishes metabolism, Organic Chemicals metabolism, Oxygen metabolism, Water Pollutants, Chemical metabolism
- Abstract
Organic matter and nutrient loading into aquatic ecosystems affects ecosystem structure and function and can result in eutrophication and hypoxia. Hypoxia is often attributed to anthropogenic pollution and is not common in unpolluted rivers. Here we show that organic matter loading from hippopotami causes the repeated occurrence of hypoxia in the Mara River, East Africa. We documented 49 high flow events over 3 years that caused dissolved oxygen decreases, including 13 events resulting in hypoxia, and 9 fish kills over 5 years. Evidence from experiments and modeling demonstrates a strong mechanistic link between the flushing of hippo pools and decreased dissolved oxygen in the river. This phenomenon may have been more widespread throughout Africa before hippopotamus populations were severely reduced. Frequent hypoxia may be a natural part of tropical river ecosystem function, particularly in rivers impacted by large wildlife.
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- 2018
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20. A social-contextual investigation of smoking among rural women: multi-level factors associated with smoking status and considerations for cessation.
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Nemeth JM, Thomson TL, Lu B, Peng J, Krebs V, Doogan NJ, Ferketich AK, Post DM, Browning CR, Paskett ED, and Wewers ME
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- Adult, Appalachian Region, Cross-Sectional Studies, Depression epidemiology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Smoking psychology, Smoking Cessation psychology, Socioeconomic Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, Health Behavior, Rural Population statistics & numerical data, Smoking epidemiology, Smoking Cessation statistics & numerical data, Social Support
- Abstract
Introduction: The social-contextual model of tobacco control and the potential mechanisms of the maintenance or cessation of smoking behavior among disadvantaged women, including rural residents, have yet to be comprehensively studied. The purpose of this study was to determine the association between selected individual, interpersonal, workplace, and neighborhood characteristics and smoking status among women in Appalachia, a US region whose residents experience a disproportionate prevalence of tobacco-related health disparities. These findings may assist in efforts to design and test scientifically valid tobacco control interventions for this and other disadvantaged populations., Methods: Women, 18 years of age and older, residing in three rural Ohio Appalachian counties, were recruited using a two-phase address-based sampling methodology for a cross-sectional interview-administered survey between August 2012 and October 2013 (N=408). Multinomial logistic regression was employed to determine associations between select multilevel factors (independent variables) and smoking status (dependent variable). The sample included 82 (20.1%) current smokers, 92 (22.5%) former smokers, and 234 (57.4%) women reporting never smoking (mean age 51.7 years)., Results: In the final multivariable multinomial logistic regression model, controlling for all other significant associations, constructs at multiple social-contextual levels were associated with current versus either former or never smoking. At the individual level, for every additional year in age, the odds of being a former or never smoker increased by 7% and 6% (odds ratio (OR) (95% confidence interval(CI)): 1.07 (1.0-1.11) and 1.06 (1.02-1.09)), respectively, as compared to the odds of being a current smoker. With regard to depression, for each one unit increase in the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale score, the odds of being a former or never smoker were 5% and 7% lower (OR(95%CI): 0.95(0.91-0.999) and 0.93(0.88-0.98)), respectively. Five interpersonal factors were associated with smoking status. As the social influence injunctive norm score increased by one unit, indicating perception of smoking to be more acceptable, the odds of being a former or never smoker decreased by 23% and 30%, respectively. For every one unit increase in the social participation score, indicating past-year engagement in one additional activity type, the odds of being a former or never smoker increased by 17% and 36%, respectively. For every 10% increase in the percentage of social ties in the participant's advice network who smoked, the odds of being a former or never smoker were 24% and 28% less, respectively. For every 0.1 unit increase in the E/I index, indicating increasing homophily on smoking in one's social network, the odds of being a former or never smoker were 20% and 24% less, respectively, in the time network, and 18% and 20% less, respectively, in the advice network. At the neighborhood level, for every one unit increase in neighborhood cohesion score, indicating increasing cohesion, the odds of being a former smoker or never smoker were 12% and 14% less, respectively., Conclusions: These findings indicate that a social-contextual approach to tobacco control may be useful for narrowing a widening trajectory of smoking disparity for rural women. Interpersonal context, in particular, must be considered in the development of culturally targeted cessation interventions for Ohio Appalachian women.
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- 2018
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21. The influence of a semi-arid sub-catchment on suspended sediments in the Mara River, Kenya.
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Dutton CL, Subalusky AL, Anisfeld SC, Njoroge L, Rosi EJ, and Post DM
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- Agriculture, Animal Migration, Animals, Artiodactyla, Cattle, Climate, Environmental Monitoring, Humans, Hydrodynamics, Kenya, Periodicity, Geologic Sediments, Rivers
- Abstract
The Mara River Basin in East Africa is a trans-boundary basin of international significance experiencing excessive levels of sediment loads. Sediment levels in this river are extremely high (turbidities as high as 6,000 NTU) and appear to be increasing over time. Large wildlife populations, unregulated livestock grazing, and agricultural land conversion are all potential factors increasing sediment loads in the semi-arid portion of the basin. The basin is well-known for its annual wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus) migration of approximately 1.3 million individuals, but it also has a growing population of hippopotami (Hippopotamus amphibius), which reside within the river and may contribute to the flux of suspended sediments. We used in situ pressure transducers and turbidity sensors to quantify the sediment flux at two sites for the Mara River and investigate the origin of riverine suspended sediment. We found that the combined Middle Mara-Talek catchment, a relatively flat but semi-arid region with large populations of wildlife and domestic cattle, is responsible for 2/3 of the sediment flux. The sediment yield from the combined Middle Mara-Talek catchment is approximately the same as the headwaters, despite receiving less rainfall. There was high monthly variability in suspended sediment fluxes. Although hippopotamus pools are not a major source of suspended sediments under baseflow, they do contribute to short-term variability in suspended sediments. This research identified sources of suspended sediments in the Mara River and important regions of the catchment to target for conservation, and suggests hippopotami may influence riverine sediment dynamics.
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- 2018
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22. The ecological importance of intraspecific variation.
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Des Roches S, Post DM, Turley NE, Bailey JK, Hendry AP, Kinnison MT, Schweitzer JA, and Palkovacs EP
- Subjects
- Ecosystem, Models, Biological, Species Specificity, Biodiversity, Biomass, Genetic Variation
- Abstract
Human activity is causing wild populations to experience rapid trait change and local extirpation. The resulting effects on intraspecific variation could have substantial consequences for ecological processes and ecosystem services. Although researchers have long acknowledged that variation among species influences the surrounding environment, only recently has evidence accumulated for the ecological importance of variation within species. We conducted a meta-analysis comparing the ecological effects of variation within a species (intraspecific effects) with the effects of replacement or removal of that species (species effects). We evaluated direct and indirect ecological responses, including changes in abundance (or biomass), rates of ecological processes and changes in community composition. Our results show that intraspecific effects are often comparable to, and sometimes stronger than, species effects. Species effects tend to be larger for direct ecological responses (for example, through consumption), whereas intraspecific effects and species effects tend to be similar for indirect responses (for example, through trophic cascades). Intraspecific effects are especially strong when indirect interactions alter community composition. Our results summarize data from the first generation of studies examining the relative ecological effects of intraspecific variation. Our conclusions can help inform the design of future experiments and the formulation of strategies to quantify and conserve biodiversity.
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- 2018
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23. Upward Adaptive Radiation Cascades: Predator Diversification Induced by Prey Diversification.
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Brodersen J, Post DM, and Seehausen O
- Subjects
- Animals, Biodiversity, Biological Evolution, Food Chain, Predatory Behavior
- Abstract
The value of biodiversity is widely appreciated, but we are only beginning to understand the interplay of processes that generate biodiversity and their consequences for coevolutionary interactions. Whereas predator-prey coevolution is most often analyzed in the context of evolutionary arms races, much less has been written about how predators are affected by, and respond to, evolutionary diversification in their prey. We hypothesize here that adaptive radiation of prey may lead to diversification and potentially speciation in predators, a process that we call an upwards adaptive radiation cascade. In this paper we lay out the conceptual basis for upwards adaptive radiation cascades, explore evidence for such cascades, and finally advocate for intensified research., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2018
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24. Life history traits and functional processes generate multiple pathways to ecological stability.
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DeLong JP, Hanley TC, Gibert JP, Puth LM, and Post DM
- Subjects
- Animals, Daphnia growth & development, Population Dynamics, Ecology, Life History Traits
- Abstract
Stability contributes to the persistence of ecological communities, yet the interactions among different stabilizing forces are poorly understood. We assembled mesocosms with an algal resource and one to eight different clones of the consumer Daphnia ambigua and tracked algal and Daphnia abundances through time. We then fitted coupled ordinary differential equations (ODEs) to the consumer-resource time series. We show that variation in different components of stability (local stability and the magnitude of population fluctuations) across mesocosms arises through variation in life history traits and the functional processes represented by ODE model parameters. Local stability was enhanced by increased algal growth rate and Daphnia mortality and foraging rate. Population fluctuations were dampened by high Daphnia conversion efficiency and lower interaction strengths, low algal growth rate, high Daphnia death rate, and low Daphnia foraging. These results indicate that (1) stability in consumer-resource systems may arise through the net effect of multiple related stabilizing pathways and (2) different aspects of stability can vary independently and may respond in opposite directions to the same forces., (© 2017 by the Ecological Society of America.)
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- 2018
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25. Evolutionary history of Daphnia drives divergence in grazing selectivity and alters temporal community dynamics of producers.
- Author
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Park JS and Post DM
- Abstract
Consumers with different seasonal life histories encounter different communities of producers during specific seasonal phases. If consumers evolve to prefer the producers that they encounter, then consumers may reciprocally influence the temporal composition of producer communities. Here, we study the keystone consumer Daphnia ambigua, whose seasonal life history has diverged due to intraspecific predator divergence across lakes of New England. We ask whether grazing preferences of Daphnia have diverged also and test whether any grazing differences influence temporal composition patterns of producers. We reared clonal populations of Daphnia from natural populations representing the two diverged life history types for multiple generations. We conducted short-term (24 hr) and long-term (27 days) grazing experiments in equal polycultures consisting of three diatom and two green algae species, treated with no consumer, Daphnia from lakes with anadromous alewife, or from lakes with landlocked alewife. After 24 hr, life history and grazing preference divergence in Daphnia ambigua drove significant differences in producer composition. However, those differences disappeared at the end of the 27-day experiment. Our results illustrate that, despite potentially more complex long-term dynamics, a multitrophic cascade of evolutionary divergence from a predator can influence temporal community dynamics at the producer level.
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- 2017
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26. LAGOS-NE: a multi-scaled geospatial and temporal database of lake ecological context and water quality for thousands of US lakes.
- Author
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Soranno PA, Bacon LC, Beauchene M, Bednar KE, Bissell EG, Boudreau CK, Boyer MG, Bremigan MT, Carpenter SR, Carr JW, Cheruvelil KS, Christel ST, Claucherty M, Collins SM, Conroy JD, Downing JA, Dukett J, Fergus CE, Filstrup CT, Funk C, Gonzalez MJ, Green LT, Gries C, Halfman JD, Hamilton SK, Hanson PC, Henry EN, Herron EM, Hockings C, Jackson JR, Jacobson-Hedin K, Janus LL, Jones WW, Jones JR, Keson CM, King KBS, Kishbaugh SA, Lapierre JF, Lathrop B, Latimore JA, Lee Y, Lottig NR, Lynch JA, Matthews LJ, McDowell WH, Moore KEB, Neff BP, Nelson SJ, Oliver SK, Pace ML, Pierson DC, Poisson AC, Pollard AI, Post DM, Reyes PO, Rosenberry DO, Roy KM, Rudstam LG, Sarnelle O, Schuldt NJ, Scott CE, Skaff NK, Smith NJ, Spinelli NR, Stachelek JJ, Stanley EH, Stoddard JL, Stopyak SB, Stow CA, Tallant JM, Tan PN, Thorpe AP, Vanni MJ, Wagner T, Watkins G, Weathers KC, Webster KE, White JD, Wilmes MK, and Yuan S
- Subjects
- United States, Databases, Factual, Lakes chemistry, Water Quality
- Abstract
Understanding the factors that affect water quality and the ecological services provided by freshwater ecosystems is an urgent global environmental issue. Predicting how water quality will respond to global changes not only requires water quality data, but also information about the ecological context of individual water bodies across broad spatial extents. Because lake water quality is usually sampled in limited geographic regions, often for limited time periods, assessing the environmental controls of water quality requires compilation of many data sets across broad regions and across time into an integrated database. LAGOS-NE accomplishes this goal for lakes in the northeastern-most 17 US states.LAGOS-NE contains data for 51 101 lakes and reservoirs larger than 4 ha in 17 lake-rich US states. The database includes 3 data modules for: lake location and physical characteristics for all lakes; ecological context (i.e., the land use, geologic, climatic, and hydrologic setting of lakes) for all lakes; and in situ measurements of lake water quality for a subset of the lakes from the past 3 decades for approximately 2600-12 000 lakes depending on the variable. The database contains approximately 150 000 measures of total phosphorus, 200 000 measures of chlorophyll, and 900 000 measures of Secchi depth. The water quality data were compiled from 87 lake water quality data sets from federal, state, tribal, and non-profit agencies, university researchers, and citizen scientists. This database is one of the largest and most comprehensive databases of its type because it includes both in situ measurements and ecological context data. Because ecological context can be used to study a variety of other questions about lakes, streams, and wetlands, this database can also be used as the foundation for other studies of freshwaters at broad spatial and ecological scales., (© The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press.)
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- 2017
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27. Annual mass drownings of the Serengeti wildebeest migration influence nutrient cycling and storage in the Mara River.
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Subalusky AL, Dutton CL, Rosi EJ, and Post DM
- Subjects
- Alligators and Crocodiles, Animals, Bayes Theorem, Biomass, Drowning, Ecosystem, Female, Fishes, Geography, Isotopes, Kenya, Male, Muscles, Rivers, Animal Migration, Food Chain, Ruminants
- Abstract
The annual migration of ∼1.2 million wildebeest ( Connochaetes taurinus ) through the Serengeti Mara Ecosystem is the largest remaining overland migration in the world. One of the most iconic portions of their migration is crossing of the Mara River, during which thousands drown annually. These mass drownings have been noted, but their frequency, size, and impact on aquatic ecosystems have not been quantified. Here, we estimate the frequency and size of mass drownings in the Mara River and model the fate of carcass nutrients through the river ecosystem. Mass drownings (>100 individuals) occurred in at least 13 of the past 15 y; on average, 6,250 carcasses and 1,100 tons of biomass enter the river each year. Half of a wildebeest carcass dry mass is bone, which takes 7 y to decompose, thus acting as a long-term source of nutrients to the Mara River. Carcass soft tissue decomposes in 2-10 wk, and these nutrients are mineralized by consumers, assimilated by biofilms, transported downstream, or moved back into the terrestrial ecosystem by scavengers. These inputs comprise 34-50% of the assimilated diet of fish when carcasses are present and 7-24% via biofilm on bones after soft tissue decomposition. Our results show a terrestrial animal migration can have large impacts on a river ecosystem, which may influence nutrient cycling and river food webs at decadal time scales. Similar mass drownings may have played an important role in rivers throughout the world when large migratory herds were more common features of the landscape., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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- 2017
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28. Outcomes of a health coaching intervention delivered by medical students for older adults with uncontrolled type 2 diabetes.
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Krok-Schoen JL, Shim R, Nagel R, Lehman J, Myers M, Lucey C, and Post DM
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- Adult, Aged, Curriculum, Female, Humans, Male, Patient Outcome Assessment, Professional-Patient Relations, Students, Medical psychology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 psychology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 therapy, Geriatrics education, Health Behavior, Patient Education as Topic methods, Quality of Life, Self-Management methods, Self-Management psychology
- Abstract
Effective strategies are needed to address the health behaviors of older patients with diabetes. One approach is health coaching, the practice of health education and health promotion through a structured partnership designed to enhance well-being and facilitate the achievement of individuals' health-related goals. The aim of this study was to describe the development of a pilot health coaching curriculum, investigate its effects on geriatric patient outcomes, and examine qualitative feedback by older patients and medical students to the curriculum. This mixed-methods study involved 29 first-year medical students randomly paired with 29 older adults with uncontrolled Type 2 diabetes. Health-related quality of life (HRQoL), stage of change movement, diabetes knowledge, locus of control, Body Mass Index (BMI), and glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) were assessed. Focus groups were used to evaluate patients' and medical students' experiences. Results showed significant increases in patients' HRQoL and stage of change for exercise improved significantly over time. There were no significant changes in stage of change for healthy diet and medication, diabetes knowledge, BMI, and HbA1c from baseline to end of study. Focus group data indicated positive responses by older patients and the medical students. A health coaching curriculum may improve patient outcomes and can provide medical students the skills needed to provide compassionate care for geriatric patients.
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- 2017
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29. A global database of nitrogen and phosphorus excretion rates of aquatic animals.
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Vanni MJ, McIntyre PB, Allen D, Arnott DL, Benstead JP, Berg DJ, Brabrand Å, Brosse S, Bukaveckas PA, Caliman A, Capps KA, Carneiro LS, Chadwick NE, Christian AD, Clarke A, Conroy JD, Cross WF, Culver DA, Dalton CM, Devine JA, Domine LM, Evans-White MA, Faafeng BA, Flecker AS, Gido KB, Godinot C, Guariento RD, Haertel-Borer S, Hall RO, Henry R, Herwig BR, Hicks BJ, Higgins KA, Hood JM, Hopton ME, Ikeda T, James WF, Jansen HM, Johnson CR, Koch BJ, Lamberti GA, Lessard-Pilon S, Maerz JC, Mather ME, McManamay RA, Milanovich JR, Morgan DKJ, Moslemi JM, Naddafi R, Nilssen JP, Pagano M, Pilati A, Post DM, Roopin M, Rugenski AT, Schaus MH, Shostell J, Small GE, Solomon CT, Sterrett SC, Strand Ø, Tarvainen M, Taylor JM, Torres-Gerald LE, Turner CB, Urabe J, Uye SI, Ventelä AM, Villeger S, Whiles MR, Wilhelm FM, Wilson HF, Xenopoulos MA, and Zimmer KD
- Subjects
- Animals, Ecosystem, Fresh Water, Phylogeny, Aquatic Organisms metabolism, Nitrogen metabolism, Phosphorus metabolism
- Abstract
Animals can be important in modulating ecosystem-level nutrient cycling, although their importance varies greatly among species and ecosystems. Nutrient cycling rates of individual animals represent valuable data for testing the predictions of important frameworks such as the Metabolic Theory of Ecology (MTE) and ecological stoichiometry (ES). They also represent an important set of functional traits that may reflect both environmental and phylogenetic influences. Over the past two decades, studies of animal-mediated nutrient cycling have increased dramatically, especially in aquatic ecosystems. Here we present a global compilation of aquatic animal nutrient excretion rates. The dataset includes 10,534 observations from freshwater and marine animals of N and/or P excretion rates. These observations represent 491 species, including most aquatic phyla. Coverage varies greatly among phyla and other taxonomic levels. The dataset includes information on animal body size, ambient temperature, taxonomic affiliations, and animal body N:P. This data set was used to test predictions of MTE and ES, as described in Vanni and McIntyre (2016; Ecology DOI: 10.1002/ecy.1582)., (© 2017 by the Ecological Society of America.)
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- 2017
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30. Ecology under lake ice.
- Author
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Hampton SE, Galloway AW, Powers SM, Ozersky T, Woo KH, Batt RD, Labou SG, O'Reilly CM, Sharma S, Lottig NR, Stanley EH, North RL, Stockwell JD, Adrian R, Weyhenmeyer GA, Arvola L, Baulch HM, Bertani I, Bowman LL Jr, Carey CC, Catalan J, Colom-Montero W, Domine LM, Felip M, Granados I, Gries C, Grossart HP, Haberman J, Haldna M, Hayden B, Higgins SN, Jolley JC, Kahilainen KK, Kaup E, Kehoe MJ, MacIntyre S, Mackay AW, Mariash HL, McKay RM, Nixdorf B, Nõges P, Nõges T, Palmer M, Pierson DC, Post DM, Pruett MJ, Rautio M, Read JS, Roberts SL, Rücker J, Sadro S, Silow EA, Smith DE, Sterner RW, Swann GE, Timofeyev MA, Toro M, Twiss MR, Vogt RJ, Watson SB, Whiteford EJ, and Xenopoulos MA
- Subjects
- Seasons, Ecosystem, Ice Cover, Lakes, Plankton physiology
- Abstract
Winter conditions are rapidly changing in temperate ecosystems, particularly for those that experience periods of snow and ice cover. Relatively little is known of winter ecology in these systems, due to a historical research focus on summer 'growing seasons'. We executed the first global quantitative synthesis on under-ice lake ecology, including 36 abiotic and biotic variables from 42 research groups and 101 lakes, examining seasonal differences and connections as well as how seasonal differences vary with geophysical factors. Plankton were more abundant under ice than expected; mean winter values were 43.2% of summer values for chlorophyll a, 15.8% of summer phytoplankton biovolume and 25.3% of summer zooplankton density. Dissolved nitrogen concentrations were typically higher during winter, and these differences were exaggerated in smaller lakes. Lake size also influenced winter-summer patterns for dissolved organic carbon (DOC), with higher winter DOC in smaller lakes. At coarse levels of taxonomic aggregation, phytoplankton and zooplankton community composition showed few systematic differences between seasons, although literature suggests that seasonal differences are frequently lake-specific, species-specific, or occur at the level of functional group. Within the subset of lakes that had longer time series, winter influenced the subsequent summer for some nutrient variables and zooplankton biomass., (© 2016 The Authors. Ecology Letters published by CNRS and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2017
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31. A Quandary of Cuprum - Wilson's Disease Disguising as Progressive Myoclonic Epilepsy.
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Sachan M, Kushwaha S, Tarfarosh SF, Banga V, and Gupta A
- Abstract
Although metals are indispensable for the production of articles in our daily usage, the deposition of these metals in human tissue is known to cause disease. However, it is not always the ingestion of abnormal amounts of lead, iron, or copper that makes our tissues morbid; our hereditary and metabolic issues are to be blamed as well. Wilson's disease is one such hereditary disease that creates chaos in tissues, usually the brain and liver, via deposition of abnormal amounts of copper in them. While Wilson's disease almost seems to bring a picture of a young patient with dystonia and other extrapyramidal symptoms in our imagination, seizures are very uncommon in this disorder. Non-stimulus-sensitive myoclonic jerks along with cognitive decline as the initial presentation of this disease have never been reported until now. In fact, such a presentation would make the neurologist believe that the patient has some type of progressive myoclonic epilepsy (PME), thus, creating a dilemma. We report two such dilemmatic cases of Wilson's disease that disguised as PME., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
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- 2017
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32. Social Networks and Smoking in Rural Women: Intervention Implications.
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Thomson TL, Krebs V, Nemeth JM, Lu B, Peng J, Doogan NJ, Ferketich AK, Post DM, Browning CR, Paskett ED, and Wewers ME
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Smoking psychology, Smoking Prevention, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Rural Population statistics & numerical data, Smoking epidemiology, Social Support
- Abstract
Objectives: We characterized the social network characteristics of women in Ohio Appalachia according to smoking status., Methods: Women ≥18 years of age were recruited from 3 Ohio Appalachian counties to complete a cross-sectional survey. Sociodemographic and smoking-related information was collected by face-to-face interview. A description of women's time (ie, spends time with) and advice (ie, gets support and advice) social network ties were obtained. An egocentric social network analysis was completed, according to the woman's smoking status., Results: Of the 408 women enrolled, 20.1% were current smokers. Time networks were larger (p < .001), more dense (p < .001), and more redundant (p < .001) than advice networks. Current smokers had a greater proportion of smoking ties in their networks compared to non-smokers (p < .001). Daily face-to-face contact with non-smoking ties was greater in time compared to advice networks (p < .001). Current smokers in advice networks tended to have less daily contact with non-smoking ties than non-smokers (p = .06)., Conclusions: Differences existed in characteristics of time versus advice egocentric networks. Smoking status was associated with these differences. Results will assist with future development of a network-based smoking cessation intervention.
- Published
- 2016
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33. Reconciling the role of terrestrial leaves in pond food webs: a whole-ecosystem experiment.
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Holgerson MA, Post DM, and Skelly DK
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- Animals, Insecta, Plant Leaves, Ecosystem, Food Chain, Ponds
- Abstract
Terrestrial carbon and nutrients can subsidize the detrital pool of freshwater ecosystems; yet, the importance of terrestrial subsidies to lake and pond food webs is uncertain and debated. Terrestrial detritus is expected to have the greatest impact on food webs when water bodies are small and shallow with low levels of incident light. Temporary forested ponds fit this description and are often assumed to have a leaf detritus-based food web, but this has not been quantified. In a whole-ecosystem experiment, we traced the flow of isotopically enriched leaf litter to primary producers and consumers in a small, forested pond. We found that terrestrial leaves provided nutrients to algae, offering an indirect pathway in which leaf litter can enter the food web. Terrestrial leaves were also consumed directly, and larval caddisfly (Limnephilus sp.) shredders likely mobilized leaf nutrients to other consumers, a process overlooked in many previous small-scale experiments that did not incorporate shredders. Unexpectedly, most consumers relied heavily upon algal food pathways despite low light and net heterotrophic conditions. Overall, our study highlights the interconnectedness of algal and leaf litter pathways in small pond food webs, and emphasizes that algal pathways are prevalent and important even in small, shaded ponds with high loads of terrestrial leaf litter., (© 2016 by the Ecological Society of America.)
- Published
- 2016
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34. Impacts of warming revealed by linking resource growth rates with consumer functional responses.
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West DC and Post DM
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- Animals, Climate Change, Female, Food Chain, Population Dynamics, Species Specificity, Daphnia physiology, Feeding Behavior physiology, Scenedesmus growth & development, Temperature
- Abstract
Warming global temperatures are driving changes in species distributions, growth and timing, but much uncertainty remains regarding how climate change will alter species interactions. Consumer-Resource interactions in particular can be strongly impacted by changes to the relative performance of interacting species. While consumers generally gain an advantage over their resources with increasing temperatures, nonlinearities can change this relation near temperature extremes. We use an experimental approach to determine how temperature changes between 5 and 30 °C will alter the growth of the algae Scenedesmus obliquus and the functional responses of the small-bodied Daphnia ambigua and the larger Daphnia pulicaria. The impact of warming generally followed expectations, making both Daphnia species more effective grazers, with the increase in feeding rates outpacing the increases in algal growth rate. At the extremes of our temperature range, however, warming resulted in a decrease in Daphnia grazing effectiveness. Between 25 and 30 °C, both species of Daphnia experienced a precipitous drop in feeding rates, while algal growth rates remained high, increasing the likelihood of algal blooms in warming summer temperatures. Daphnia pulicaria performed significantly better at cold temperatures than D. ambigua, but by 20 °C, there was no significant difference between the two species, and at 25 °C, D. ambigua outperformed D. pulicaria. Warming summer temperatures will favour the smaller D. ambigua, but only over a narrow temperature range, and warming beyond 25 °C could open D. ambigua to invasion from tropical species. By fitting our results to temperature-dependent functions, we develop a temperature- and density-dependent model, which produces a metric of grazing effectiveness, quantifying the grazer density necessary to halt algal growth. This approach should prove useful for tracking the transient dynamics of other density-dependent consumer-resource interactions, such as agricultural pests and biological-control agents., (© 2016 The Authors. Journal of Animal Ecology © 2016 British Ecological Society.)
- Published
- 2016
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35. Student dissatisfaction with an integrated community health education service learning project.
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Post DM, Wallace LS, Davis JA, and Clinchot D
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- Health Education standards, Humans, Program Evaluation, Health Education methods, Students, Medical psychology
- Published
- 2016
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36. Does intraspecific competition promote variation? A test via synthesis.
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Jones AW and Post DM
- Abstract
Competitive diversification, that is, when increasing intraspecific competition promotes population niche expansion, is commonly invoked in evolutionary studies and currently plays a central role in how we conceptualize the process of adaptive diversification. Despite the frequency with which this idea is cited, the empirical evidence for the process is somewhat limited, and the findings of these studies have yet to be weighed objectively through synthesis. Here, we sought to fill this gap by reviewing the existing literature and collecting the data necessary to assess the evidence for competition as a diversifying force. Additionally, we sought to test a more recent hypothesis, which suggests that competition can act to both promote and inhibit dietary diversification depending on the degree to which a consumer depletes its resources. The surprising result of this synthesis was that increasing competition did not have a mean positive effect on population-level diet breadth or the degree of individual specialization. Instead, we found that increasing intraspecific competition had a restricting effect on population-level diet breadth in as many cases as it had a diversifying effect. This wide disparity in the effect of competition on consumer diet variation was negatively related to a metric for consumer resource depletion. Altogether, these findings call into question a long-standing assumption of basic evolutionary models and lend some support to recent theoretical predictions. Specifically, these findings support the idea that competition is primarily diversifying for species with a small effect (per unit biomass) on their resources and that resource depletion limits the diversifying effect of competition for consumers with larger ecological effects.
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- 2016
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37. Local adaptation in transgenerational responses to predators.
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Walsh MR, Castoe T, Holmes J, Packer M, Biles K, Walsh M, Munch SB, and Post DM
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- Animal Migration, Animals, Connecticut, Ecosystem, Lakes, Seasons, Time Factors, Zooplankton, Adaptation, Physiological, Daphnia physiology, Fishes physiology, Predatory Behavior
- Abstract
Environmental signals can induce phenotypic changes that span multiple generations. Along with phenotypic responses that occur during development (i.e. 'within-generation' plasticity), such 'transgenerational plasticity' (TGP) has been documented in a diverse array of taxa spanning many environmental perturbations. New theory predicts that temporal stability is a key driver of the evolution of TGP. We tested this prediction using natural populations of zooplankton from lakes in Connecticut that span a large gradient in the temporal dynamics of predator-induced mortality. We reared more than 120 clones of Daphnia ambigua from nine lakes for multiple generations in the presence/absence of predator cues. We found that temporal variation in mortality selects for within-generation plasticity while consistently strong (or weak) mortality selects for increased TGP. Such results provide us the first evidence for local adaptation in TGP and argue that divergent ecological conditions select for phenotypic responses within and across generations., (© 2016 The Author(s).)
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- 2016
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38. Comparative Analyses of the Lipooligosaccharides from Nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae and Haemophilus haemolyticus Show Differences in Sialic Acid and Phosphorylcholine Modifications.
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Post DM, Ketterer MR, Coffin JE, Reinders LM, Munson RS Jr, Bair T, Murphy TF, Foster ED, Gibson BW, and Apicella MA
- Subjects
- Bacterial Proteins genetics, Bacterial Proteins metabolism, Haemophilus chemistry, Haemophilus classification, Haemophilus isolation & purification, Haemophilus influenzae chemistry, Haemophilus influenzae classification, Haemophilus influenzae isolation & purification, Humans, Lipopolysaccharides metabolism, Mass Spectrometry, N-Acetylneuraminic Acid metabolism, Phosphorylcholine metabolism, Haemophilus metabolism, Haemophilus Infections microbiology, Haemophilus influenzae metabolism, Lipopolysaccharides chemistry, N-Acetylneuraminic Acid analysis, Phosphorylcholine analysis
- Abstract
Haemophilus haemolyticus and nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHi) are closely related upper airway commensal bacteria that are difficult to distinguish phenotypically. NTHi causes upper and lower airway tract infections in individuals with compromised airways, while H. haemolyticus rarely causes such infections. The lipooligosaccharide (LOS) is an outer membrane component of both species and plays a role in NTHi pathogenesis. In this study, comparative analyses of the LOS structures and corresponding biosynthesis genes were performed. Mass spectrometric and immunochemical analyses showed that NTHi LOS contained terminal sialic acid more frequently and to a higher extent than H. haemolyticus LOS did. Genomic analyses of 10 strains demonstrated that H. haemolyticus lacked the sialyltransferase genes lic3A and lic3B (9/10) and siaA (10/10), but all strains contained the sialic acid uptake genes siaP and siaT (10/10). However, isothermal titration calorimetry analyses of SiaP from two H. haemolyticus strains showed a 3.4- to 7.3-fold lower affinity for sialic acid compared to that of NTHi SiaP. Additionally, mass spectrometric and immunochemical analyses showed that the LOS from H. haemolyticus contained phosphorylcholine (ChoP) less frequently than the LOS from NTHi strains. These differences observed in the levels of sialic acid and ChoP incorporation in the LOS structures from H. haemolyticus and NTHi may explain some of the differences in their propensities to cause disease., (Copyright © 2016, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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39. Effects of Patient Navigation on Patient Satisfaction Outcomes.
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Post DM, McAlearney AS, Young GS, Krok-Schoen JL, Plascak JJ, and Paskett ED
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- Aged, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasms prevention & control, Neoplasms psychology, Early Detection of Cancer methods, Healthcare Disparities, Neoplasms diagnosis, Patient Navigation, Patient Satisfaction
- Abstract
Patient navigation (PN) may reduce cancer health disparities. Few studies have investigated the effects of PN on patient-reported satisfaction with care or assessed patients' satisfaction with navigators. The objectives of this study are to test the effects of PN on patient satisfaction with cancer care, assess patients' satisfaction with navigators, and examine the impact of barriers to care on satisfaction for persons with abnormal cancer-related screening tests or symptoms. Study participants included women and men with abnormal breast, cervical, or colorectal cancer screening tests and/or symptoms receiving care at 18 clinics. Navigated (n=416) and non-navigated (n=292) patients completed baseline and end-of-study measures. There was no significant difference between navigated and non-navigated patients in change in patient satisfaction with cancer care from baseline to exit. African-American (p<0.001), single (p=0.03), low income (p<0.01), and uninsured patients (p<0.001) were significantly less likely to report high patient satisfaction at baseline. A significant effect was found for change in satisfaction over time by employment status (p=0.04), with full-time employment showing the most improvement. The interaction between satisfaction with navigators and satisfaction with care over time was marginally significant (p=0.08). Baseline satisfaction was lower for patients who reported a barrier to care (p=0.02). Patients reporting other-focused barriers (p=0.03), including transportation (p=0.02), had significantly lower increases in satisfaction over time. Overall, results suggested that assessing barriers to cancer care and tailoring navigation to barrier type could enhance patients' experiences with health care. PN may have positive effects for healthcare organizations struggling to enhance quality of care.
- Published
- 2015
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40. Emergence of a novel prey life history promotes contemporary sympatric diversification in a top predator.
- Author
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Brodersen J, Howeth JG, and Post DM
- Abstract
Intraspecific phenotypic variation can strongly impact community and ecosystem dynamics. Effects of intraspecific variation in keystone species have been shown to propagate down through the food web by altering the adaptive landscape for other species and creating a cascade of ecological and evolutionary change. However, similar bottom-up eco-evolutionary effects are poorly described. Here we show that life history diversification in a keystone prey species, the alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus), propagates up through the food web to promote phenotypic diversification in its native top predator, the chain pickerel (Esox niger), on contemporary timescales. The landlocking of alewife by human dam construction has repeatedly created a stable open water prey resource, novel to coastal lakes, that has promoted the parallel emergence of a habitat polymorphism in chain pickerel. Understanding how strong interactions propagate through food webs to influence diversification across multiple trophic levels is critical to understand eco-evolutionary interactions in complex natural ecosystems.
- Published
- 2015
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41. Phosphoethanolamine Transferase LptA in Haemophilus ducreyi Modifies Lipid A and Contributes to Human Defensin Resistance In Vitro.
- Author
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Trombley MP, Post DM, Rinker SD, Reinders LM, Fortney KR, Zwickl BW, Janowicz DM, Baye FM, Katz BP, Spinola SM, and Bauer ME
- Subjects
- Administration, Oral, Adult, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Antimicrobial Cationic Peptides pharmacology, Bacterial Proteins metabolism, Chancroid drug therapy, Chancroid microbiology, Chancroid pathology, Ciprofloxacin therapeutic use, Ethanolaminephosphotransferase metabolism, Ethanolamines metabolism, Female, Gene Deletion, Gene Expression, Genetic Complementation Test, Haemophilus ducreyi drug effects, Haemophilus ducreyi metabolism, Haemophilus ducreyi pathogenicity, Healthy Volunteers, Humans, Lipid A chemistry, Male, Mutation, Protein Binding, Static Electricity, alpha-Defensins pharmacology, beta-Defensins pharmacology, Cathelicidins, Bacterial Proteins genetics, Drug Resistance, Bacterial genetics, Ethanolaminephosphotransferase genetics, Haemophilus ducreyi genetics, Lipid A metabolism
- Abstract
Haemophilus ducreyi resists the cytotoxic effects of human antimicrobial peptides (APs), including α-defensins, β-defensins, and the cathelicidin LL-37. Resistance to LL-37, mediated by the sensitive to antimicrobial peptide (Sap) transporter, is required for H. ducreyi virulence in humans. Cationic APs are attracted to the negatively charged bacterial cell surface. In other gram-negative bacteria, modification of lipopolysaccharide or lipooligosaccharide (LOS) by the addition of positively charged moieties, such as phosphoethanolamine (PEA), confers AP resistance by means of electrostatic repulsion. H. ducreyi LOS has PEA modifications at two sites, and we identified three genes (lptA, ptdA, and ptdB) in H. ducreyi with homology to a family of bacterial PEA transferases. We generated non-polar, unmarked mutants with deletions in one, two, or all three putative PEA transferase genes. The triple mutant was significantly more susceptible to both α- and β-defensins; complementation of all three genes restored parental levels of AP resistance. Deletion of all three PEA transferase genes also resulted in a significant increase in the negativity of the mutant cell surface. Mass spectrometric analysis revealed that LptA was required for PEA modification of lipid A; PtdA and PtdB did not affect PEA modification of LOS. In human inoculation experiments, the triple mutant was as virulent as its parent strain. While this is the first identified mechanism of resistance to α-defensins in H. ducreyi, our in vivo data suggest that resistance to cathelicidin LL-37 may be more important than defensin resistance to H. ducreyi pathogenesis.
- Published
- 2015
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42. The effects of nutrition-induced abnormal food metabolism in the Southern Plains woodrat (Neotoma micropus): comparisons of variations of the Western diet.
- Author
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Post DM, Hawkins BL, and Eldridge JA
- Subjects
- Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Animals, Collagen, Fructose administration & dosage, Fructose adverse effects, Podocytes, Sucrose administration & dosage, Sucrose adverse effects, Diet, Western adverse effects, Dietary Carbohydrates adverse effects, Dietary Fats adverse effects, Lipid Metabolism physiology, Liver metabolism, Sigmodontinae metabolism
- Abstract
We investigated the effects of several modifications of the Western diet on a medium-sized rodent, Neotoma micropus, that lives in the area of the wildland-urban interface. We conducted a laboratory study of the response of N. micropus to high fat-high fructose (HFHF), high fat-high sucrose (HFHS), high fat-low sugar (HFLSu) and control (low fat-low sugar) diets. We found a significant increase in hepatic lipid deposition and a significant decrease in podocytes in those animals that consumed the HFHF and HFLSu diets compared to those on the HFHS and control diets. We found no significant differences in Bowman's space or hepatic collagen formation. We predict that N. micropus in the wild, with access to anthropogenic resources, will show similar effects as a result of the consumption of anthropogenic resources., (Journal of Animal Physiology and Animal Nutrition © 2014 Blackwell Verlag GmbH.)
- Published
- 2015
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43. Testing Interventions to Motivate and Educate (TIME): A multi-level intervention to improve colorectal cancer screening.
- Author
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Krok-Schoen JL, Young GS, Pennell ML, Reiter PL, Katz ML, Post DM, Tatum CM, and Paskett ED
- Abstract
Objective: To test the effectiveness of a colorectal cancer (CRC) screening intervention directed at three levels (clinic, provider, patient) in a primary care setting., Method: We conducted a group randomized trial (Clinical Trials registration no. NCT01568151) among 10 primary care clinics in Columbus, Ohio that were randomized to a study condition (intervention or usual care). We determined the effect of a multi-level, stepped behavioral intervention on receipt of a CRC screening test among average-risk patients from these clinics over the study period., Results: Patients (n=527) who were outside of CRC screening recommendations were recruited. Overall, 35.4% of participants in the intervention clinics had received CRC screening by the end of the study compared to 35.1% of participants who were in the usual care clinics. Time to CRC screening was also similar across arms (HR=0.97, 95% CI=0.65-1.45)., Conclusion: The multi-level intervention was not effective in increasing CRC screening among participants who needed a test, perhaps due to low participation of patients in the stepped intervention. Future studies utilizing evidence-based strategies to encourage CRC screening are needed.
- Published
- 2015
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44. Comparative analyses of proteins from Haemophilus influenzae biofilm and planktonic populations using metabolic labeling and mass spectrometry.
- Author
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Post DM, Held JM, Ketterer MR, Phillips NJ, Sahu A, Apicella MA, and Gibson BW
- Subjects
- Chromatography, Liquid, Isotope Labeling, Mass Spectrometry, Bacterial Proteins analysis, Biofilms growth & development, Haemophilus influenzae chemistry, Haemophilus influenzae physiology, Proteome analysis
- Abstract
Background: Non-typeable H. influenzae (NTHi) is a nasopharyngeal commensal that can become an opportunistic pathogen causing infections such as otitis media, pneumonia, and bronchitis. NTHi is known to form biofilms. Resistance of bacterial biofilms to clearance by host defense mechanisms and antibiotic treatments is well-established. In the current study, we used stable isotope labeling by amino acids in cell culture (SILAC) to compare the proteomic profiles of NTHi biofilm and planktonic organisms. Duplicate continuous-flow growth chambers containing defined media with either "light" (L) isoleucine or "heavy" (H) (13)C6-labeled isoleucine were used to grow planktonic (L) and biofilm (H) samples, respectively. Bacteria were removed from the chambers, mixed based on weight, and protein extracts were generated. Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) was performed on the tryptic peptides and 814 unique proteins were identified with 99% confidence., Results: Comparisons of the NTHi biofilm to planktonic samples demonstrated that 127 proteins showed differential expression with p-values ≤0.05. Pathway analysis demonstrated that proteins involved in energy metabolism, protein synthesis, and purine, pyrimidine, nucleoside, and nucleotide processes showed a general trend of downregulation in the biofilm compared to planktonic organisms. Conversely, proteins involved in transcription, DNA metabolism, and fatty acid and phospholipid metabolism showed a general trend of upregulation under biofilm conditions. Selected reaction monitoring (SRM)-MS was used to validate a subset of these proteins; among these were aerobic respiration control protein ArcA, NAD nucleotidase and heme-binding protein A., Conclusions: The present proteomic study indicates that the NTHi biofilm exists in a semi-dormant state with decreased energy metabolism and protein synthesis yet is still capable of managing oxidative stress and in acquiring necessary cofactors important for biofilm survival.
- Published
- 2014
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45. Intraspecific phenotypic variation among alewife populations drives parallel phenotypic shifts in bluegill.
- Author
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Huss M, Howeth JG, Osterman JI, and Post DM
- Subjects
- Animals, Connecticut, Feeding Behavior, Fishes physiology, Lakes, Perciformes genetics, Perciformes growth & development, Population Density, Seasons, Zooplankton growth & development, Food Chain, Perciformes anatomy & histology, Perciformes physiology, Phenotype, Selection, Genetic
- Abstract
Evolutionary diversification within consumer species may generate selection on local ecological communities, affecting prey community structure. However, the extent to which this niche construction can propagate across food webs and shape trait variation in competing species is unknown. Here, we tested whether niche construction by different life-history variants of the planktivorous fish alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus) can drive phenotypic divergence and resource use in the competing species bluegill (Lepomis macrochirus). Using a combination of common garden experiments and a comparative field study, we found that bluegill from landlocked alewife lakes grew relatively better when fed small than large zooplankton, had gill rakers better adapted for feeding on small-bodied prey and selected smaller zooplankton compared with bluegill from lakes with anadromous or no alewife. Observed shifts in bluegill foraging traits in lakes with landlocked alewife parallel those in alewife, suggesting interspecific competition leading to parallel phenotypic changes rather than to divergence (which is commonly predicted). Our findings suggest that species may be locally adapted to prey communities structured by different life-history variants of a competing dominant species., (© 2014 The Author(s) Published by the Royal Society. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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46. Francisella tularensis Schu S4 lipopolysaccharide core sugar and O-antigen mutants are attenuated in a mouse model of tularemia.
- Author
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Rasmussen JA, Post DM, Gibson BW, Lindemann SR, Apicella MA, Meyerholz DK, and Jones BD
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Bacterial Capsules physiology, Disease Models, Animal, Female, Francisella tularensis genetics, Francisella tularensis immunology, Lipopolysaccharides immunology, Macrophages cytology, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mutation, O Antigens chemistry, O Antigens immunology, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Tularemia genetics, Tularemia immunology, Virulence genetics, Virulence immunology, Virulence Factors genetics, Virulence Factors immunology, Virulence Factors metabolism, Francisella tularensis pathogenicity, O Antigens genetics, Tularemia microbiology
- Abstract
The virulence factors mediating Francisella pathogenesis are being investigated, with an emphasis on understanding how the organism evades innate immunity mechanisms. Francisella tularensis produces a lipopolysaccharide (LPS) that is essentially inert and a polysaccharide capsule that helps the organism to evade detection by components of innate immunity. Using an F. tularensis Schu S4 mutant library, we identified strains that are disrupted for capsule and O-antigen production. These serum-sensitive strains lack both capsule production and O-antigen laddering. Analysis of the predicted protein sequences for the disrupted genes (FTT1236 and FTT1238c) revealed similarity to those for waa (rfa) biosynthetic genes in other bacteria. Mass spectrometry further revealed that these proteins are involved in LPS core sugar biosynthesis and the ligation of O antigen to the LPS core sugars. The 50% lethal dose (LD50) values of these strains are increased 100- to 1,000-fold for mice. Histopathology revealed that the immune response to the F. tularensis mutant strains was significantly different from that observed with wild-type-infected mice. The lung tissue from mutant-infected mice had widespread necrotic debris, but the spleens lacked necrosis and displayed neutrophilia. In contrast, the lungs of wild-type-infected mice had nominal necrosis, but the spleens had widespread necrosis. These data indicate that murine death caused by wild-type strains occurs by a mechanism different from that by which the mutant strains kill mice. Mice immunized with these mutant strains displayed >10-fold protective effects against virulent type A F. tularensis challenge.
- Published
- 2014
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47. Combining genetic and demographic information to prioritize conservation efforts for anadromous alewife and blueback herring.
- Author
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Palkovacs EP, Hasselman DJ, Argo EE, Gephard SR, Limburg KE, Post DM, Schultz TF, and Willis TV
- Abstract
A major challenge in conservation biology is the need to broadly prioritize conservation efforts when demographic data are limited. One method to address this challenge is to use population genetic data to define groups of populations linked by migration and then use demographic information from monitored populations to draw inferences about the status of unmonitored populations within those groups. We applied this method to anadromous alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus) and blueback herring (Alosa aestivalis), species for which long-term demographic data are limited. Recent decades have seen dramatic declines in these species, which are an important ecological component of coastal ecosystems and once represented an important fishery resource. Results show that most populations comprise genetically distinguishable units, which are nested geographically within genetically distinct clusters or stocks. We identified three distinct stocks in alewife and four stocks in blueback herring. Analysis of available time series data for spawning adult abundance and body size indicate declines across the US ranges of both species, with the most severe declines having occurred for populations belonging to the Southern New England and the Mid-Atlantic Stocks. While all alewife and blueback herring populations deserve conservation attention, those belonging to these genetic stocks warrant the highest conservation prioritization.
- Published
- 2014
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48. Improving symptom communication through personal digital assistants: the CHAT (Communicating Health Assisted by Technology) project.
- Author
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Post DM, Shapiro CL, Cegala DJ, David P, Katz ML, Krok JL, Phillips GS, McAlearney AS, Lehman JS, Hicks W, and Paskett ED
- Subjects
- Antineoplastic Agents therapeutic use, Breast Neoplasms drug therapy, Depression diagnosis, Fatigue diagnosis, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Pilot Projects, Quality of Life, Surveys and Questionnaires, Breast Neoplasms diagnosis, Computers, Handheld, Health Communication methods, Pain diagnosis, Pain Measurement methods
- Abstract
Background: Communication problems impede effective symptom management during chemotherapy. The primary aim of this pilot randomized controlled trial was to test the effects of a personal digital assistant-delivered communication intervention on pain, depression, and fatigue symptoms among breast cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy. Secondary aims included assessment of 1) study feasibility, 2) patient and clinician responses to study participation, and 3) intervention effects on health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and communication self-efficacy., Methods: Intervention group participants (n = 27) completed symptom inventories at baseline, once per week during treatment, and at posttreatment. Depending on symptom severity, they viewed race-concordant videos on how to communicate about pain, depression and/or fatigue, using the personal digital assistant. Symptom records were tracked and shared with clinicians. Control group participants (n = 23) received usual care. Longitudinal random effects modeling assessed the changes in average symptom scores over time. Descriptive statistics assessed study feasibility and intervention effects on HRQoL and communication self-efficacy. Postintervention focus groups, interviews, and surveys assessed responses to study participation., Results: Mean age of the participants was 51.0 years; 42 participants (84%) were white. In comparison with control, intervention group participants reported lower average pain severity over time (P = .015). Mean pain interference scores over time were marginally different between groups (P = .07); mean depression and fatigue scores over time were statistically nonsignificant. Feasibility outcomes and perspectives about study participation were positive. Mean pre-post decreases in HRQoL were generally higher among intervention group participants; pre-post changes in communication self-efficacy were equivalent., Conclusion: Mixed findings of the study indicate the need for future research.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Intraspecific phenotypic variation in a fish predator affects multitrophic lake metacommunity structure.
- Author
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Howeth JG, Weis JJ, Brodersen J, Hatton EC, and Post DM
- Abstract
Contemporary insights from evolutionary ecology suggest that population divergence in ecologically important traits within predators can generate diversifying ecological selection on local community structure. Many studies acknowledging these effects of intraspecific variation assume that local populations are situated in communities that are unconnected to similar communities within a shared region. Recent work from metacommunity ecology suggests that species dispersal among communities can also influence species diversity and composition but can depend upon the relative importance of the local environment. Here, we study the relative effects of intraspecific phenotypic variation in a fish predator and spatial processes related to plankton species dispersal on multitrophic lake plankton metacommunity structure. Intraspecific diversification in foraging traits and residence time of the planktivorous fish alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus) among coastal lakes yields lake metacommunities supporting three lake types which differ in the phenotype and incidence of alewife: lakes with anadromous, landlocked, or no alewives. In coastal lakes, plankton community composition was attributed to dispersal versus local environmental predictors, including intraspecific variation in alewives. Local and beta diversity of zooplankton and phytoplankton was additionally measured in response to intraspecific variation in alewives. Zooplankton communities were structured by species sorting, with a strong influence of intraspecific variation in A. pseudoharengus. Intraspecific variation altered zooplankton species richness and beta diversity, where lake communities with landlocked alewives exhibited intermediate richness between lakes with anadromous alewives and without alewives, and greater community similarity. Phytoplankton diversity, in contrast, was highest in lakes with landlocked alewives. The results indicate that plankton dispersal in the region supplied a migrant pool that was strongly structured by intraspecific variation in alewives. This is one of the first studies to demonstrate that intraspecific phenotypic variation in a predator can maintain contrasting patterns of multitrophic diversity in metacommunities.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Do better-rated navigators improve patient satisfaction with cancer-related care?
- Author
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Jean-Pierre P, Winters PC, Clark JA, Warren-Mears V, Wells KJ, Post DM, LaVerda N, Van Duyn MA, and Fiscella K
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasms diagnosis, Neoplasms therapy, Patient Care standards, Prognosis, Surveys and Questionnaires, Continuity of Patient Care standards, Early Detection of Cancer, Neoplasms psychology, Patient Care psychology, Patient Navigation, Patient Satisfaction statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Patient navigation has emerged as a promising strategy for addressing racial-ethnic and socioeconomic disparities in cancer-related care. However, little is known about the impact of patients' perception of the quality of navigation on patient outcomes. We examined the impact of better-rated navigators on patients' satisfaction with cancer-related care. The sample included 1,593 adults (85.8% with abnormal cancer screening and 14.2% with confirmed cancer diagnosis) who received patient navigation. We defined better-rated navigators as those scoring above the first quartile of mean scores on the Patient Satisfaction with Interpersonal Relationship with Navigator scale. We defined patient satisfaction based on scores above or below the median of the Patient Satisfaction with Cancer-Related Care (PSCC) scale. We controlled for patient and site characteristics using backward selection logistic regression analyses. Among patients with abnormal screening, having a better-rated navigator was associated with higher score on the PSCC (p < 0.05). After controlling for other bivariate predictors of satisfaction (e.g., age, race, income, and household size), navigation by better-rated navigators was associated with a greater likelihood of having higher patient satisfaction [odds ratio (OR), 1.38; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.05-1.82]. Similar findings between better-rated navigators and score on the PSCC were found for participants with diagnosed cancer (OR, 3.06; 95% CI, 1.56-6.0). Patients navigated by better-rated navigators reported higher satisfaction with their cancer-related care.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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