Actual Effects (actual + effects)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Implications of Climatic Warming for Conservation of Native Trees and Shrubs in Florida

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, Issue 4 2001
David W. Crumpacker
Climatic-envelope models are useful for simultaneous investigation of many plant species whose range-limiting mechanisms are poorly known. They are most effectively applied in regions with strong temperature and moisture gradients and low relief. Their required databases are often relatively easy to obtain. We provide an example involving the effect of six annual warming scenarios, ranging from +1° C to +2° C and from +10% to ,20% annual precipitation (some have greater warming in winter than in summer), on 117 native woody species in Florida (U.S.A.). Tree species at their southern range boundaries in several parts of Florida are likely to be negatively affected by as little as 1° C warming if it is greater in winter than in summer or is accompanied by a 20% decrease in annual precipitation. Potential species responses to an identical type of 1° C warming may be different for some conservation areas in the same region of Florida. Potentially extensive disruption of some major woody ecosystems is predicted under certain types of 1° C annual warming and under all types of 2° C annual warming that were investigated. Additional consideration of nonclimatic factors suggests that many potential effects on species and ecosystems are not underestimates of actual effects over a 100-year period of warming. We recommend monitoring for decreased fertility and viability of ecologically important, temperate woody species near their southern range limits in Florida. Early detection of such changes in fitness might then provide time for mitigations designed to alleviate more serious subsequent effects on biodiversity. Control of invasive, non-native plant species and prevention of their additional introduction, human-assisted translocation of native subtropical plant species into previously temperate parts of Florida, and restoration of more natural hydrological regimes are examples of potentially useful mitigations if climatic warming continues. Resumen: Los modelos de procesos ecológicos y los modelos empíricos han sido usados para relacionar predicciones de cambio climático con los efectos en especies de plantas y vegetación. Los modelos climáticos son útiles para la investigación simultánea de muchas especies de plantas cuyos mecanismos limitantes de rango son poco conocidos. Estos modelos son más eficientemente aplicados en regiones con gradientes de temperatura y humedad fuertes y con relieve bajo. Las bases de datos requeridas son a menudo relativamente fáciles de adquirir. Proveemos un ejemplo que involucra el efecto de seis escenarios anuales de calentamiento con un rango de +1° C a +2° C y de +10% a ,20% de precipitación anual (algunos con rangos de calentamiento mayores en el invierno que en el verano), en 117 especies leñosas nativas de Florida ( E.U.A.). Las especies de árboles en sus límites de rango al sur en diversas partes de Florida son más factibles de ser negativamente afectadas por tan poco como 1° C de calentamiento, si este es mayor en el invierno que en el verano o si es acompañado por una disminución de un 20% de precipitación anual. Las respuestas potenciales de las especies a un tipo idéntico de calentamiento de 1° C puede ser diferente para algunas áreas de conservación en la misma región de Florida. Se predicen perturbaciones potencialmente extensivas en algunos ecosistemas leñosos principales investigados bajo ciertos tipos de calentamiento anual de 1° C y bajo todos los tipos de calentamiento anual de 2° C. Las consideraciones adicionales de factores no climáticos sugieren que muchos efectos potenciales sobre las especies y ecosistemas no son subestimaciones de los efectos actuales sobre un período de calentamiento de 100 años. Se recomienda el monitoreo de la disminución de la fertilidad y viabilidad de especies leñosas templadas ecológicamente importantes cerca de los límites sureños de sus rangos en la Florida. La detección temprana de estos cambios en adaptabilidad pueden proveer tiempo para mitigaciones diseñadas para aliviar efectos posteriores más serios en la biodiversidad. Algunos ejemplos de mitigaciones potencialmente útiles en caso de que el calentamiento global continúe incluyen el control de especies de plantas invasoras no nativas y la prevención de su introducción adicional, la translocación asistida por humanos de plantas nativas subtropicales en partes previamente templadas de Florida y la restauración de regimenes hidrológicos más naturales. [source]


Indicators of leadership development in undergraduate military education

JOURNAL OF LEADERSHIP STUDIES, Issue 2 2010
Rebecca S. Shepherd
Despite the reputation of service academies and military colleges for producing leaders of character who serve as commissioned officers in America's armed forces, little is known about the actual effects these institutions have on the leadership development of their students. A two-step process, this cross-sectional study sought to investigate leadership development through the lens of the leadership identity development model as measured by the aptitude for commission grade. From a review of the military leadership curriculum at American service academies and military colleges, the initial phase of research established that leadership development occurred. The second phase used quantitative methods and a cross-sectional design to investigate the effects of peer ranking, cumulative grade point average, leadership grades, and varsity athletic participation on leadership development throughout four years of undergraduate education. Findings indicated that company ranking by peers was significant regardless of gender or ethnicity. Mixed significant findings resulted for grade point average, leadership grades, and varsity athletic participation when based on gender and self-identified minority status. [source]


Regulated trafficking of neurotransmitter transporters: common notes but different melodies

JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY, Issue 1 2002
Michael B. Robinson
Abstract The activity of biogenic amine and amino acid neurotransmitters is limited by presynaptic and astrocytic Na+ -dependent transport systems. Their functional importance is underscored by the observation that these transporters are the targets of broad classes of psychotherapeutic agents, including antidepressants and stimulants. Early studies suggested that the activity of these transporters can be fine tuned by a number of different signaling pathways. In the past five years, several groups have provided compelling evidence that changing the cell surface availability of these transporters contributes to this fine tuning. This regulated trafficking can result in rapid (within minutes) increases or decreases in the plasma membrane expression of these transporters and is independent of transcriptional or translational control mechanisms. Many of the same signaling molecules, including protein kinase C (PKC), tyrosine kinase, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (P13-K), and protein phosphatase, regulate the transporters for different neurotransmitters. In addition to these classical receptor activated pathways, transporter substrates also regulate activity and cell surface expression of these transporters. In fact, some of the transporters form complexes with signaling molecules. Given the functional and genetic similarities of these transporters, it is not surprising that the same signaling molecules regulate their trafficking, but except for the molecules, the actual effects on individual transporters are remarkably different. It,is as if the same musical notes have been rearranged into several different melodies. [source]


Wettbewerbsorientierte Reformen im Gesundheitssystem der Schweiz , Vorbild für regulierten Wettbewerb in der deutschen GKV?

PERSPEKTIVEN DER WIRTSCHAFTSPOLITIK, Issue 1 2004
Stefan Greß
In this article we examine expected behavioral changes of the market actors, the way incentives for market actors have been changed and analyze the way market actors in fact changed their behavior. We conclude that so far only some of the targets of the reforms have been met. For a reasonable assessment of the Swiss experience in regulating competition in health care it is paramount to distinguish expected effects from actual effects. [source]


Effects of ovariectomy and oestrogen replacement on the function and expression of Rho-kinase in rat bladder smooth muscle

BJU INTERNATIONAL, Issue 5 2006
Sung K. Hong
OBJECTIVE To investigate the effects of ovariectomy and oestrogen replacement on the function and expression of Rho-kinase in rat bladder smooth muscle, as the actual effects of oestrogen deprivation on bladder smooth muscle are unclear. MATERIALS AND METHODS Female Sprague,Dawley rats were placed into one of three groups: sham-operated, bilateral ovariectomy-only, and bilateral ovariectomy plus oestrogen replacement groups. In the last group, oestrogen was replaced by weekly injection of ,-estradiol 17-cypionate (250 µg/kg subcutaneously for 6 weeks) beginning at 1 week after ovariectomy, whereas the other groups received vehicle-only injections for 6 weeks. After treatment, the bladder was removed for muscle strip studies to evaluate the effects of Y-27632, a specific inhibitor of Rho-kinase, on baseline tension and carbachol-induced tonic contractions. Also, the protein expression of RhoA and Rho-kinase isoenzymes was assessed by Western blot analysis. RESULTS Of the three groups, incubation with 10 µm Y-27632 resulted in the largest decrease in baseline tension of strips from the bilateral ovariectomy-only group, but this was not statistically significant (P > 0.05). For carbachol-induced tonic contractions, strips from the bilateral ovariectomy-only group were attenuated the most among the three groups after adding Y-27632 (P < 0.05). However, there were no significant differences in the levels of RhoA and the two Rho-kinase isoenzymes in bladder tissues from the three groups. CONCLUSION Our data show that oestrogen might inhibit the function of Rho-kinase in bladder smooth muscle, while having no significant effect on its expression. This finding might help to explain the greater incidence of urinary tract symptoms suggestive of overactive bladder after the menopause in women. [source]


The effect of environmental information on investment allocation decisions , an experimental study

BUSINESS STRATEGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT, Issue 6 2008
Pall Rikhardsson
Abstract This paper focuses on the use of environmental information in investment decision making. The research approach employed is based on an experiment where three groups of final year finance students were asked to allocate investment funds between two companies based on financial accounts and information material from these companies in which environmental information was included in varying degrees. The overall conclusion is that the qualitative environmental information affects short term allocation decisions, hence indicating a risk reduction potential of environmental information comparable to the classic interpretation of financial information. The quantitative environmental information included in the experiment seems to mitigate rather than extend the directional effect of more environmental information. The evidence also seems to indicate that decision makers are not always aware which information categories affect their decision making. Hence, this has implications for how the potential value of environmental information is to be assessed. Finally, experimental studies as a methodology seem to be better suited to indicate actual effects of different types of information on decision making than attitude surveys. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment. [source]