Home About us Contact | |||
Extinction
Kinds of Extinction Terms modified by Extinction Selected AbstractsEXTINCTION DURING EVOLUTIONARY RADIATIONS: RECONCILING THE FOSSIL RECORD WITH MOLECULAR PHYLOGENIESEVOLUTION, Issue 12 2009Tiago B. Quental Recent application of time-varying birth,death models to molecular phylogenies suggests that a decreasing diversification rate can only be observed if there was a decreasing speciation rate coupled with extremely low or no extinction. However, from a paleontological perspective, zero extinction rates during evolutionary radiations seem unlikely. Here, with a more comprehensive set of computer simulations, we show that substantial extinction can occur without erasing the signal of decreasing diversification rate in a molecular phylogeny. We also find, in agreement with the previous work, that a decrease in diversification rate cannot be observed in a molecular phylogeny with an increasing extinction rate alone. Further, we find that the ability to observe decreasing diversification rates in molecular phylogenies is controlled (in part) by the ratio of the initial speciation rate (Lambda) to the extinction rate (Mu) at equilibrium (the LiMe ratio), and not by their absolute values. Here we show in principle, how estimates of initial speciation rates may be calculated using both the fossil record and the shape of lineage through time plots derived from molecular phylogenies. This is important because the fossil record provides more reliable estimates of equilibrium extinction rates than initial speciation rates. [source] COALESCENCE IN A METAPOPULATION WITH RECURRENT LOCAL EXTINCTION AND RECOLONIZATIONEVOLUTION, Issue 5 2003John R. Pannell Abstract Many species exist as metapopulations in balance between local population extinction and recolonization. The effect of these processes on average population differentiation, within-deme diversity, and specieswide diversity has been considered previously. In this paper, coalescent simulations of Slatkin's propagule-pool and migrant-pool models are used to characterize the distribution of neutral genetic diversity within demes (,s), diversity in the metapopulation a whole (TTT), the ratio FST= (,t,,S)/,T, Tajima's D statistic, and several ratios of gene-tree branch lengths. Using these distributions, power to detect differences in key metapopulation parameter values is determined under contrasting sampling regimes. The results indicate that it will be difficult to use sequence data from a single locus to detect a history of extinctions and recolonizations in a metapopulation because of high genealogical variance, the loss of diversity due to reductions in effective population size, and the fact that a genealogy of lineages from different demes under Slatkin's model differs from a neutral coalescent only in its time scale. Genetic indices of gene-tree shape that capture the effects of extinction/recolonization on both external branches and the length of the genealogy as a whole will provide the best indication of metapopulation dynamics if several lineages are sampled from several different demes. [source] FIXATION OF NEW ALLELES AND THE EXTINCTION OF SMALL POPULATIONS: DRIFT LOAD, BENEFICIAL ALLELES, AND SEXUAL SELECTIONEVOLUTION, Issue 6 2000Michael C. Whitlock Abstract With a small effective population size, random genetic drift is more important than selection in determining the fate of new alleles. Small populations therefore accumulate deleterious mutations. Left unchecked, the effect of these fixed alleles is to reduce the reproductive capacity of a species, eventually to the point of extinction. New beneficial mutations, if fixed by selection, can restore some of this lost fitness. This paper derives the overall change in fitness due to fixation of new deleterious and beneficial alleles, as a function of the distribution of effects of new mutations and the effective population size. There is a critical effective size below which a population will on average decline in fitness, but above which beneficial mutations allow the population to persist. With reasonable estimates of the relevant parameters, this critical effective size is likely to be a few hundred. Furthermore, sexual selection can act to reduce the fixation probability of deleterious new mutations and increase the probability of fixing new beneficial mutations. Sexual selection can therefore reduce the risk of extinction of small populations. [source] THE END-PERMIAN MASS EXTINCTION WAS SYNCHRONOUS COINCIDED WITH THE EVOLUTION OF TOXIC ALGAEJOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY, Issue 2001Article first published online: 24 SEP 200 Lee, R. E.1 & Kugrens, P.2 1Department of Biomedical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523; 2Department of Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Co 80523 USA The cause of the end-Permian mass extinction, the greatest of all mass extinctions, is one of the most intriguing mysteries in the history of life. The end-Permian mass extinction was primarily a marine event, resulting principally in the elimination of sessile filter-feeding organisms. Based on two methods, molecular clocks and correlation with ancient atmospheric CO2, the algae derived from secondary endosymbioses are believed to have originated in the middle to late Permian. All of the toxic marine algae in today's oceans are derived from secondary endosymbioses. Therefore it appears likely that the end-Permian extinction was due to the evolution of toxic algae in the phytoplankton of late-Permian seas. Sieving of the toxic algae in the phytoplankton likely resulted in the decline and eventual elimination of a large portion of the Paleozoic fauna during the end-Permian mass extinction. [source] POPULATION EXTINCTION IN DETERMINISTICAND STOCHASTIC DISCRETE-TIME EPIDEMIC MODELS WITH PERIODIC COEFFICIENTS WITH APPLICATIONS TO AMPHIBIAN POPULATIONSNATURAL RESOURCE MODELING, Issue 2 2006KEITH E. EMMERT ABSTRACT. Discrete-time deterministic and stochastic epidemic models are formulated for the spread of disease in a structured host population. The models have applications to a fungal pathogen affecting amphibian populations. The host population is structured according to two developmental stages, juveniles and adults. The juvenile stage is a post-metamorphic, nonreproductive stage, whereas the adult stage is reproductive. Each developmental stage is further subdivided according to disease status, either susceptible or infected. There is no recovery from disease. Each year is divided into a fixed number of periods, the first period represents a time of births and the remaining time periods there are no births, only survival within a stage, transition to another stage or transmission of infection. Conditions are derived for population extinction and for local stability of the disease-free equilibrium and the endemic equilibrium. It is shown that high transmission rates can destabilize the disease-free equilibrium and low survival probabilities can lead to population extinction. Numerical simulations illustrate the dynamics of the deterministic and stochastic models. [source] PATTERNS OF EVOLUTION AND EXTINCTION IN THE LAST HARPETID TRILOBITES DURING THE LATE DEVONIAN (FRASNIAN)PALAEONTOLOGY, Issue 1 2009KENNETH J. McNAMARA Abstract:, Late Devonian (Frasnian) harpetid trilobites have hitherto only been described from the western side of the Protethys Ocean, in what is now Europe and North Africa, as well as from Gondwana-derived northwestern Kazakhstan (Mugodjar). However, late Frasnian strata in the Canning Basin, Western Australia, that were deposited on the eastern side of this ocean, contain a rich harpetid fauna. Described herein are two new harpetids: Eskoharpes gen. nov. and Globoharpes gen. nov., within which are placed six species: E. palanasus sp. nov., E. wandjina sp. nov., E. boltoni sp. nov., E. guthae sp. nov., G. teicherti sp. nov. and G. friendi sp. nov. The ontogenetic development of E. palanasus, E. wandjina and G. teicherti are described, including the first unequivocal harpetid protaspis. Globoharpes exhibits evidence of sexual dimorphism in the development of a pronounced preglabellar boss in some specimens. This structure is thought to have functioned as a brood pouch. Such structures have previously only been described in Cambrian and Ordovician trilobites, and never before in harpetids. It is suggested that the characteristic harpetid fringe functioned as a secondary respiratory structure. The Eskoharpes lineage shows evolutionary trends that mirror changes seen in ontogenetic development of the youngest species, suggesting the operation of peramorphic processes. This is the first record of heterochrony in harpetids and the first documented example of peramorphosis in Devonian trilobites. These harpetids demonstrate a stepped pattern of extinction during the late Frasnian, probably related to the effects of the two Kellwasser biocrises that have been well documented in European Frasnian sections. Highly vaulted species of Eskoharpes and the strongly vaulted Globoharpes became extinct at the Lower Kellwasser Event. The flatter species of Eskoharpes became extinct at the base of the Upper Kellwasser Event shortly prior to the Frasnian/Famennian boundary. The extinction of these harpetids, along with contemporaneous forms from Europe, which are also discussed herein, marks the end of the trilobite order Harpetida worldwide. [source] CLIMATE PREDICTORS OF LATE QUATERNARY EXTINCTIONSEVOLUTION, Issue 8 2010David Nogués-Bravo Between 50,000 and 3,000 years before present (BP) 65% of mammal genera weighing over 44 kg went extinct, together with a lower proportion of small mammals. Why species went extinct in such large numbers is hotly debated. One of the arguments proposes that climate changes underlie Late Quaternary extinctions, but global quantitative evidence for this hypothesis is still lacking. We test the potential role of global climate change on the extinction of mammals during the Late Quaternary. Our results suggest that continents with the highest climate footprint values, in other words, with climate changes of greater magnitudes during the Late Quaternary, witnessed more extinctions than continents with lower climate footprint values, with the exception of South America. Our results are consistent across species with different body masses, reinforcing the view that past climate changes contributed to global extinctions. Our model outputs, the climate change footprint dataset, provide a new research venue to test hypotheses about biodiversity dynamics during the Late Quaternary from the genetic to the species richness level. [source] Evaluating the Predicted Local Extinction of a Once-Common MouseCONSERVATION BIOLOGY, Issue 4 2005OLIVER R.W. PERGAMS Chicago; declinación de especies comunes; extinción pronosticada; Peromyscus leucopus; Peromyscus maniculatus bairdii Abstract:,In an earlier paper (Pergams & Nyberg 2001) we found that the proportion of the prairie deer mouse (Peromyscus maniculatus bairdii), among all local Peromyscus museum specimens collected in the Chicago region, had significantly declined over time. This proportion changed from about 50% before 1900 to <10% in the last 25 years. Based on this proportion a regression model predicted the local extinction of the prairie deer mouse in 2009. To evaluate that prediction, we estimated current deer mouse abundance by live trapping small mammals at 15 preserves in Cook and Lake counties, Illinois (USA) at which prairie deer mice had previously been caught or that still contained their preferred open habitat. In 1900 trap nights, 477 mammals were caught, including 251 white-footed mice (P. leucopus), but only one prairie deer mouse. The observed proportion of Peromyscus that were prairie deer mice, 0.4%, was even lower than the 4.5% predicted for 2000. Here we also introduce a simple, new community proportions model, which for any given geographic region compares the proportions of species recently caught with the proportions of species in museums. We compared proportions of seven species collected in Cook and Lake counties and examined by Hoffmeister (1989) with proportions of these species that we caught. Ten percent of the museum community was prairie deer mice, but only 0.2% of our catch was. The current local scarcity of the prairie deer mouse is consistent with the regression-based prediction of its eminent local extinction. More conservation attention should be paid to changes in relative abundance of once-common species. Resumen:,En un artículo previo (Pergams & Nyberg 2001) encontramos que la proporción de Peromyscus maniculatus bairdii, entre todos los especimenes de museo de Peromyscus recolectados en la región de Chicago, había declinado significativamente. Esta proporción cambió de 50% antes de 1900 a <10% en los últimos 25 años. Con base en esta proporción, un modelo de regresión pronosticó la extinción local de P. m. bairdii en 2009. Para evaluar esa predicción, estimamos la abundancia actual de P. m. bairdii mediante el trampeo de mamíferos pequeños en 25 reservas en los condados Cook y Lake, Illinois (E.U.A.) en las que se había capturado a P. m. bairdii previamente o que aun contenían su hábitat abierto preferido. En 1900 noches-trampa, capturamos a 477 mamíferos, incluyendo a 251 P. leucopus pero solo a un P. m. bairdii. La proporción observada de P. m. bairdii, 0.4%, fue menor a 4.5% pronosticado para 2000. Aquí también introducimos un modelo, nuevo y sencillo, de proporciones de la comunidad que compara, para cualquier región geográfica, las proporciones de especies recientemente capturadas con la proporciones de especies en los museos. Comparamos las proporciones de siete especies recolectadas en los condados Cook y Lake y examinadas por Hoffmeister (1989) con las proporciones de especies que capturamos. Diez por ciento de la comunidad de museos era P. m. bairdii, pero solo 0.2% de nuestra muestra lo fue. La actual escasez local de P. m. bairdii es consistente con la predicción de su inminente extinción local con base en la regresión. La conservación debe prestar mayor atención a los cambios en la abundancia relativa de una especie anteriormente común. [source] Habitat Loss and Extinction in the Hotspots of BiodiversityCONSERVATION BIOLOGY, Issue 4 2002Thomas M. Brooks None of these hotspots have more than one-third of their pristine habitat remaining. Historically, they covered 12% of the land's surface, but today their intact habitat covers only 1.4% of the land. As a result of this habitat loss, we expect many of the hotspot endemics to have either become extinct or,because much of the habitat loss is recent,to be threatened with extinction. We used World Conservation Union [ IUCN ] Red Lists to test this expectation. Overall, between one-half and two-thirds of all threatened plants and 57% of all threatened terrestrial vertebrates are hotspot endemics. For birds and mammals, in general, predictions of extinction in the hotspots based on habitat loss match numbers of species independently judged extinct or threatened. In two classes of hotspots the match is not as close. On oceanic islands, habitat loss underestimates extinction because introduced species have driven extinctions beyond those caused by habitat loss on these islands. In large hotspots, conversely, habitat loss overestimates extinction, suggesting scale dependence (this effect is also apparent for plants). For reptiles, amphibians, and plants, many fewer hotspot endemics are considered threatened or extinct than we would expect based on habitat loss. This mismatch is small in temperate hotspots, however, suggesting that many threatened endemic species in the poorly known tropical hotspots have yet to be included on the IUCN Red Lists. We then asked in which hotspots the consequences of further habitat loss (either absolute or given current rates of deforestation) would be most serious. Our results suggest that the Eastern Arc and Coastal Forests of Tanzania-Kenya, Philippines, and Polynesia-Micronesia can least afford to lose more habitat and that, if current deforestation rates continue, the Caribbean, Tropical Andes, Philippines, Mesoamerica, Sundaland, Indo-Burma, Madagascar, and Chocó,Darién,Western Ecuador will lose the most species in the near future. Without urgent conservation intervention, we face mass extinctions in the hotspots. Resumen: Casi la mitad del total de plantas vasculares del mundo y un tercio de los vertebrados terrestres son endémicos en 25 "áreas críticas" para la biodiversidad, cada una de las cuales tiene por lo menos 1500 especies de plantas endémicas. En ninguno de estos sitios permanece más de un tercio de su hábitat prístino. Históricamente, cubrían 12% de la superficie terrestre, pero en la actualidad su hábitat intacto cubre solo 1.4% del terreno. Como resultado de esta pérdida de hábitat esperamos que muchas de las especies endémicas a estos sitios estén extintas o , porque la pérdida de hábitat es reciente , se encuentren amenazadas de extinción. Utilizamos Listas Rojas de UICN para comprobar esta predicción. En general, entre la mitad y dos tercios de las plantas amenazadas y el 57% de los vertebrados terrestres amenazados son endémicos de áreas críticas para la biodiversidad. Para aves y mamíferos en general, las predicciones de extinción en las áreas críticas para la biodiversidad, basadas en la pérdida de hábitat, coinciden con el número de especies consideradas extintas o amenazadas independientemente. En dos clases de áreas críticas para la biodiversidad la coincidencia no es muy grande. En islas oceánicas, la pérdida de hábitat subestima la extinción porque las especies introducidas han causado más extinciones que las producidas por la reducción del hábitat. Por lo contrario, la pérdida de hábitat sobrestima la extinción en áreas críticas para la biodiversidad extensas, lo que sugiere una dependencia de escala (este efecto también es aparente para plantas). Para reptiles, anfibios y plantas mucho menos especies endémicas son consideradas amenazadas o extintas por pérdida de hábitat. Sin embargo, esta discordancia es pequeña en áreas críticas para la biodiversidad en zonas templadas templadas, lo que sugiere que muchas especies endémicas amenazadas en las poco conocidas áreas críticas para la biodiversidad en zonas tropicales aun están por incluirse en las Listas Rojas. Posteriormente nos preguntamos en que áreas críticas para la biodiversidad serían más serias las consecuencias de una mayor pérdida de hábitat (absoluta o con las tasas actuales de deforestación). Nuestros resultados sugieren que el Arco Oriental y los Bosques Costeros de Tanzania/Kenia, Filipinas, Polinesia/Micronesia no pueden soportar mayores pérdidas y que, si continúan las tasas de deforestación actuales, el Caribe, Andes Tropicales, Filipinas, Mesoamérica, Sundaland, Indo-Burma, Madagascar y Chocó/Darién/Ecuador Occidental perderán más especies en el futuro. Sin acciones urgentes de conservación, habrá extinciones masivas en las áreas críticas para la biodiversidad. [source] Body Size and Risk of Extinction in Australian MammalsCONSERVATION BIOLOGY, Issue 5 2001Marcel Cardillo For Australian terrestrial mammals this link is of particular interest because it is widely believed that species in the intermediate size range of 35,5500 g (the "critical weight range") have been the most prone to recent extinction. But the relationship between body size and extinction risk in Australian mammals has never been subject to a robust statistical analysis. Using a combination of randomization tests and phylogenetic comparative analyses, we found that Australian mammal extinctions and declines have been nonrandom with respect to body size, but we reject the hypothesis of a critical weight range at intermediate sizes. Small species appear to be the least prone to extinction, but extinctions have not been significantly clustered around intermediate sizes. Our results suggest that hypotheses linking intermediate body size with high risk of extinction in Australian mammals are misguided and that the focus of future research should shift to explaining why the smallest species are the most resistant to extinction. Resumen: El vínculo entre el tamaño del cuerpo y el riesgo de extinción ha sido el centro de mucha atención reciente. Para los mamíferos terrestres australianos este vínculo es de particular interés debido a que se cree ampliamente que las especies en un rango intermedio de tamaño de 35,5500 g (el rango de peso crítico) ha sido el más susceptible a extinciones recientes. Sin embargo, la relación entre extinciones, el tamaño y el riesgo de extinción en mamíferos australianos nunca ha sido sometida a un análisis estadístico robusto. Usando una combinación de pruebas aleatorizadas y análisis filogenéticos comparativos, encontramos que las extinciones y disminuciones de mamíferos australianos han sido no aleatorias con respecto al tamaño del cuerpo, pero rechazamos la hipótesis de un rango crítico a tamaños intermedios. Las especies pequeñas aparentan ser las menos susceptibles de extinción, pero las extinciones no se han agrupado significativamente alrededor de tamaños intermedios. Nuestros resultados sugieren que la hipótesis que vincula el tamaño intermedio de cuerpo con un alto riesgo de extinción en mamíferos australianos está mal planteada y que el centro de la investigación a futuro deberá enfocarse a explicar el porqué las especies más pequeñas son las más robustas a la extinción. [source] Extinction in the developing rat: An examination of renewal effectsDEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOBIOLOGY, Issue 6 2007Carol S.L. Yap Abstract In the present series of experiments the context-specificity of extinction was examined from a developmental perspective. For postnatal day (PN) 23 rats, renewal of freezing to an aversive odor conditioned stimulus (CS) was observed when rats were conditioned in Context A, extinguished in Context B, and tested in Context A (i.e., ABA renewal). This effect was not observed in PN16 rats, which is consistent with previous studies suggesting that rats <,PN20 are impaired in encoding contextual information [i.e., Carew and Rudy [1991]. Developmental Psychobiology, 24, 191,209]. Subsequent experiments demonstrated that for rats conditioned at PN16 and tested at PN23, contextual regulation of extinction performance depended on the age at which extinction occurred. Specifically, ABA renewal was observed in rats given extinction training at PN22 but not in rats given extinction training at PN17. These latter results show that whether or not context regulates the expression of an ambiguous memory is determined by the animal's age when the memory becomes ambiguous. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Dev Psychobiol 49: 565-575, 2007. [source] Extinction in island endemic birds reconsideredECOGRAPHY, Issue 1 2004Tim M. Blackburn First page of article [source] Opposing effects of amygdala and orbital prefrontal cortex lesions on the extinction of instrumental responding in macaque monkeysEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 9 2005Alicia Izquierdo Abstract Extinction is a well-known behavioural phenomenon that allows organisms to respond flexibly to a changing environment. Although recent work implicates the amygdala and orbital prefrontal cortex (PFo) in extinction of Pavlovian conditioned fear and aversion, much less is known about the neural bases of instrumental extinction. To explore the contribution of the macaque amygdala to flexible responding in the face of changing reward contingency, we tested the effects of selective, excitotoxic lesions of the amygdala on extinction of an instrumental response. For comparison, we evaluated the effects of ablation of PFo on the same task. Amygdala lesions facilitated the extinction of instrumental responses, whereas lesions of PFo had the opposite effect. [source] THE CURSE OF THE LABRADOR DUCK: My Obsessive Quest to the Edge of Extinction.GEOGRAPHICAL REVIEW, Issue 2 2010By Glen Chilton. No abstract is available for this article. [source] Temporal dynamics and nestedness of an oceanic island bird faunaGLOBAL ECOLOGY, Issue 4 2006Ermias T. Azeria ABSTRACT Aim, To examine temporal variation in nestedness and whether nestedness patterns predict colonization, extinction and turnover across islands and species. Location, Dahlak Archipelago, Red Sea. Method, The distributions of land birds on 17 islands were recorded in two periods 30 years apart. Species and islands were reordered in the Nestedness Temperature Calculator, software for assessing degrees of nestedness in communities. The occupancy probability of each cell, i.e. species,island combinations, was calculated in the nested matrix and an extinction curve (boundary line) was specified. We tested whether historical and current nested ranks of species and islands were correlated, whether there was a relationship between occupancy probability (based on the historical data) and number of extinctions or colonizations (regression analyses) and whether the boundary line could predict extinctions and colonizations (chi-square analyses). Results, Historical and current nested ranks of islands and species were correlated but changes in occupancy patterns were common, particularly among bird species with intermediate incidence. Extinction and turnover of species were higher for small than large islands, and colonization was negatively related to isolation. As expected, colonizations were more frequent above than below the boundary line. Probability of extinction was highest at intermediate occupancy probability, giving a quadratic relationship between extinction and occupancy probability. Species turnover was related to the historical nested ranks of islands. Colonization was related negatively while extinction and occupancy turnover were related quadratically to historical nested ranks of species. Main conclusions, Some patterns of the temporal dynamics agreed with expectations from nested patterns. However, the accuracy of the predictions may be confounded by regional dynamics and distributions of idiosyncratic, resource-limited species. It is therefore necessary to combine nestedness analysis with adequate knowledge of the causal factors and ecology of targeted species to gain insight into the temporal dynamics of assemblages and for nestedness analyses to be helpful in conservation planning. [source] Unnatural Extinction: The Rise and Fall of the Independent Local UnionINDUSTRIAL RELATIONS, Issue 3 2001Sanford M. Jacoby This article analyzes what happened to independent local unions (ILUs), also known as company unions, since 1935. After providing a statistical analysis of ILU membership since 1935, the article looks at the factors that shaped membership trends: changes in labor law, the characteristics of ILUs, worker attitudes toward ILUs, and employers' industrial relations policies. New evidence is presented that suggests that even those employers who still favored ILUs in the 1950s were orienting them away from collective bargaining and toward the "new nonunion model" of the 1960s and 1970s. [source] How closely do acute lethal concentration estimates predict effects of toxicants on populations?INTEGRATED ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT AND MANAGEMENT, Issue 2 2005John D. Stark Abstract Acute lethal dose/concentration estimates are the most widely used measure of toxicity and these data often are used in ecological risk assessment. However, the value of the lethal concentration (LC50) as a toxicological endpoint for use in ecological risk assessment recently has been criticized. A question that has been asked frequently is how accurate is the LC50 for prediction of longer-term effects of toxicants on populations of organisms? To answer this question, Daphnia pulex populations were exposed to nominal concentrations equal to the 48-h acute LC50 of 6 insecticides, Actara, Aphistar diazinon, pymetrozine, Neemix, and Spinosad; and 8 agricultural adjuvants, Bond, Kinetic, Plyac, R-11, Silwet, Sylgard 309, Water Maxx, and X-77; for 10 d. None of the D. pulex populations exposed to the acute LC50 of these insecticides were 50% lower than the control populations at the end of the study; exposure to diazinon resulted in populations that were higher than expected (91% of the control). Exposure to Actara and Aphistar resulted in populations that were <1 and 29% of the control, respectively. Exposure to Fulfill, Neemix, and Spinosad resulted in extinction. Extinction occurred after exposure to all of the adjuvants, except Silwet L-77 where the population was 31% of the control. These results corroborate other studies that indicate that the LC50 is not a good predictor of effects on population growth. Although lethal concentration estimates have their place in toxicology, namely to compare intrinsic toxicity of chemicals among species or susceptibility of a species to different chemicals over short time periods, population growth and growth-rate studies are necessary to predict toxicant effects on populations. [source] Mantle heterogeneity beneath the Antarctic,Phoenix Ridge off Antarctic PeninsulaISLAND ARC, Issue 1 2008Sung-Hi Choi Abstract We determined the Sr, Nd and Pb isotopic compositions of basalts recovered from the Antarctic,Phoenix Ridge (APR), a fossil spreading center in the Drake Passage, Antarctic Ocean, in order to understand the nature of the subridge mantle source. There are no known hotspots in close proximity to the site. We observe that small-scale isotopic heterogeneity exists at a shallow level in the subaxial mantle of the APR. Enriched (E-type) mid-ocean ridge basalts (MORB) coexist with normal (N-type) MORB in this region. The E-type basalts are: (i) relatively young compared to the N-type samples; (ii) were erupted after the extinction of the APR; and (iii) have been generated by low-degree partial melting of an enriched mantle source. Extinction of the APR likely caused the extent of partial melting in this region to decrease. We interpret that the geochemically enriched materials dispersed in the ambient depleted mantle were the first fraction to melt to form the E-type MORB. [source] ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Extinction of the autochthonous small mammals of Mallorca (Gymnesic Islands, Western Mediterranean) and its ecological consequencesJOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, Issue 6 2008Pere Bover Abstract Aim, To investigate the chronology, causes and consequences of the extinction of the autochthonous Pleistocene small mammals of Mallorca. Location, Mallorca (Gymnesic Islands, Balearics, Western Mediterranean). Methods, We have obtained the first direct 14C ages from the bone collagen of selected samples of two extinct endemic small mammals from Mallorca: the Balearic dormouse, Eliomys morpheus (Rodentia: Myoxidae) and the Balearic shrew, Asoriculus hidalgoi (Soricomorpha: Soricidae). We also present evidence for the absence of both endemics from the earliest Mallorcan archaeological sites and for the introduction of the garden dormouse, Eliomys quercinus, and the wood mouse, Apodemus sylvaticus. Combined information from direct dating of bone collagen of E. quercinus and A. sylvaticus and from cultural associations provides an adequate framework to establish the chronology of the faunal change and to compare it with the chronological information available on climatic change and the first arrival of humans on the islands. Results, The chronological record includes the latest evidence available for the survival of endemic species and the earliest introduction of small mammals into Mallorca. We present ,uncertainty periods for extinction' (UPEs) of both endemic mammals based on the chronology of their last occurrence and on the inferred timing of their extinction (restricted UPEs). Main conclusions, Possible causes for the extinction of autochthonous small mammals on Mallorca are discussed. Once we have discarded climatic causes, predation by invasive species, competition with newcomers and habitat deterioration, the introduction of diseases emerges as the most reasonable explanation for these extinctions. Based on the identification of changes in keystone species in Mallorcan ecosystems, we propose a tentative schedule of key ecological changes that have taken place over the past 5 millennia. [source] Understanding Late Quaternary extinctions: the case of Myotragus balearicus (Bate, 1909)JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, Issue 5 2003Pere Bover Abstract Aim, In this study we present a new view on the extinction of Myotragus balearicus, an extinct highly modified dwarf caprine from the Gymnesic Islands (or eastern Balearic Islands), as a methodological case study for interpretation of Late Quaternary extinctions (LQEs). Methods, We analyse all available 14C ages obtained from M. balearicus bones from the uppermost part of the Pleistocene and the Holocene, together with the available chronological data of the putative causes of Myotragus extinction. Results, It has been possible to define two critical dates that allow us to establish an ,uncertainty period for the Myotragus extinction' (UPME) in each analysed island (Mallorca, Menorca and Cabrera). For Mallorca, the UPME corresponds to the interval c. 3700 to 2030 calbc (i.e. c. 1670 years of uncertainty). In the case of Menorca, the UPME spans from 10,000 to 1930 calbc (8070 years of uncertainity). In Cabrera the UPME is placed between 3650 and 300 calbc (3350 years of uncertainty). These periods, together with a review of the available information on the chronology of human arrival and the chronology of Holocene climatic change, shed light on the possible causes of the extinction of this species. Main conclusions, Extinction of Myotragus because of climatic change can be definitively rejected. The Myotragus extinction must be attributed to the rapid effects of the first human occupation. The use of uncertainity periods for the disappearance of species represents a useful tool for the analysis of LQEs. [source] Maintaining diversity through intermediate disturbances: evidence from rodents colonizing rehabilitating coastal dunesAFRICAN JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, Issue 4 2000S. M. Ferreira Abstract Rodents inhabit the coastal dune forests of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Here habitat rehabilitation following mining of dunes has resulted in coastal dune forest succession similar to that recorded in nonmined forests. We investigated the colonization of rehabilitating stands and evaluate the role of disturbance in maintaining rodent diversity. A trapping programme was established between July 1993 and February 1995 during which rodent colonization, local extinction and species richness were recorded for rehabilitating stands of different ages. Trends in these variables were closely associated with one of three possible outcomes for a disturbed patch over time, with no intervening disturbances following the initial disturbance. Colonization was initially high which led to an increase in species richness. Extinction was lower than colonization, but became higher when the habitat was 3 years old, which led to a decline in richness. We extrapolate this result assuming negligibly small disturbances after the initiation of rehabilitation and suggest that intermediate levels of disturbance maintain rodent species richness in coastal dune forests. Furthermore, our results illustrated species turnover, a prediction of the recorded outcome, with young stands dominated by Mastomys natalensis and older stands by Saccostomus campestris or Aethomys chrysophilus. Résumé Il y a des rongeurs dans les forêts des dunes côtières du KwaZulu-Natal, en Afrique du Sud. Là, la réhabilitation de l'habitat après l'exploitation minière des dunes a abouti à une succession de forêts côtières des dunes semblable à celle qui est observée dans les forêts non exploitées. Nous avons étudié la colonisation des endroits en voie de réhabilitation et évalué le rôle des perturbations dans le maintien de la diversité des rongeurs. On a mis au point un programme de piégeage entre juillet 1993 et février 1995, pendant lequel on a noté la colonisation par les rongeurs, l'extinction locale et la richesse en espèces pour les endroits à différents stades de réhabilitation. Les tendances pour ces variables étaient étroitement associées à l'un des trois résultats possibles que peut conna,^tre avec le temps un endroit qui a été perturbé, lorsque aucune autre perturbation ne suit la première. La colonisation a d'abord été forte, ce qui a causé un enrichissement des espèces. Les extinctions étaient moins fréquentes que les colonisations, mais elles ont augmenté lorsque le nouvel habitat a atteint l'âge de trois ans, ce qui a entra,^né une perte de richesse en espèces. Nous extrapolons ce résultant en supposant que ce sont de petites perturbations négligeables après le démarrage de la réhabilitation et nous suggérons que des taux moyens de perturbation maintiennent la richesse spécifique des rongeurs dans les forêts des dunes côtières. De plus, nos résultats illustrent une rotation des espèces, une prédiction des résultats rapportés, avec les endroits les plus jeunes dominés par Mastomys natalensis et les plus anciens par Saccostomus campestris et Aethomys chrysophilus. [source] Effects of d -Cycloserine on Extinction and Reconditioning of Ethanol-Seeking Behavior in MiceALCOHOLISM, Issue 5 2009Peter A. Groblewski Background:,d -Cycloserine (DCS), a partial N -methyl- d -aspartate receptor agonist, has been shown to enhance the extinction of both cocaine and amphetamine-induced conditioned place preference (CPP). However, there have been no reports of the effects of DCS on the extinction of ethanol-conditioned behaviors in mice. Thus, the current experiments examined the effects of DCS on the extinction and subsequent reconditioning of ethanol-induced CPP in mice. Methods:, Male DBA/2J mice received either 2 or 4 pairings of ethanol (2 g/kg) with a conditioned stimulus (CS+) floor cue (and an equal number of saline pairings with a CS, floor cue on alternate days) resulting in either a weak or strong ethanol CPP, respectively. Following conditioning of a strong ethanol CPP mice received saline or 30 mg/kg DCS prior to each of the twelve 30-minute choice extinction trials administered at 48-hour intervals. Mice that had received conditioning of a weak ethanol CPP received saline, 30 or 60 mg/kg DCS immediately before each of the six 30-minute choice extinction trials. Following successful ethanol CPP extinction, mice received reconditioning trials similar to the initial conditioning trials. A final experiment examined the effects 12 DCS pre-exposures (15, 30, and 60 mg/kg) on initial conditioning of ethanol CPP. Results:, First, we showed that 2 doses of DCS (30 and 60 mg/kg) did not have aversive properties that could confound the effects on extinction of CPP (Experiment 1). Second, we showed that DCS (30 and 60 mg/kg) had no effect on the rate of extinction of either strong (Experiment 2) or weak (Experiment 3) ethanol-induced CPP. Interestingly, DCS administered during extinction interfered with reconditioning of ethanol-induced CPP,an effect specific to reconditioning, as DCS pre-exposure did not influence initial ethanol CPP conditioning (Experiment 4). Conclusions:, These experiments show that although DCS showed no effect on extinction behavior, when given during extinction it interfered with subsequent reconditioning of ethanol CPP. The mechanisms of this effect were not, however, due to nonspecific interference with learning because repeated DCS pre-exposures did not impair initial conditioning of ethanol CPP. [source] Identification of dislocations in large tetragonal hen egg-white lysozyme crystals by synchrotron white-beam topographyJOURNAL OF SYNCHROTRON RADIATION, Issue 6 2003M. Tachibana Large tetragonal hen egg-white (HEW) lysozyme crystals have been grown by a salt concentration-gradient method. The grown crystals, of thicknesses greater than 1.5,mm, were observed by means of X-ray topography using white-beam synchrotron radiation. Line contrasts clearly appeared on the Laue topographs. Extinction of the line images was observed in specific reflections. These results mean that the observed lines correspond to dislocation images. From the extinction criterion it is shown that the predominant dislocations are of screw character with ,110, Burgers vectors. In addition, dislocation loops with [001] Burgers vectors have been found in a tetragonal HEW lysozyme crystal including some cracks. These results are discussed in the light of dislocation elastic energy and slip systems in the crystals. [source] Operant Self-Administration of Ethanol in Sardinian Alcohol-Preferring RatsALCOHOLISM, Issue 11 2002Giovanni Vacca Background "Work" for ethanol, that is, the ability of a laboratory animal to press a lever to gain access to ethanol, has been proposed as (a) a requirement for definition of an animal model of alcoholism and (b) a measure of ethanol-reinforcing properties. The present study evaluated oral self-administration of ethanol under an operant (lever pressing) procedure in selectively bred Sardinian alcohol-preferring (sP) and alcohol-nonpreferring (sNP) rats. Methods Rats from both lines were initiated to self-administer 10% ethanol, on a fixed ratio 1 schedule and in daily 30 min sessions, by using the Samson sucrose fading procedure. Subsequently, rats were exposed to increasing concentrations of ethanol up to 30% on a fixed ratio 4 schedule. Finally, the extinction responding for ethanol, defined as the maximal number of lever responses reached by each rat in the absence of ethanol reinforcement, was determined. Results The results indicated that sP rats acquired and maintained lever pressing for ethanol, self-administering mean amounts of ethanol in the range of 0.6 to 1.1 g/kg/session, which gave rise to mean blood ethanol levels in the 30 to 45 mg% range. Extinction responding for ethanol in sP rats averaged 73. In contrast, once sucrose was faded out, sNP rats displayed minimal levels of responding for ethanol, and extinction responding averaged 6. Conclusions The results of the present study extend to the sP/sNP rat lines the finding that ethanol can be established as a reinforcer in selectively bred alcohol-preferring rats, whereas it has modest, if any, reinforcing properties in alcohol-nonpreferring rats. [source] Long-Lasting Resistance to Extinction of Response Reinstatement Induced by Ethanol-Related Stimuli: Role of Genetic Ethanol PreferenceALCOHOLISM, Issue 10 2001Roberto Ciccocioppo Background: The conditioning of ethanol's reinforcing effects with specific environmental stimuli is thought to be a critical factor in long-lasting relapse risk associated with alcoholism. To study the significance of such learning factors in the addictive potential of ethanol, this experiment was designed (1) to characterize the effects of stimuli associated with alcohol availability on the reinstatement of responding at a previously ethanol-paired lever in rats with genetically determined ethanol preference versus nonpreference and (2) to examine the persistence of the motivating effects of these stimuli over time. Methods: Male alcohol-preferring (P) and alcohol-nonpreferring (NP) rats were trained to operantly self-administer ethanol (10% w/v) or water on a fixed-ratio 1 schedule in a 30-min daily session. Ethanol and water sessions were scheduled in random sequence across training days. Ethanol availability was signaled by an olfactory discriminative stimulus (banana extract, S+), and each lever press was paired with brief presentation of the conditioning chamber's house light (CS+). The discriminative stimulus signaling water availability (i.e., nonreward) consisted of anise odor (S,), and lever-responses during water sessions were paired with a brief white noise generation (CS,). The rats then were placed on extinction conditions during which ethanol and water, as well as the corresponding stimuli, were withheld. The effects of noncontingent exposure to the S+ versus S, paired with response-contingent presentation of the CS+ versus CS, on responding at the previously active lever were then determined in 30-min reinstatement sessions. To study the resistance to extinction of the effects of the ethanol-associated stimuli, additional tests were conducted at 3-day intervals for a total of 50 days. Results: The number of ethanol-reinforced responses during self-administration training was significantly greater in P than in NP rats (p < 0.01). After extinction, a significant recovery of responding was observed in both groups of rats under the stimulus conditions associated with ethanol (S+/CS+) but not those associated with water (S,/CS,). However, the response reinstatement was significantly greater in P than NP rats (p < 0.01). In addition, the results revealed a considerable resistance to extinction to the effects of the ethanol-associated stimuli. Throughout the 50-day test period, responding remained significantly above extinction levels in both P and NP rats (p < 0.01), but with an overall greater number of responses in P than NP rats (p < 0.05). Conclusions: The results support the hypothesis that conditioning factors contribute importantly to compulsive ethanol seeking and long-lasting vulnerability to relapse. In addition, the results suggest that genetic predisposition toward heightened ethanol intake extends to greater susceptibility to the motivating effects of ethanol-related environmental stimuli. [source] Extinction and permanence of the predator,prey system with stocking of prey and harvesting of predator impulsivelyMATHEMATICAL METHODS IN THE APPLIED SCIENCES, Issue 4 2006Lingzhen Dong Abstract In this paper, a predator,prey system with stocking of prey and harvesting of predator impulsively is studied. Here, the prey population is stocked with a constant quantity and the predator population is harvested at a rate proportional to the species itself at fixed moments. Under some conditions, the existence and global asymptotic stability of the boundary periodic solution are proved, which implies that the system will be extinct; and given some different restrictions, ultimate positive upper and lower bounds of all solutions are obtained, showing the system being permanent. At last, two examples are given to illustrate our results. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Policies of Extinction: The Life and Death of Canada's Endangered Species LegislationPOLICY STUDIES JOURNAL, Issue 1 2000Raymond A. Rogers This article examines the attempt by the Canadian Federal Government to pass endangered species legislation (1995). It focuses on the constraints which confront the creation of environmental policy in Canada and identifies jurisdictional overlap and stakeholder conflict as the prime source of difficulties which confronted the Federal Government as it moved through the policy process for creating endangered species legislation. The wide-ranging consultation process leading up to the creation of the legislation provided ample opportunity for powerful interests to undermine the protection of endangered species. The article concludes with a discussion of endangered species legislation as an example of the failure of the "crisis management" approach to conservation and sustainability. [source] Civilization or Extinction: Citizens and Indians in the Early United StatesTHE JOURNAL OF THE HISTORICAL SOCIETY, Issue 2 2006Joseph S. Lucas [source] Extinction of island endemics: it is not inbreeding depressionANIMAL CONSERVATION, Issue 2 2007D. H. Reed No abstract is available for this article. [source] Sixty four nights of UBV photometry of early-type stars at La Sila,ASTRONOMISCHE NACHRICHTEN, Issue 3 2010P. Mayer Abstract UBV measurements of early-type stars, mostly eclipsing binaries, obtained at La Silla in the years 1990 to 1994 with the ESO 50 cm telescope are presented. Most of these data were already used in our individual studies of several binaries. Now all photometric measurements were reduced again with an advanced technique and are made available electronically. Our data for MY Ser have not yet been published; new light curve is given and solved. The result is that MY Ser is a contact binary, with very large fill-out parameter. Also a light curve and its solution for V1051 Cen are provided, and the problem of the period of V871 Cen is pointed out. Besides binaries (and the comparison and check stars) data for several stars in southern H II regions are included. Extinction and transformation coefficients are given (© 2010 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim) [source] |