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Pacific Regions (pacific + regions)
Selected AbstractsASIA PACIFIC COLUMN: New challenges and opportunities in managing substance abuse in MalaysiaDRUG AND ALCOHOL REVIEW, Issue 5 2006MAHMUD MAZLAN MD Abstract Until recently, Malaysia has lagged behind in the treatment of drug addiction and related disorders, despite experiencing severe drug problems. By the end of 2004, 234 000 heroin users or heroin-dependent individuals had been registered in the official government registry, but other estimates exceed 500 000 for heroin abusers in the country. Amphetamine-type stimulant abuse is also increasing and of considerable public and government concern. Among the population of drug users, HIV and other infectious diseases rates are very high. In the Western Pacific regions, Malaysia has the second highest HIV prevalence (after Vietnam) among adult populations (0.62%) and the highest proportion of HIV cases resulting from injection drug use (76.3%). Drug use and related disorders exert a heavy burden on the country's health care and legal systems. Historically, drug abusers were rehabilitated involuntarily in correctional, rather than health-care, facilities. This primarily criminal treatment approach had limited effectiveness which led to widespread public dissatisfaction and the recent introduction of medical treatments for addiction. Naltrexone was introduced in 1999; buprenorphine was introduced in 2001 and methadone in 2003. Agonist maintenance programmes were embraced rapidly by the medical community in Malaysia. Currently, over 30 000 opiate-dependent patients are treated with agonist maintenance treatments by more than 500 medical practitioners in Malaysia. Despite these recent advances, treatments for amphetamine-type stimulant abuse or dependence are underdeveloped, and diversion of agonist medications is an emerging concern. [source] Synchronicity in southern hemisphere squid stocks and the influence of the Southern Oscillation and Trans Polar IndexFISHERIES OCEANOGRAPHY, Issue 4 2004C. M. Waluda Abstract Squid are short lived, with highly labile populations that respond rapidly to changes in environmental conditions. This makes them a good model for studying the response of recruitment processes to environmental signals. This study examines the influence of the Southern Oscillation Index (SOI) and Trans Polar Index (TPI) on the environment and abundance of six species of commercially important squid from the southern hemisphere, all linked to major current systems connected by the Antarctic Circumpolar Current: Dosidicus gigas (Southeast Pacific), Loligo vulgaris reynaudii (Southeast Atlantic), Nototodarus sloanii, N. gouldi (Southwest Pacific), Illex argentinus and L. gahi (Southwest Atlantic). All fisheries displayed a high level of inter-annual variability and a degree of synchronicity was seen to occur in the abundance of the three Pacific species. The SOI signal was reflected in the environment of each fishery, particularly in Pacific regions. Both indices are correlated with squid abundance, particularly during the early life history stages (SOI) and adult stages (TPI), suggesting some degree of latitudinal separation, with juveniles potentially influenced by environmental variability at lower latitudes and adults at higher latitudes. [source] Microsatellite markers for the pest fruit fly, Bactrocera papayae (Diptera: Tephritidae) and other Bactrocera speciesMOLECULAR ECOLOGY RESOURCES, Issue 1 2006D. C. A. SHEARMAN Abstract The dorsalis complex contains some of the most economically important fruit fly pests of the Asia,Pacific regions, including Bactrocera dorsalis, Bactrocera papayae and Bactrocera carambolae. These species are morphologically indistinct and genetically very similar. We describe the development of 12 microsatellite markers isolated from a representative of the dorsalis complex, B. papayae. We show the potential utility of the B. papayae microsatellites and a set of microsatellites isolated from Bactrocera tryoni as population and species markers for the dorsalis complex. [source] Aviation fuel demand modelling in OECD and developing countries: impacts of fuel efficiencyOPEC ENERGY REVIEW, Issue 1 2009Mohammad Mazraati On the quest for reducing the fuel consumption per passenger per flight for economical and environmental reasons, commercial aircraft manufacturers are implementing new strategies for optimising aircraft performance by using new lighter and stronger materials and enhancing engines' efficiencies in terms of fuel consumption and maintenance requirements. With the rising and falling of economies, whether in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) countries or other developing countries, the aviation industry has been affected by multiple factors such as passenger traffic, freight traffic, airport capacities and oil prices. Aircraft manufacturers have worked on improving the engine efficiency of their newly built airplanes (e.g. Airbus's A-380 and Boeing's B-787), and many airports in the world have increased the number of their runways to face the increasing demand for air traffic in the world. Aviation efficiency can also be achieved through better load management, which in return enables airliners to cope with higher oil prices or rising costs. Aviation fuel demand is modelled in OECD North America, Europe and Pacific regions and some selected developing countries. Price elasticities of fuel demand in all regions are low, while income elasticities are high. The elasticity of aviation fuel demand on passenger kilometre performed (PKP) is considerably low. One per cent increase in PKP leads to less than half a per cent increase in aviation fuel demand, confirming an ongoing fuel efficiency in aviation industry. [source] Random Walks and the Cointegration of the ACLI and NCREIFREAL ESTATE ECONOMICS, Issue 3 2000Leon Shilton Do NCREIF returns influence commercial mortgage underwriters when they adjust capitalization rates? Are the ACLI capitalization series and the NCREIF return series cointegrated at the national and the smaller geographic sub-division levels? This research uses a two-step procedure to test for cointegration. First, the Phillips,Perron unit-root procedure must show that each series is a unit-root random walk. Previous research usually has assumed that these series are random walks, with the implication that the commercial mortgage market is efficient. Second, the Phillips,Ouliaris test of the residuals of a function of the two series determines the possibility of cointegration. At the national level and for the Northeast and Pacific regions the two series are random walks and cointegrated. In other geographic sub-divisions, neither or only one series is a random walk and therefore the data does not support a relationship. The lack of functional relationships in four of the six smaller geographic regions suggests that underwriters are not obtaining the NCREIF information or are ignoring it. The lack of random walks with the implication about capital-market efficiency invites further research. [source] Comparison of Small Subunit Ribosomal RNA Gene and Internal Transcribed Spacer Sequences Among Isolates of the Intranuclear Microsporidian Nucleospora salmonisTHE JOURNAL OF EUKARYOTIC MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 4 2000STEPHANE J. GRESOVIAC ABSTRACT. Nucleospora salmonis is an intranuclear microsporidian associated with a proliferative disorder of the lymphoid cells of captive salmonid fish in the northwestern and northeastern regions of North America, in France, and in Chile. Newer diagnostic approaches have used the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to detect the parasite in fish tissues. The target sequences for these assays lie in the small subunit ribosomal RNA (ssu rRNA) gene or internal transcribed spacer (ITS) as determined from N. salmonis from chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) from the Pacific Northwest of North America. The lack of sequence data on parasites from diverse geographic origins and hosts led us to compare several isolates of N. salmonis. There was a high degree of similarity in the ssu rDNA sequences (> 98%) among all the isolates of N. salmonis examined, regardless of host or geographic origin. The greatest sequence differences were found between isolates from the Pacific regions of America. Isolates from Chile shared sequences with one or both geographic groups from North America. A similar distribution of sequence types was observed when ITS-1 sequences of selected isolates were analyzed. Sequence data from two N. salmonis -like isolates from marine non-salmonid fish showed one closely related and the second less closely related to N. salmonis isolates from salmonid fish. These results provide evidence for a homogeneous group of aquatic members of the genus Nucleospora found among salmonid fish (N. salmonis) that can be detected using diagnostic PCR assays with ssu rDNA target sequences. The presence of parasites related to N. salmonis among marine fish suggests a potentially broad host and geographic distribution of members of the family Enterocytozoonidae. [source] Legislation and the capacity for rapid-response management of nonindigenous species of fish in contiguous waters of Canada and the USAAQUATIC CONSERVATION: MARINE AND FRESHWATER ECOSYSTEMS, Issue 3 2009Vernon G. Thomas Abstract 1.The provision of Canadian and US hard, enforceable, law to authorize rapid response management of nonindigenous aquatic species originating from aquaculture, live fish sales, bait fish, and the pet trade was analysed at the provincial/state levels of government for the Atlantic, Laurentian Great Lakes, and Pacific regions of North America. 2.No federal legal capacity for rapid response management exists in either country. US state legislation is generally better developed than Canadian provincial laws to manage the exotic fish trade. However, much discrepancy exists among provincial and state law regarding provisions to restrict or prohibit potentially harmful species. Aquaculture and baitfish use is generally better regulated than live fish markets and the pet fish trade in both countries. Only the state of Maine has laws authorizing rapid-response management to control escaped exotic fish. 3.Most species of nonindigenous fish arise from the aquarium, pet, and baitfish trades, and development of improved legislation containing provisions for rapid response management of escapees is warranted in all states and provinces. 4.It is recommended that Canada amends the Fisheries Act to create the appropriate enabling legislation to monitor, assess risk, and deploy rapid response management of nonindigenous aquatic species, including fish that enter federal fresh and sea waters. Two recently-introduced US Bills, S. 725 and H.R. 1350, with their explicit measures for early detection and fast action response, could, if passed into law, create provisions to control introduced nuisance species throughout North American waters. They would also create precedents for states and provinces that have most jurisdiction over aquaculture and trade in exotic fish to amend and align their laws in a complementary manner. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] |