Study Years (study + year)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Dental hygiene students' part-time jobs in dental practices in the Netherlands

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DENTAL HYGIENE, Issue 2 2010
JHG Poorterman
To cite this article: Int J Dent Hygiene DOI: 10.1111/j.1601-5037.2009.00415.x Poorterman JHG, Dikkes BT, Brand HS. Dental hygiene students' part-time jobs in dental practices in the Netherlands. Abstract:, Objective:, Many students have paid employment while studying. In the Netherlands, the Individual Health Care Professions Act (IHCP Act) allows dental hygiene students to work under certain conditions in a dental practice. The aim of the study was to determine how many dental hygiene students have part-time job employment in dental practice and which professional tasks they carry out. We also asked the dental hygiene students their opinion of the IHCP Act. Methods:, All the enrolled dental hygiene students (n = 341) at a School of Health in the Netherlands received a questionnaire by email. Results:, The response was 52% (176 students). Of the responding students, 75% had paid employment in addition to their study. A proportion of the students (35%) worked in a dental practice. The median number of hours worked per week was eight. Study year, age and prior education were positively related to working part-time in dental practice. Activities frequently performed were giving oral hygiene instruction, fluoride applications, scaling and root planning, providing chair side assistance and giving local anaesthesia. Although the self-reported knowledge about the IHCP Act was high, almost half of the students expressed the need for more detailed legal information. Conclusions:, Many dental hygiene students work in a dental practice, taking over a number of tasks usually performed by the dentist. More information in the dental hygiene curriculum about the requirements of the IHCP Act seems desirable. [source]


Systematic review of chorioamnionitis and cerebral palsy

DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES RESEARCH REVIEW, Issue 1 2002
Yvonne W. Wu
Abstract In a recent meta-analysis evaluating the relationship between chorioamnionitis and cerebral palsy, we found that chorioamnionitis is a risk factor for both cerebral palsy and cystic periventricular leukomalacia (cPVL). The current paper extends the meta-analysis by including studies published in the year 2000, and by further evaluating the causes of heterogeneity among individual study results. Using a random effects model, clinical chorioamnionitis was significantly associated with both cerebral palsy (RR 1.9, 95% CI 1.5,2.5) and cPVL (RR 2.6, 95% CI 1.7,3.9). Sources of heterogeneity included widely varying practices in the diagnosis of clinical chorioamnionitis, different gestational age characteristics, and varying study year. We conclude that based on the available literature, chorioamnionitis is a risk factor for both cerebral palsy and cPVL. MRDD Research Reviews 2002;8:25,29. © 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Comparison of costs and utilization among buprenorphine and methadone patients

ADDICTION, Issue 6 2009
Paul G. Barnett
ABSTRACT Aims Buprenorphine is an effective alternative to methadone for treatment of opioid dependence, but economic concerns represent a barrier to implementation. The economic impacts of buprenorphine adoption by the US Veterans Health Administration (VHA) were examined. Design Prescriptions of buprenorphine, methadone treatment visits, health-care utilization and cost, and diagnostic data were obtained for 2005. Findings VHA dispensed buprenorphine to 606 patients and methadone to 8191 other patients during the study year. An analysis that controlled for age and diagnosis found that the mean cost of care for the 6 months after treatment initiation was $11 597 for buprenorphine and $14 921 for methadone (P < 0.001). Cost was not significantly different in subsequent months. The first 6 months of buprenorphine treatment included an average of 66 ambulatory care visits, significantly fewer than the 137 visits in methadone treatment (P < 0.001). In subsequent months, buprenorphine patients had 8.4 visits, significantly fewer than the 21.0 visits of methadone patients (P < 0.001). Compared to new methadone episodes, new buprenorphine episodes had 0.634 times the risk of ending [95% confidence interval 0.547,0.736]. Implementation of buprenorphine treatment was not associated with an influx of new opioid-dependent patients. Conclusion Despite the higher cost of medication, buprenorphine treatment was no more expensive than methadone treatment. VHA methadone treatment costs were higher than reported by other providers. Although new buprenorphine treatment episodes lasted longer than new methadone episodes, buprenorphine is recommended for more adherent patients. [source]


Contrasting bacterioplankton community composition and seasonal dynamics in two neighbouring hypertrophic freshwater lakes

ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 11 2001
K. Van der Gucht
We characterized the bacterioplankton community and its seasonal dynamics in two neighbouring hypertrophic lakes by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) analysis of short (193 bp) 16S ribosomal DNA polymerase chain reaction (PCR) products obtained with primers specific for the domain Bacteria. Lake Blankaart is turbid and has a high phytoplankton biomass and episodic cyanobacterial blooms, whereas biomanipulated Lake Visvijver is characterized by clearwater conditions and the establishment of a dense charophyte vegetation. Both lakes were dominated by bacterial groups commonly found in freshwater habitats (e.g. ACK4 cluster of Actinomycetes; ACK stands for clones isolated from the Adirondack mountain lakes). Yet, cluster analysis and principal components analysis (PCA) revealed that taxon composition of the bacterioplankton community of the two lakes differs substantially and consistently throughout the season. During the study year (1998), the bacterioplankton community of both lakes showed a distinct seasonal pattern. Lake Blankaart showed a clear differentiation between winter, spring, summer and autumn. In Lake Visvijver, summer samples differed greatly from spring, autumn and winter samples. We hypothesize that the contrasting bacterioplankton in the two neighbouring shallow lakes is determined largely by the presence or absence of macrophytes. [source]


Solar UVB and warming affect decomposition and earthworms in a fen ecosystem in Tierra del Fuego, Argentina

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, Issue 10 2009
JOHANN G. ZALLER
Abstract Combined effects of co-occurring global climate changes on ecosystem responses are generally poorly understood. Here, we present results from a 2-year field experiment in a Carex fen ecosystem on the southernmost tip of South America, where we examined the effects of solar ultraviolet B (UVB, 280,315 nm) and warming on above- and belowground plant production, C : N ratios, decomposition rates and earthworm population sizes. Solar UVB radiation was manipulated using transparent plastic filter films to create a near-ambient (90% of ambient UVB) or a reduced solar UVB treatment (15% of ambient UVB). The warming treatment was imposed passively by wrapping the same filter material around the plots resulting in a mean air and soil temperature increase of about 1.2 °C. Aboveground plant production was not affected by warming, and marginally reduced at near-ambient UVB only in the second season. Aboveground plant biomass also tended to have a lower C : N ratio under near-ambient UVB and was differently affected at the two temperatures (marginal UVB × temperature interaction). Leaf decomposition of one dominant sedge species (Carex curta) tended to be faster at near-ambient UVB than at reduced UVB. Leaf decomposition of a codominant species (Carex decidua) was significantly faster at near-ambient UVB; root decomposition of this species tended to be lower at increased temperature and interacted with UVB. We found, for the first time in a field experiment that epigeic earthworm density and biomass was 36% decreased by warming but remained unaffected by UVB radiation. Our results show that present-day solar UVB radiation and modest warming can adversely affect ecosystem functioning and engineers of this fen. However, results on plant biomass production also showed that treatment manipulations of co-occurring global change factors can be overridden by the local climatic situation in a given study year. [source]


Carbon dioxide balance of a fen ecosystem in northern Finland under elevated UV-B radiation

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, Issue 4 2009
JAANA K. HAAPALA
Abstract The effect of elevated UV-B radiation on CO2 exchange of a natural flark fen was studied in open-field conditions during 2003,2005. The experimental site was located in Sodankylä in northern Finland (67°22,N, 26°38,E, 179 m a.s.l.). Altogether 30 study plots, each 120 cm × 120 cm in size, were randomly distributed between three treatments (n=10): ambient control, UV-A control and UV-B treatment. The UV-B-treated plots were exposed to elevated UV-B radiation level for three growing seasons. The instantaneous net ecosystem CO2 exchange (NEE) and dark respiration (RTOT) were measured during the growing season using a closed chamber method. The wintertime CO2 emissions were estimated using a gradient technique by analyzing the CO2 concentration in the snow pack. In addition to the instantaneous CO2 exchange, the seasonal CO2 balances during the growing seasons were modeled using environmental data measured at the site. In general, the instantaneous NEE at light saturation was slightly higher in the UV-B treatment compared with the ambient control, but the gross photosynthesis was unaffected by the exposure. The RTOT was significantly lower under elevated UV-B in the third study year. The modeled seasonal (June,September) CO2 balance varied between the years depending on the ground water level and temperature conditions. During the driest year, the seasonal CO2 balance was negative (net release of CO2) in the ambient control and the UV-B treatment was CO2 neutral. During the third year, the seasonal CO2 uptake was 43±36 g CO2 -C m,2 in the ambient control and 79±45 g CO2 -C m,2 in the UV-B treatment. The results suggest that the long-term exposure to high UV-B radiation levels may slightly increase the CO2 accumulation to fens resulting from a decrease in microbial activity in peat. However, it is unlikely that the predicted development of the level of UV-B radiation would significantly affect the CO2 balance of fen ecosystems in future. [source]


Root production and demography in a california annual grassland under elevated atmospheric carbon dioxide

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, Issue 9 2002
Paul A. T. Higgins
Abstract This study examined root production and turnover in a California grassland during the third year of a long-term experiment with ambient (LO) and twice-ambient atmospheric CO2 (HI), using harvests, ingrowth cores, and minirhizotrons. Based on one-time harvest data, root biomass was 32% greater in the HI treatment, comparable to the stimulation of aboveground production during the study year. However, the 30,70% increase in photosynthesis under elevated CO2 for the dominant species in our system is considerably larger than the combined increase in above and belowground biomass. One possible explanation is, increased root turnover, which could be a sink for the additional fixed carbon. Cumulative root production in ingrowth cores from both treatments harvested at four dates was 2,3 times that in the single harvested cores, suggesting substantial root turnover within the growing season. Minirhizotron data confirmed this result, demonstrating that production and mortality occurred simultaneously through much of the season. As a result, cumulative root production was 54%, 47% and 44% greater than peak standing root length for the no chamber (X), LO, and HI plots, respectively. Elevated CO2, however, had little effect on rates of turnover (i.e. rates of turnover were equal in the LO and HI plots throughout most of the year) and cumulative root production was unaffected by treatment. Elevated CO2 increased monthly production of new root length (59%) only at the end of the season (April,June) when root growth had largely ceased in the LO plots but continued in the HI plots. This end-of-season increase in production coincided with an 18% greater soil moisture content in the HI plots previously described. Total standing root length was not affected by CO2 treatment. Root mortality was unaffected by elevated CO2 in all months except April, in which plants grown in the HI plots had higher mortality rates. Together, these results demonstrate that root turnover is considerable in the grassland community and easily missed by destructive soil coring. However, increased fine root turnover under elevated CO2 is apparently not a major sink for extra photosynthate in this system. [source]


Temporal variation of heterozygosity-based assortative mating and related benefits in a lesser kestrel population

JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY, Issue 12 2009
J. ORTEGO
Abstract Heterozygosity as a target of mate choice has received much attention in recent years and there is growing evidence supporting its role in the evolution of mate preferences. In this study we analyse mating patterns in relation to heterozygosity in a lesser kestrel (Falco naumanni) population intensively monitored over six study years (2002,2007). The magnitude of heterozygosity-based assortative mating varied over time, being particularly patent in the last study years (2006, 2007). We have found evidence that this mating pattern entails both direct and indirect-genetic benefits. Clutch size increased with female heterozygosity and more heterozygous males raised a higher number of fledglings particularly in those years when the strength of the heterozygosity-based assortative mating was markedly higher. In the last study year, parent,offspring correlation of heterozygosity was stronger and higher than the expected if individuals would have randomly mated with respect to heterozygosity. Overall, our results offer empirical support to the heterozygous mate hypothesis of sexual selection but suggest that genetic diversity may act as a temporally variable target for mate choice. [source]


Temporal Changes in Brain Volume and Cognition in a Randomized Treatment Trial of Vascular Dementia

JOURNAL OF NEUROIMAGING, Issue 1 2001
Joseph P. Broderick MD
ABSTRACT Objective. To measure changes in brain and ischemic volume over time by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) as part of a randomized treatment trial of vascular dementia. Methods. Participants who met criteria for vascular dementia underwent comprehensive neurological and neuropsychological testing on entrance, during, and at completion of the 1-year study. For those centers who had easily available MRI, MRI of the brain was to be performed on entry and completion of the study. Image analysis was performed on all balanced and T2-weighted MR films to determine ventricular, sulcal, ischemic, and hemispheric brain volumes. Results. Of the 105 patients who met the criteria for vascular dementia, 40 had a baseline MRI study that met protocol requirements and was of excellent image quality. The baseline ventricular volume in these 40 patients with high-quality MR correlated with most measures of cognitive and behavioral function, including the total Alzheimer's Disease Assessment Score (ADAS) (r= 0.51, P= .0024), as well as activities of daily living (r= 0.61, P= .0002). The baseline ischemic brain volume correlated well only with the gait and postural stability scale (r= 0.74, P= .009). Of the 40 participants, 25 had MRI studies at baseline and at completion of the study that were comparable and of excellent image quality. For these 25 patients, the mean ventricular volumes increased by 9% over the study year (P= .001) and the mean ischemic brain volume increased by 18% (P= .01). Temporal changes in the sulcal and nonischemic brain volume did not reach significance. None of the 14 clinical score measures changed significantly between baseline and completion of the study in these 25 patients. Conclusion. In summary, ventricular volume correlated well with cognitive measures in patients with vascular dementia and was a more sensitive marker for change during the study year than the clinical scales used in this study. This study also points out the practical limitations of brain imaging as a surrogate measure of clinical outcome in multicenter randomized treatment trials of brain disease. [source]


Academic misconduct among medical students in a post-communist country

MEDICAL EDUCATION, Issue 3 2004
Maja Hrabak
Aim, To assess the prevalence of, attitudes towards and willingness to report different forms of academic dishonesty among medical students in a post-communist transitional country. Methods, An anonymous, self-administered questionnaire was distributed to medical students in Years 2,6 at the Zagreb University School of Medicine; 827 (70%) valid questionnaires were returned and analysed. Results, Most of the students (94%) admitted cheating at least once during their studies. The most frequent type of misconduct was ,signing in an absent student on a class attendance list' (89.1%), and the least frequent ,paying for passing an examination' (0.7%). The number of committed types of misconduct out of 11 listed types increased from Year 2 (median 2) to Year 6 (median 4). Cheating behaviours could be clustered into 4 groups based on self-reported cheating, perceived prevalence of cheating, attitude towards cheating, and willingness to report cheating. The clustered behaviours that most students admitted to were perceived as the most frequent, more approved of and less likely to be reported. The strongest predictors of dishonest behaviour were attitude, perception of peer group behaviour and study year. Almost half (44%) the students said they would never report any form of cheating. Conclusion, Academic misconduct is widespread among medical students at the largest medical school in Croatia and its prevalence is greater than that reported for developed countries. This may be related to social and cultural factors specific to a country in the midst of a post-communist transition to a market economy, and calls for measures to be instigated at an institutional level to educate against and prevent such behaviour. [source]


Allergen-induced in vitro expression of IL-18, SLAM and GATA-3 mRNA in PBMC during sublingual immunotherapy

ALLERGY, Issue 8 2007
J. Savolainen
Background:, Signalling lymphocytic activation molecule (SLAM) and interleukin (IL)-18 induce interferon (IFN)-, production from Th1 cells. The allergen-induced SLAM and IL-18 mRNA expressions are increased during subcutaneous immunotherapy (SCIT), but nothing is known about their role during sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT). Transcription factor GATA-3 is associated with Th2 cells but its role in SCIT and SLIT is yet unexplored. This study was undertaken to analyse the allergen induced in vitro mRNA expression of IL-18, SLAM and GATA-3 in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of children with allergic rhinitis (AR) during SLIT. Methods:, Ten patients with AR undergoing pollen SLIT with a weekly dose of 200 000 SQ-U, 10 with 24 000 SQ-U of mixture of Betula verrucosa, Corylus avellana and Alnus glutinosa and 10 with placebo were included. Peripheral blood mononuclear cell were stimulated with birch extract prior to, after 1 and 2 years of the treatment. The mRNA expression was assessed using kinetic real-time RT-PCR (TaqMan®; Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA). Results:, The expression of IL-18 mRNA was increased in the high-dose group in comparison to the placebo group after 1 year of therapy (P = 0.028) and had an inverse correlation with the late phase skin reaction after the second study year (r = ,0.41, P = 0.041). SLAM mRNA expression increased in the high-dose group from baseline to 1 year (P = 0.028) and correlated with IL-10 (r = 0.96, P < 0.0001) and transforming growth factor-, (r = 0.80, P = 0.0037) mRNA expression. No significant changes were seen in GATA-3 mRNA expression. Conclusions:, During SLIT, IL-18 and SLAM are upregulated, suggesting that the Th2 type inflammatory response is downregulated during SLIT by increased Th1 type response. [source]


Host plant quality and defence against parasitoids: no relationship between levels of parasitism and a geometrid defoliator immunoassay

OIKOS, Issue 6 2008
Netta Klemola
Host plant quality has a major influence on the performance, and ultimately on the fitness of an herbivorous insect, but may also have indirect effects on the third trophic level by affecting an herbivore's defensive ability against natural enemies. In a three-year field study, we examined the effects of natural food quality on the ability of autumnal moths, Epirrita autumnata (Lepidoptera, Geometridae), to defend themselves against parasitoids. In each year, we confirmed the variation in quality of host trees (mountain birch, Betulapubescens ssp. czerepanovii) by determining the mass of pupae reared in mesh bags attached to the trees and the water content of leaves. Individuals grown on high quality trees possessed significantly higher encapsulation rate of a foreign antigen as pupae compared to those on low quality trees during the first and third study years; a parallel trend was also found in the second study year, although this difference was not statistically significant. However, in spite of observed differences in encapsulation rates, individuals reared on high and low quality trees did not differ in their levels of parasitisation when exposed to hymenopteran parasioids in the wild and thus were equally vulnerable. Accordingly, the encapsulation response seems not to play a major role on the population ecology scale in the studied system. Our findings also stress the importance of direct resistance tests, which should be conducted along with tests of insect immune function. [source]


The transient value of classifying preschool wheeze into episodic viral wheeze and multiple trigger wheeze

ACTA PAEDIATRICA, Issue 1 2010
A Schultz
Abstract Background:, A recently proposed method for classifying preschool wheeze is to describe it as either episodic (viral) wheeze or multiple trigger wheeze. In research studies, phenotype is generally determined by retrospective questionnaire. Aim:, To determine whether recently proposed phenotypes of preschool wheeze are stable over time. Methods:, In all, 132 two to six-year-old children with doctor diagnosed asthma on maintenance inhaled corticosteroids were classified as having episodic (viral) wheeze or multiple trigger wheeze at a screening visit and then followed up at three-monthly intervals for a year. At each follow-up visit, standardized questionnaires were used to determine whether the subjects wheezed only with, or also in the absence of colds. Stability of the phenotypes was assessed at the end of the study. Results:, Phenotype as determined by retrospective parental report at the start of the study was not predictive of phenotype during the study year. Phenotypic classification remained the same in 45.9% of children and altered in 54.1% of children. Conclusion:, When children with preschool wheeze are classified into episodic (viral) wheeze or multiple trigger wheeze based on retrospective questionnaire, the classification is likely to change significantly within a 1-year period. [source]


Distribution, abundance, and individual strategies: a multi-scale analysis of dasyurid marsupials in arid central Australia

ECOGRAPHY, Issue 3 2006
Adele S. Haythornthwaite
We investigated the effects of different environmental factors on the distribution and abundance of 6 species of dasyurid marsupials using a multiple-scale analysis. Data collected in the spinifex dunefields of the Simpson Desert, Australia, were analysed at 3 spatial scales spanning more than 5 orders of magnitude: "metasite" (covering an area of 1000,2000 km2), site (2,12 km2) and grid (0.01 km2). Temporal variability was also investigated, using data collected in March, April, and May in 4 consecutive years from 1997 to 2000. Both abiotic and biotic factors influenced the capture rates of different species at different times and spatial scales. At the coarsest spatial scale, Dasycercus cristicauda (mulgara) was consistently limited in its distribution by the intensity of rainfall, probably as an indirect result of increased grazing pressure from pastoral activity and a higher density of feral predators in high rainfall areas. However, at the finest spatial scale, this partly carnivorous species was scarce in areas of dense spinifex, perhaps because such habitats yield lowest returns during foraging, and was more common in areas where small invertebrate prey were abundant. Factors affecting the distribution of the most abundant dasyurid species in the study area, Sminthopsis youngsoni (lesser hairy-footed dunnart), could not be identified at any scale; we conclude that this reflects the opportunistic foraging strategies and flexible habitat requirements of this insectivorous species. Both Ningaui ridei (wongai ningaui) and Sminthopsis hirtipes (hairy-footed dunnart) were less abundant throughout the study region. For N. ridei, a spinifex specialist, predictors of occurrence could be identified only at the finest scale of analysis; at the grid level, a close positive association was detected in 2 of the 4 study years between capture rate and spinifex cover. For S. hirtipes, all 3 levels of spatial analysis revealed a negative association between capture rate and both rainfall and spinifex density. For the rarely-caught S. crassicaudata (fat-tailed dunnart) and Planigale tenuirostris (narrow-nosed planigale), no clear results were obtained at any spatial scale, and we interpret this to indicate that the study region represents sub-optimal habitat for these species. Given that different factors affected the distribution and abundance of dasyurids at different spatial scales over time, we conclude that a multiple-scale approach to population and community analysis is vital to accurately identify which environmental processes shape population and community dynamics. Understanding the interplay between regional and local processes will be crucial for management of existing species populations and for prediction of their distributions and abundances in future. [source]


Rust severity in bioenergy willow plantations treated with additional nutrients

FOREST PATHOLOGY, Issue 1 2009
M. Toome
Summary A 3-year field study was carried out to determine the effect of wastewater irrigation and previous differences in mineral fertilization on the occurrence of willow leaf rust (Melampsora epitea). The experiment was conducted in two energy forest plantations: one designed for wastewater purification and the other as a mineral fertilization experiment. The severity of leaf rust on different clones and sites with different treatments was assessed by counting the number of uredinia per leaf unit area. Generally, plants irrigated with wastewater consistently had more leaf rust, irrespective of the study years or willow clones. Previous mineral fertilization had mixed effects on different clones 2 years after the last application. Three years after the last fertilizer application, however, no impact of the treatment on rust disease development was detected. In general, the rust levels differed from year to year probably due to climate. In this study, no correlation was detected between shoot age and rust severity, whereas climate and treatments strongly influenced leaf rust levels on some willow clones. [source]


Ecosystem CO2 exchange and plant biomass in the littoral zone of a boreal eutrophic lake

FRESHWATER BIOLOGY, Issue 8 2003
T. Larmola
Summary 1In order to study the dynamics of primary production and decomposition in the lake littoral, an interface zone between the pelagial, the catchment and the atmosphere, we measured ecosystem/atmosphere carbon dioxide (CO2) exchange in the littoral zone of an eutrophic boreal lake in Finland during two open water periods (1998,1999). We reconstructed the seasonal net CO2 exchange and identified the key factors controlling CO2 dynamics. The seasonal net ecosystem exchange (NEE) was related to the amount of carbon accumulated in plant biomass. 2In the continuously inundated zones, spatial and temporal variation in the density of aerial shoots controlled CO2 fluxes, but seasonal net exchange was in most cases close to zero. The lower flooded zone had a net CO2 uptake of 1.8,6.2 mol m,2 per open water period, but the upper flooded zone with the highest photosynthetic capacity and above-ground plant biomass, had a net CO2 loss of 1.1,7.1 mol m,2 per open water period as a result of the high respiration rate. The excess of respiration can be explained by decomposition of organic matter produced on site in previous years or leached from the catchment. 3Our results from the two study years suggest that changes in phenology and water level were the prime cause of the large interannual difference in NEE in the littoral zone. Thus, the littoral is a dynamic buffer and source for the load of allochthonous and autochthonous carbon to small lakes. [source]


Copepod life cycle adaptations and success in response to phytoplankton spring bloom phenology

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, Issue 6 2009
HANNO SEEBENS
Abstract In a seasonal environment, the timing of reproduction is usually scheduled to maximize the survival of offspring. Within deep water bodies, the phytoplankton spring bloom provides a short time window of high food quantity and quality for herbivores. The onset of algal bloom development, however, varies strongly from year to year due to interannual variability in meteorological conditions. Furthermore, the onset is predicted to change with global warming. Here, we use a long-term dataset to study (a) how a cyclopoid copepod, Cyclops vicinus, is dealing with the large variability in phytoplankton bloom phenology, and (b) if bloom phenology has an influence on offspring numbers. C. vicinus performed a two-phase dormancy, that is, the actual diapause of fourth copepodid stages at the lake bottom is followed by a delay in maturation, that is, a quiescence, within the fifth copepodid stage until the start of the spring bloom. This strategy seems to guarantee a high temporal match of the food requirements for successful offspring development, especially through the highly vulnerable naupliar stages, with the phytoplankton spring bloom. However, despite this match with food availability in all study years, offspring numbers, that is, offspring survival rates were higher in years with an early start of the phytoplankton bloom. In addition, the phenology of copepod development suggested that also within study years, early offspring seems to have lower mortality rates than late produced offspring. We suggest that this is due to a longer predator-free time period and/or reduced time stress for development. Hence, within the present climate variability, the copepod benefited from warmer spring temperatures resulting in an earlier phytoplankton spring bloom. Time will show if the copepod's strategy is flexible enough to cope with future warming. [source]


Effects of air pollution on natural enemies of the leaf beetle Melasoma lapponica

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, Issue 2 2000
Elena L. Zvereva
Summary 1. ,Air pollution might have differential effects on herbivores and their natural enemies, thus changing population dynamics. Therefore, from 1993 to 1998 we studied mortality caused by parasitoids and predators to the willow-feeding leaf beetle Melasoma lapponica in the impact zone of the Severonikel nickel,copper smelter (Kola Peninsula, north-western Russia). 2. ,Densities of M. lapponica were very low at clean forest sites (below five beetles per 10-min count) but higher in polluted areas (10,340 beetles per count). There were, however, variations between study years. 3. ,Egg predation, mainly by syrphid larvae and zoophagous bugs, was higher at relatively clean sites (55·3%) than at polluted sites (22·2%). Similarly, predation on larvae by zoophagous bugs and wood ants was higher at clean sites (68·4%) than at polluted sites (32·9%). 4. ,In contrast to predation, mortality caused by the parasitoid flies Megaselia opacicornis (Phoridae) and Cleonice nitidiuscula (Tachinidae) was lower at clean sites (12·3%) than at polluted sites (35·3%). Total parasitism levels increased significantly with pollution load. 5. ,Total mortality caused by natural enemies was higher at clean sites (93·7%) than at polluted sites (79·4%) due to higher predation rates, which may partly explain increased leaf beetle density within the smelter's impact zone. The effects of predators in clean forests were confirmed by the extinction of adults of M. lapponica introduced to one of the forest sites. 6. ,Although some individual sources of mortality appeared to be density dependent (direct or inverse), the joint effect of all natural enemies was not. 7. ,Our data show that a decrease in predation can contribute to increased leaf beetle density at polluted sites. However, the overall effects of natural enemies in this case were not sufficient to account for all density variations between sites. To our knowledge this is the first study to assess how pollution affects the partitioning of mortality in herbivorous insects between predators and parasitoids. [source]


Temporal variation of heterozygosity-based assortative mating and related benefits in a lesser kestrel population

JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY, Issue 12 2009
J. ORTEGO
Abstract Heterozygosity as a target of mate choice has received much attention in recent years and there is growing evidence supporting its role in the evolution of mate preferences. In this study we analyse mating patterns in relation to heterozygosity in a lesser kestrel (Falco naumanni) population intensively monitored over six study years (2002,2007). The magnitude of heterozygosity-based assortative mating varied over time, being particularly patent in the last study years (2006, 2007). We have found evidence that this mating pattern entails both direct and indirect-genetic benefits. Clutch size increased with female heterozygosity and more heterozygous males raised a higher number of fledglings particularly in those years when the strength of the heterozygosity-based assortative mating was markedly higher. In the last study year, parent,offspring correlation of heterozygosity was stronger and higher than the expected if individuals would have randomly mated with respect to heterozygosity. Overall, our results offer empirical support to the heterozygous mate hypothesis of sexual selection but suggest that genetic diversity may act as a temporally variable target for mate choice. [source]


Variable selection patterns on the labellum shape of Geoblasta pennicillata, a sexually deceptive orchid

JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY, Issue 11 2009
S. BENITEZ-VIEYRA
Abstract By mimicking shape and female mating pheromones, flowers of sexually deceptive orchids attract sexually excited males which pollinate them while trying to copulate. Although many studies have demonstrated the crucial importance of odour signals in these systems, most flowers pollinated by pseudocopulation resemble, at least superficially, an insect body and these visual cues may be important to cheat pollinators. In this 2-year study, we show that the shape of the labellum of Geoblasta pennicillata is a target of pollinator-mediated natural selection. Contrary to our expectations, plants with a labellum shape more similar to female wasps were not favoured. The strength and pattern of phenotypic selection varied between study years and sexual functions. Although selection through female success was probably associated to the fine-tuning of the mechanical fit between flower form and male wasp, shape was the target of natural selection through male success in both study years indicating that male wasps use this trait when choosing flowers. The imperfect mimicry and patterns of selection observed indicated that an exact imitation is not needed to attract and deceive the pollinators and they suggested a receiver perceptual bias towards uncommon phenotypes. [source]


Evaluating the enemies hypothesis in a clover-cabbage intercrop: effects of generalist and specialist natural enemies on the turnip root fly (Delia floralis)

AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 2 2010
Maria Björkman
1The relative importance of the resource concentration hypothesis and the enemies hypothesis was investigated for the turnip root fly Delia floralis in a cabbage,red clover intercropping system compared with a cabbage monoculture. 2Delia floralis egg densities were measured as well as the activity-densities of generalist predators in a field experiment during two growing seasons. In the second year, a study of egg predation with artificially placed eggs was conducted, in addition to a predator exclusion experiment, to estimate total predation during the season. Parasitization rates were estimated from samples of pupae. 3Delia floralis oviposition was greater in the monoculture during both years. The predator activity-densities differed between treatments and study years. The known natural enemies of Delia spp., Bembidion spp. and Aleochara bipustulata showed a strong response to a cultivation system with higher activity-densities in the monoculture. The response, however, appeared to be caused primarily by habitat preferences and not by D. floralis egg densities. 4The reduction in the number of D. floralis pupae in the intercropping may be explained by a disruption in oviposition behaviour caused by the presence of clover because neither predation, nor parasitization rates differed between cultivation systems. [source]


Aerial seed bank dynamics and seedling emergence patterns in two annual Mediterranean Asteraceae

JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE, Issue 3 2010
F. Bastida
Abstract Question: We explored the functional significance of seasonal aerial seed banks in two coexisting, heterocarpic annual Asteraceae with dormant (Chrysanthemum coronarium) and non-dormant (Anacyclus radiatus) achenes. We hypothesised that the plant achene pool is a significant component of total seed reserves, and that within-season seedling emergence timing is shaped by achene release patterns. Location: SW Spain. Methods: In an observational study, we established temporal achene release patterns. We also quantified the aerial and soil achene pools throughout the release season, and assessed seedling emergence timing. Sowing experiments were used to explore the influence of achene release dynamics on emergence timing, and to establish achene morph-specific patterns of between-year distribution of germination. Results: Achene release extended from late spring to late autumn (Chrysanthemum), or from early autumn to early winter (Anacyclus). Within species, achene morphs differed in release timing. Only in Chrysanthemum, a small achene fraction seemed to persist in the soil, and between-year germination distribution differed among morphs. In coexisting populations, the Anacyclus plant achene pool was an order of magnitude higher than the soil pool throughout the release season, whereas in Chrysanthemum both pools were of the same magnitude during autumn. Within-year seedling emergence was significantly staggered beneath parent plants compared with the pattern resulting solely from the germination response in soil, with the exception of Chrysanthemum in one of the two study years. Conclusions: Results suggest that seasonal aerial seed banks are effective within-season, risk-reducing traits in ruderal Mediterranean habitats characteristic of the study species. [source]


Spatial and temporal variations in the timing of leaf replacement in a Quercus cornelius-mulleri population

JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE, Issue 6 2003
Martin L. Cody
Nixon & Steele (1981) Abstract. The phenology of spring leaf replacement was studied in a population of 46 evergreen scrub oaks (Quercus cornelius-mulleri) at the edge of the Mojave Desert in each of five years over the period 1990,2001. The oaks occupied a site that spanned rocky slopes to sandy bajadas. The site receives variable annual rainfall (estimated 12-yr average 195 mm; range in study years 67,706 mm). The spatial coordinates of all individuals were recorded, and in April, when leaf replacement was underway, individual replacement phenologies were assessed. Shrub sizes were recorded in three separate years, and in 2001 water potentials were measured. Individuals vary greatly in their timing of leaf replacement within years, and also between years. Many individuals with an early phenology one year are significantly later in the following year, and vice versa. While we detected weak influences on leaf replacement phenology due to shrub size, position within the site, and a genetic component, stronger influences were attributable to the phenology of the shrub in prior years, and to the phenology of neighbours within years. Neighbouring individuals that are close and/or large are significantly disparate in phenology, with one early and the other late. A potential mechanism of local resource depletion associated with costs to an early phenology is discussed. [source]


Bacterioplankton heterotrophic activity in relation to the phytoplankton compartment in a recently formed reservoir

LAKES & RESERVOIRS: RESEARCH AND MANAGEMENT, Issue 1 2008
Louis-B.
Abstract Seasonal and spatial variations in bacterial abundance, biomass and potential heterotrophic activity in a recently flooded reservoir were measured for two consecutive years, in conjunction with phytoplankton biomass (chlorophyll- a concentration) and activity (primary production). The mean value of primary production remained constant between the two study years, while those of the chlorophyll- a concentrations, bacterial abundance, bacterial biomass and bacterial heterotrophic activity decreased. The observed trends in the bacterial variables were linked to changes in the relative importance of allochthonous dissolved organic matter, in addition to selective grazing activity on bacterioplankton. Multivariate regression analyses identified bacterial abundance (29%) and temperature (17%) as dominant correlates of the bacterial potential heterotrophic activity. We concluded that, in a new reservoir, organic matter, other than that from phytoplankton, might be of great importance for bacterioplankton metabolism. Furthermore, grazing activity on bacteria by metazoa in a new reservoir represents, on occasion, an important trophic link between the top consumer and otherwise unavailable dissolved organic carbon sources. Finally, even if little energy is transferred to larger consumers, the microbial route is still important in re-mineralizing organic matter in Sep Reservoir. [source]


Epidemiology, treatment and outcome of candidemia: a five-year review at three Canadian hospitals

MYCOSES, Issue 5-6 2002
Behandlung und ausgang von Candidämien: Eine Fünfjahresübersicht an drei kanadischen Hospitälern, Epidemiologie
Candidämie; Epidemiologie; Kanada Summary. To determine treatment regimens and epidemiological patterns in the occurrence of candidemia, a review of cases occurring from 1992 to 1996 in three large Canadian hospitals, University of Alberta Hospital (UAH) and Royal Alexandra Hospital (RAH), Edmonton, and Foothills Medical Center (FMC), Calgary, was carried out. Cases were detected by reviewing microbiology laboratory records. There were 202 cases in all (UAH 104, FMC 70, RAH 28). For the five study years the candidemia rate was 4.5/10 000 discharges (UAH 7.6, FMC 4.9, and RAH 1.7; P < 0.05 for all interhospital comparisons). The rate remained stable between 1992 and 1995 but rose dramatically in 1996 to 7.6/10 000 (P < 0.01 compared to 1995) as a result of increases at UAH and RAH. Of the 208 species identified, Candida albicans accounted for 135 (65%). During hospitalization 93 (46%) patients died. Species did not influence outcome. Antifungal treatment with fluconazole alone was given to 14% of patients, and increased in frequency throughout the study. No antifungal therapy was given to 47 patients (23%). This group had a much higher mortality (68%) than those who received treatment (39% P < 0.01). Twenty of the untreated patients had already died by the time the blood culture had been reported as growing a yeast. Candidemia rates vary significantly between hospitals and increased in some but not all over the five study years. As many patients with candidemia will have died by the time laboratory diagnosis is made, presumptive antifungal therapy in high-risk patients may be necessary if outcome is to be improved. Zusammenfassung. Um epidemiologische Muster zu erkennen und Behandlungsmethoden zu optimieren, wurden die Candidämiefälle in der Zeit von 1992 bis 1996 in drei großen kanadischen Kliniken analysiert: University of Alberta Hospital (UAH) Royal Alexander Hospital (RAH), Edmonton und Foothills Medical Center (FMC), Calgary. Es wurden die archivierten mikrobiologischen Laborbefunde ausgewertet, insgesamt 202 Fälle (UAH 104, FMC 70, RAH 28). Im 5-Jahreszeitraum betrug die Candidämierate 4.5/10 000 Entlassungen (UAH 7.6, FMC 4.9, RAH 1.7, P < 0.05 für den Interklinikvergleich). Die Rate blieb zwischen 1992 und 1995 stabil, stieg aber im Jahr 1996 auf 7.6/10 000 (P < 0.01 im Vergleich zu 1995) infolge der Zunahme im UAH und RAH. Unter den 208 identifizierten Isolaten waren 135 Candida albicans (65%). Während der Hospitalisierung verstarben 93 Patienten (46%). Die Erregerart hatte keinen Einfluß auf den Krankheitsausgang. Fluconazol allein wurde 14% der Patienten verabreicht, die Verordnungshäufigkeit stieg während der Studie an. Keine antimykotische Therapie wurde 47 Patienten verordnet (23%). Diese Gruppe hatte eine wesentlich höhere Mortalität, nämlich 68%, im Vergleich zu der behandelten mit 39% (P < 0.01). 20 der nichtbehandelten Patienten waren schon zu dem Zeitpunkt verstorben, als der Befund ,Hefewachstum' aus der Blutkultur erhoben wurde. Die Candidämieraten unterschieden sich signifikant zwischen den Kliniken und stiegen in einigen, aber nicht allen im 5-Jahreszeitraum an. Da viele Patienten bereits während des Zeitraumes der Labordiagnostik verstarben, erscheint bei Hochrisikopatienten eine empirische Frühtherapie unabdingbar, wenn der Krankheitsausgang optimiert werden soll. [source]


Risk factors for nosocomial intensive care infection: a long-term prospective analysis

ACTA ANAESTHESIOLOGICA SCANDINAVICA, Issue 6 2001
P. Appelgren
Background: To identify risk factors for nosocomial infection in intensive care and to provide a basis for allocation of resources. Methods: Long-term prospective incidence study of risk factors for nosocomial infection in the surgical-medical intensive care unit of a university hospital. Results: A total of 2671 patients were admitted during four years, and 562 of 574 patients staying >48 h were observed during 4921 patient days (median length of stay 5 days, range 2,114). Of these, 196 (34%) patients had 364 nosocomial infections after median 8,10 days, an infection rate of 14/100 admissions. Infection prolonged length of stay 8,9 days and doubled the risk of death. The infections were 17% blood stream, 26% pneumonias, 34% wound, 10% urinary tract and 13% other infections. The incidence of bloodstream infection declined significantly during the study years, from 12% to 5%. In multiple regression analysis, the important variables for infection were central venous catheter, mechanical ventilation, pleural drainage and trauma with open fractures. High age, immunosuppression and infection on admission did not influence the risk of acquiring infection. Trauma patients constituted 24% of the study population. Trauma with open fractures increased the risk of infection more than twice (P=0.003), mainly due to wound infections. Conclusion: Trauma cases, with open fractures, were the patients most at risk of infection, despite low disease severity scores. Resources to prevent nosocomial infection should be allocated to these patients. [source]


Context-dependency of a complex fruit,frugivore mutualism: temporal variation in crop size and neighborhood effects

OIKOS, Issue 3 2010
Soumya Prasad
The quantity of fruit consumed by dispersers is highly variable among individuals within plant populations. The outcome of such selection operated by frugivores has been examined mostly with respect to changing spatial contexts. The influence of varying temporal contexts on frugivore choice, and their possible demographic and evolutionary consequences is poorly understood. We examined if temporal variation in fruit availability across a hierarchy of nested temporal levels (interannual, intraseasonal, 120 h, 24 h) altered frugivore choice for a complex seed dispersal system in dry tropical forests of southern India. The interactions between Phyllanthus emblica and its primary disperser (ruminants) was mediated by another frugivore (a primate), which made large quantities of fruit available on the ground to ruminants. The direction and strength of crop size and neighborhood effects on this interaction varied with changing temporal contexts. Fruit availability was higher in the first of the two study years, and at the start of the season in both years. Fruit persistence on trees, determined by primate foraging, was influenced by crop size and conspecific neighborhood densities only in the high fruit availability year. Fruit removal by ruminants was influenced by crop size in both years and neighborhood densities only in the high availability year. In both years, these effects were stronger at the start of the season. Intraseasonal reduction in fruit availability diminished inequalities in fruit removal by ruminants and the influence of crop size and fruiting neighborhoods. All trees were not equally attractive to frugivores in a P. emblica population at all points of time. Temporal asymmetry in frugivore-mediated selection could reduce potential for co-evolution between frugivores and plants by diluting selective pressures. Inter-dependencies formed between disparate animal consumers can add additional levels of complexity to plant,frugivore mutualistic networks and have potential reproductive consequences for specific individuals within populations. [source]


Host plant quality and defence against parasitoids: no relationship between levels of parasitism and a geometrid defoliator immunoassay

OIKOS, Issue 6 2008
Netta Klemola
Host plant quality has a major influence on the performance, and ultimately on the fitness of an herbivorous insect, but may also have indirect effects on the third trophic level by affecting an herbivore's defensive ability against natural enemies. In a three-year field study, we examined the effects of natural food quality on the ability of autumnal moths, Epirrita autumnata (Lepidoptera, Geometridae), to defend themselves against parasitoids. In each year, we confirmed the variation in quality of host trees (mountain birch, Betulapubescens ssp. czerepanovii) by determining the mass of pupae reared in mesh bags attached to the trees and the water content of leaves. Individuals grown on high quality trees possessed significantly higher encapsulation rate of a foreign antigen as pupae compared to those on low quality trees during the first and third study years; a parallel trend was also found in the second study year, although this difference was not statistically significant. However, in spite of observed differences in encapsulation rates, individuals reared on high and low quality trees did not differ in their levels of parasitisation when exposed to hymenopteran parasioids in the wild and thus were equally vulnerable. Accordingly, the encapsulation response seems not to play a major role on the population ecology scale in the studied system. Our findings also stress the importance of direct resistance tests, which should be conducted along with tests of insect immune function. [source]


Clinical outcome and IL-17, IL-23, IL-27 and FOXP3 expression in peripheral blood mononuclear cells of pollen-allergic children during sublingual immunotherapy

PEDIATRIC ALLERGY AND IMMUNOLOGY, Issue 1-Part-II 2010
Kaisa Nieminen
Nieminen K, Valovirta E, Savolainen J. Clinical outcome and IL-17, IL-23, IL-27 and FOXP3 expression in peripheral blood mononuclear cells of pollen-allergic children during sublingual immunotherapy. Pediatr Allergy Immunol 2010: 21: e174,e184. © 2009 John Wiley & Sons A/S Induction of allergen-specific, tolerogenic, IL-10 and/or TGF-,-producing T-regulatory (Treg) cells that express transcription factor FOXP3 is considered as one of the key mechanisms of allergen-specific immunotherapy. However, little is known of the induction of FOXP3 expression in children during sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT). Recently, also, a novel subgroup of T-helper (Th) cells, the Th17 cells, secreting predominantly IL-17 (IL-17A), was identified. The expressions of IL-17 or the Th17-regulating cytokines IL-23 and IL-27 during SLIT are currently completely unexplored. This randomized, placebo-controlled dose-response study was performed to analyze the effects of SLIT on FOXP3, IL-17, IL-23, and IL-27 expressions in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of children with allergic rhinitis and their associations with clinical outcome. Thirty children were included: ten received SLIT with a glycerinated mixture of birch, hazel and alder with a cumulative weekly dose of 24,000 SQ-U, 10 with dose 200,000 SQ-U/wk, and ten received placebo. Cytokine and FOXP3 mRNA expressions in allergen-, purified protein derivative-stimulated and non-stimulated PBMC were determined at 0, 1 and 2 yr of SLIT by real-time RT-PCR (TaqMan®). Symptoms and medications were recorded using diary cards. Allergen-induced IL-17 mRNA expression was significantly increased in the study subjects with elevated combined Symptom Medication Score (SMS) after 2 yr. There was also a significant positive correlation between the allergen-induced IL-17 and SMS in whole study group (r = 0.38, p = 0.039) and especially the 200,000 SQ-U dose-treated group (r = 0.74, p = 0.027) at 2 yr. Allergen-induced FOXP3 mRNA expression was significantly increased in the 200,000 SQ-U dose-treated children after two study years as compared with baseline (p = 0.016) and placebo-treated children (p = 0.028). The changes in FOXP3 mRNA expression positively correlated with IL-10 and TGF-, mRNAs during SLIT in whole study population. Increased allergen-induced IL-17 responses during SLIT are associated with elevated SMS. Increased tolerogenic, allergen-specific Treg responses are also observed in children during SLIT. [source]


Is the combination of topsoil replacement and inoculation with plant material an effective tool for the restoration of threatened sandy grassland?

APPLIED VEGETATION SCIENCE, Issue 4 2010
Carsten Eichberg
Abstract Question: Is it possible to restore dry calcareous inland sand ecosystems with their characteristic plant community structure within a 4-yr period by means of combined abiotic,biotic techniques (topsoil replacement, inoculation with raked/mown plant material from target areas)? Location: Upper Rhine valley, Germany. Methods: Two 4-year experiments were carried out on former arable land, each in the proximity of a reference area bearing a similar complex of threatened sandy grasslands (experiment 1: fine-scale; experiment 2: landscape scale). In both experiments we used nutrient-poor deep-sand substrate (abiotic approach), raked/mown inoculation material from target areas and grazing as management tool (biotic and management approach). The vegetation of the restoration and donor areas was sampled once a year and analysed by non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS) ordination and target-species ratios. Mixed linear models were calculated to determine effects of grazing (experiment 1) and year (both experiments). Results: NMDS revealed a continuous development of the restored sites towards the corresponding donor sites. Similarly, target-species ratios of the restored sites tended towards the ratios of the donor sites. To date, grazing effects have mainly been structural: reduction of a carpet-forming pleurocarpous moss species and of litter. In addition, cover of target species in relation to total plant cover was significantly enhanced by grazing in the last two study years. Conclusions: The combination of nutrient-poor substrate, inoculation with raked/mown plant material and grazing proved to be a very effective restoration method for dry base-rich sand ecosystems. After 4 yr the restored plant communities serve as well-developed parts of a habitat network. [source]