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Selected AbstractsTargeted sugar provision promotes parasitism of the cereal leaf beetle Oulema melanopusAGRICULTURAL AND FOREST ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 1 2010Edward W. Evans 1Parasitoids may often lack access to sugar (e.g. floral nectar) in agricultural settings. Strategically timed spraying of host plants with sugar solution may provide one means of enhancing parasitism at the same time as minimizing nontarget effects (e.g. benefiting the pest itself). 2Sucrose was sprayed in wheat fields of northern Utah (U.S.A.) to assess the effects on parasitism of the cereal leaf beetle Oulema melanopus by the larval parasitoid Tetrastichus julis. 3Early-season sugar provisioning, when larvae of the pest were first hatching and parasitoid adults were newly emerged, did not affect the numbers of cereal leaf beetle larvae that matured in treated plots but increased parasitism rates of beetle larvae by four-fold in 2006 and by seven-fold in 2007. 4No net influx of adult parasitoids into plots was detected after the application of sugar. Locally-emerging parasitoids may have spent less time searching for their own food needs versus hosts. A laboratory experiment also confirmed that access to sucrose significantly increased parasitoid longevity. 5The field experimental results obtained demonstrate that applications of sugar, implemented to target a key time of the growing season when benefits are maximized for parasitoids and minimized for their hosts, can strongly promote parasitism of the cereal leaf beetle in wheat fields. [source] Taking Civil Rights SeriouslyAUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF POLITICS AND HISTORY, Issue 4 2000John Chesterman For a variety of reasons Australians possess a curious lack of understanding about the gaining of civil rights by Indigenous people. These reasons include the lack of a clear civil rights ,moment' in Australian history and the negative connotations now associated with civil rights when compared to the more radical Indigenous rights. This article explores the reasons for Australia's public amnesia about Indigenous people's acquisition of civil rights, and makes a case for repositioning this occurrence as a key time in Australian political history. [source] Interannual changes in sablefish (Anoplopoma fimbria) recruitment in relation to oceanographic conditions within the California Current SystemFISHERIES OCEANOGRAPHY, Issue 1 2006MICHAEL J. SCHIRRIPA Abstract Sablefish (Anoplopoma fimbria) supports substantial fisheries in both the eastern and western Pacific Oceans. Juvenile recruitment along the west coast of the continental United States has been highly variable over the past three decades. Using a generalized additive model, we demonstrate that physical oceanographic variables within the California Current System have significant effects on sablefish recruitment. Significant relationships were found between juvenile recruitment and northward Ekman transport, eastward Ekman transport, and sea level during key times and at key locations within the habitat of this species. The model explains nearly 70% of the variability in sablefish recruitment between the years 1974 and 2000. The predictive power of the model was demonstrated by refitting without the last 5 yr of data and subsequent prediction of those years. Bootstrap assessments of bias associated with parameter estimates and jackknife-after-bootstrap assessments of the influence of individual data on parameter estimates are presented and discussed. Using this model, it is possible to draw preliminary conclusions concerning year-class strength of cohorts not yet available to the survey gear as well as historic year-class strengths. We discuss changes in zooplankton abundance and shifts in species of copepods associated with fluctuations in the physical variables that appear to have a major influence on sablefish recruitment. [source] Using medical records to supplement a claims-based comparative effectiveness analysis of antidepressants,PHARMACOEPIDEMIOLOGY AND DRUG SAFETY, Issue 8 2010Thomas W. Croghan Abstract Purpose Because health insurance claims lack clinical information, comparative effectiveness research studies that rely on these data may be challenging to interpret and may result in biased inference. We conducted an exploratory study to determine if medical information contained in patient charts could offer clinical details that would assist in interpreting the results of a claims-based comparative effectiveness study of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs). Methods Retrospective review of 457 charts of patients initiating SSRI treatment. Descriptive data elements included patient diagnosis, symptoms of depressive and anxiety disorders, provider's assessment, and medication treatment and side effects. Results Most subjects were excluded from the study because their charts were not accessible (58.7%), they did not have a follow-up visit (55.6%), providers could not be contacted (58.0%), or providers refused participation in the study (36.5%). Among those included in the study, most patients were noted to have depression, but most charts lacked information on the majority of depression symptoms at baseline and follow-up. Few concomitant symptoms, side effects, and other important clinical and treatment characteristics were recorded. Conclusions Inability to obtain charts due to plan or provider refusal, lack of available information in charts at key times in the course of illness, and missing data elements posed considerable challenges and prevented firm conclusions beyond those drawn from the parent, claims-based study. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] |